Present invention relates to the field of fuel supply systems for internal combustion engines, in particular to diesels and their fuel pump-injectors having hydraulic actuating mechanism for driving the pumping plunger.
Conventional hydraulically driven pump-injectors with actuating mechanism comprise: a body with inlet and outlet channels for the connection with accumulator (rail) of actuating fluid (which is in turn connected to the actuating fluid pump), and a drain tank or sump, respectively; pressure intensifier, comprising a power piston and a pumping plunger, a working cavity being formed above the said power piston in the body, into which the actuating fluid is introduced via said inlet channel in the body, and a drain cavity under the power piston connected to the drain tank or sump by an additional channel being formed in the said body; distributing device with a valve, predominantly having an electromagnetic drive controlled by an electronic control unit mounted in the body between said inlet and outlet channels, and the working cavity above the power piston; a return mechanism of the power piston with pumping plunger, and a sprayer unit.
When high factors of pressure multiplication (10 and more) are used, which are needed for obtaining high injection pressure (2000 bars and above) with moderate pressure of the actuating liquid (up to 200 bars), the power piston in conventional pump-injectors with single-piston pressure intensifier must necessarily have a large diameter. As a result, the pump-injector body also has a large diameter. This makes it difficult to modify and upgrade existing diesel engines to incorporate advanced fuel injection systems based on hydraulically driven pump-injectors, due to space limitations in the engines cylinder head, where relatively small diameter injectors or pump-injectors are used.
The present invention is aimed at significantly decreasing the diameters of hydraulically driven pump-injectors by replacing a conventional single-piston actuating mechanism used in conventional hydraulically driven pump-injectors with a multi-piston actuating mechanism comprising a tandem of power pistons. This allows for decreasing the diameter of power pistons, and, consequently, of pump-injectors.
In accordance with this invention, hydraulically driven pump-injector with actuating mechanism comprises: a body with inlet and outlet channels for the connection with an accumulator (rail) of actuating fluid (which is in turn connected to the actuating fluid pump), and a drain tank or sump, respectively; a multi-piston pressure intensifier comprising several power pistons and one pumping plunger; a distributing device with a valve, predominantly having an electromagnetic drive controlled by an electronic control unit (the valve can also be controlled by piezoelectric, magnetostriction, mechanical or other devices), mounted in the body between said inlet and outlet channels and the working cavities of the power pistons; a return mechanism (for instance, a spring mechanism) of power pistons with pumping plunger, said pressure intensifier comprising two or more power pistons that drive the pumping plunger, the pistons being disposed in cylindrical bores of the body, working cavities being formed above the pistons, which are connected with the accumulator (rail) of the actuating fluid by said distributing device of actuating fluid and said inlet channel in the body, and drain cavities being formed under the pistons, connected with the drain tank or sump by said outlet channels formed in the body. In order to decrease the diameter of the body, the power pistons are arranged coaxially with each other and with the pumping plunger, one after another, in tandem, rods being installed between the power pistons and transferring the force from one piston to another. The rods are moving inside the partitions formed directly in the body or in a bushing, which is tightly installed in the body. Said partitions separate the drain cavity of the previous piston (which is disposed closer to the distributing device) from the working cavity of the next piston, and the working cavity of the first power piston disposed next to the distributing device, i.e. the leader, is bounded by the surface of the internal cylindrical cavity of the pump-injector body. The actuating fluid is supplied to the pistons' working cavities from the distributing device through channels made in the body, or from the working cavity of the previous piston to the working cavity of the next piston, i.e. the follower. In this case, the first piston (the leader) in the piston tandem is connected with the distributing device by an additional channel. Another design option is also possible, in which the actuating fluid from the working cavity of the previous piston enters the working cavity of the next piston through an opening in the bottom of the previous piston and a central channel disposed along the rod, which transfers the force from the previous piston to the next piston. In this case, the pistons of a multi-piston pressure intensifier can have identical or different diameters. Using pistons of different diameters allows for equalizing the forces transferred by each piston to the pumping plunger.
This invention envisages phase (time) shift in supplying the actuating fluid into above-piston working cavities of the pistons that follow the leader in order to achieve rate shape and thus allow for increasing the engine life and lowering the noise and exhaust emission levels.
Design features allowing for achieving rate shape are described in detail in the section “Summary of the Invention”.
