1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a system for controlling smoke emissions from a a naturally aspirated locomotive by controlling the locomotive's air/fuel ratio and output in response to operation at barometric pressures characteristic of varying altitudes.
2. Disclosure Information
Naturally aspirated railroad locomotives typically are powered by compression ignition “diesel” engines. Such engines may be either four-stroke cycle or two-stroke cycle engines. Four-stroke naturally aspirated engines have no charge air booster such as a turbocharger or a supercharger. Two-stroke cycle diesel engines used in railroad locomotives are typically scavenged with a positive displacement blower such as a Roots-type blower. Notwithstanding the use of blower scavenging, such engines typically operate in a manner similar to naturally aspirated engines because the Roots blower or other type of positive displacement blower merely serves to force exhaust gases from the engine's cylinders at a pressure only slightly above atmospheric pressure, with the result that the airbox supplying the engine cylinders or intake manifold operates very closely to ambient air pressure.
Naturally aspirated railroad locomotives are, of course, subject to operation at altitude, and at higher altitudes, say above 2500 feet, operation may be characterized by production of excessive exhaust smoke. This smoke results from the lack of oxygen at higher altitudes.
Naturally aspirated locomotives are usually calibrated so that the engine powering the locomotive operates at one of eight throttle positions (“notches”) characteristic of different engine speeds and loads. Accordingly, each notch is usually calibrated at a different air/fuel ratio, with notch 1, the lowest engine speed having the leanest air/fuel ratio or highest numerical air/fuel ratio, and notch 8 characterized by the highest engine speed and the richest, or lowest numerical air/fuel ratio. It is easily seen that if a naturally aspirated locomotive is operated at high altitude at the higher notches, e.g., 6, 7 and 8, smoking may occur due to the richer fuel calibration at the higher notches, coupled with lack of oxygen availability.
It would be desirable to control air/fuel ratio with minimal modification to the engine operating system commonly used on naturally aspirated locomotives, so as to reduce the production of smoke when the engine is operated at higher altitudes.
According to an aspect of the present invention, a railroad locomotive includes a naturally-aspirated reciprocating internal combustion engine normally operated at a plurality of predetermined throttle positions corresponding to a discrete engine speed and load points. A traction generator is driven by the engine. A throttle position sensor generates a throttle position signal corresponding to the throttle position selected by the locomotive's operator. A load regulator receives a speed signal derived from the throttle position signal and outputs an excitation signal for the traction generator. A controller receives at least the throttle position signal, the excitation signal, and an air availability signal, with the controller modifying the throttle position signal and the excitation signal in response to at least a value of the air availability signal, so that engine speed and load are controlled independently, based upon the selected throttle position, whereby exhaust smoke output of the engine will be mitigated.
According to another aspect of the present invention, the engine incorporated in a railroad locomotive may be either a four-stroke cycle diesel engine, or a blower-scavenged two-stroke cycle diesel engine. In either case, an engine governor controls both the load regulator and a fuel supply system for the engine, with the governor controlling the amount of fuel being supplied to the engine in response to the modified throttle position signal and the modified excitation signal.
According to an aspect of the present invention, the controller may optionally receive an ambient air temperature signal in addition to throttle position signal, excitation signal, and the air availability signal.
In general, according to another aspect of the present invention, the air availability signal corresponds to ambient barometric pressure.
According to another aspect of the present invention, the throttle positions correspond to predetermined engine speeds and air/fuel ratios, with the controller modifying the throttle position signal and the excitation signal so that the engine is operated at a greater engine speed and higher air/fuel ratio than the engine speed and air/fuel ratio normally associated with a given throttle position if the locomotive is operated at an air availability less than a predetermined air availability.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a method for controlling the air/fuel ratio of a naturally-aspirated reciprocating fuel injected internal combustion engine powering a traction generator in a railroad locomotive having a throttle with discrete, predetermined, operator-selectable throttle positions corresponding to predetermined engine speeds and loads includes monitoring the selected throttle position at which the locomotive is being operated, while determining air availability. If air availability decreases below an air availability threshold, the engine will be operated at a speed greater than the speed corresponding to the selected throttle position, while the quantity of fuel injected per stroke is reduced, so that the power of the engine is maintained in accordance with the selected throttle position, while increasing the air/fuel ratio so as to mitigate the amount of exhaust smoke produced by the engine. In essence, the power output of the engine will be pushed downward to the power output at a lower notch setting in some cases, thus establishing that the engine speed and load are controlled independently, based upon the selected throttle position.
According to another aspect of the present invention, smoke output of the engine is reduced by controlling engine speed and air/fuel ratio independently of the selected throttle positions, such that the air/fuel ratio may be moved to a more fuel-lean position than would otherwise be the case with fixed throttle notch positions corresponding to fixed engine speed and fixed load.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a method for modifying the air/fuel ratio control of a naturally aspirated reciprocating internal combustion engine powering a traction generator in a railroad locomotive having a manually settable throttle with a plurality of positions corresponding to predetermined engine speeds and engine loads, so as to control smoke caused by varying air availability, includes providing a single control module having an air availability sensing device and a throttle position monitor, and determining a desired engine speed and desired load, based upon the throttle setting and sensed air availability. The controller will modify a main generator excitation signal in response to the desired load and transmit the modified excitation signal to the traction generator to control the engine load, while controlling the engine speed to the desired engine speed.
It is an advantage of a method and system according to the present invention that excessive smoke emissions of a naturally aspirated railroad locomotive may be controlled without the need for costly aftertreatment devices.
It is yet another advantage of the present invention that smoke emissions may be controlled without the need for costly retrofitting of modified fuel injection hardware.
It is yet another advantage of a method and system according to the present invention that smoke emissions may be limited without causing deration while operating at low to moderate altitudes and at lower to moderate throttle settings.
Other advantages, as well as features of the present invention, will become apparent to the reader of this specification.
As shown in
Engine 14 drives a traction generator 18, which provides electrical power for operating locomotive 10. As used herein, the term “generator” means a rotating electrical machine which may be constituted as either a generator or an alternator.
The output of wheel slip module 34 is sent as a modified throttle or speed signal, to controller 50 and also to load regulator 46, which is a potentiometer controlled by engine speed governor 38. Governor 38 also controls fuel injectors 42 to maintain engine speed at the specified notch setting. The output of load regulator 46 is an excitation signal which is sent to generator 18. This excitation signal determines the load imposed by generator 18 upon engine 14.
Controller 50 receives the output of load regulator 46 and modifies the excitation signal