The proposed multi-piston actuating mechanism can be used in hydraulically driven pump-injectors using fuel (the same that will eventually be injected into the combustion chamber) or oil as actuating fluid.
A functional diagram of a hydraulically driven pump-injector with actuating mechanism having two pistons in which the actuating fluid from above-piston working cavity of the first piston (leader) is supplied to the above-piston working cavity of the second piston (follower) via a channel in the body is shown in
In
In
In
In
Pump-injector with the proposed multi-piston actuating mechanism shown in
When power pistons 1 and 2 with pumping plunger 3 are in extreme upper position, the under-plunger cavity 4 is filled with fuel (actuating fluid) via channel 5 in body 11, groove 6 and channels 7 in plunger 3.
When the electromagnet of the valve of distributing device 8 is energized (here the operation of pump-injector is described using an example of a distributing device with electromagnetically controlled valve, but, as mentioned above, the proposed device can use other types of controlling devices described above), the actuating fluid through inlet channel 9, distributing device 8 and channels 10 in body 11 is supplied into above-piston working cavity 12 of piston 1 and from it via channel 13 in body 11 into above-piston working cavity 14 of piston 2. Under the pressure of the actuating fluid, pistons 1 and 2 together with rod 15, installed in partition 16 of body 11, and plunger 3, press the return spring of device 17 and move into extreme lower position, and plunger 3 after channels 7 are disconnected from groove 6 forces the fuel via sprayer unit 18 into the engine's combustion chamber. During the working stroke of the pistons, when they move downward as shown in
Changes in cyclic fuel deliveries in pump-injectors are achieved by controlling the value of the working stroke of power pistons and pumping plunger by changing the duration of the electric signal fed to the controlling valve of the distributing device (in the model described here, the signal is fed to the electromagnet of the controlling valve).
Pump-injector corresponding to the functional diagram shown in
The proposed multi-piston actuating mechanism allows for achieving rate shape due to phase (time) shift in supplying the actuating fluid into above-piston working cavity 14 of piston 2 as compared to piston 1, i.e. the actuating fluid to above-piston working cavity 14 of piston 2 is supplied later than to above-piston working cavity 12 of piston 1.
To achieve this in a pump-injector shown in
With regard to the functional diagram shown in
It will be evident to those skilled in the art that the invention is not limited to the details of the foregoing illustrated embodiments and that the present invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential attributes thereof The present embodiment is therefore to be considered in all respect as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced therein.
In the proposed invention, the most space-saving design of a multi-piston actuating mechanism (actuating mechanisms may have two pistons or more) can be achieved if the pistons are disposed coaxially one after another, in tandem consisting of a leading piston and the followers, the pistons being also coaxial to the pumping plunger. In the device shown in
The proposed multi-piston actuating mechanism can be used in various hydraulically driven pump-injectors. However, this mechanism can be most efficient in hydraulically driven pump-injectors for diesels with large working cylinder displacements, and, hence, with high cyclic fuel deliveries. In this case, the need to achieve high injection pressure (2000 bar and higher) requires a high degree of pressure multiplication (10 and higher) in the pressure intensifier. This requirement in single-piston pressure intensifiers leads to a relatively high diameter of the power piston, which in turn leads to an increase in the diameter of the body, and impedes its installation in engine cylinder heads. This drawback is particularly significant when systems with hydraulically driven pump-injectors must be used in the existing diesels with standard fuel systems having conventional injectors or pump-injectors of relatively small diameters. Replacing conventional injectors or pump-injectors with hydraulically driven pump-injectors requires a serious modification of the diesel's cylinder head.
The use of multi-piston actuating mechanisms with pistons of various diameters and stepped delivery of the actuating fluid to each piston as envisaged by the invention, allows for controlling the forefront of the pressure rise in the injection characteristic (rate shape) and thus allows for lowering the rate of the pressure rise in the engine's combustion chamber in the beginning of combustion, increasing the engine's durability and life, lowering its noise and, most important, decreasing the formation of the toxic nitric oxides in the exhaust gases.
The use of the proposed actuating mechanisms is especially expedient in hydraulically driven pump-injectors intended for newly-designed high-power diesels, although the proposed actuating mechanisms can also be used in pump-injectors of the existing diesels.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IL2004/000133 | 2/11/2004 | WO | 00 | 2/7/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/078271 | 8/25/2005 | WO | A |
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20070221178 A1 | Sep 2007 | US |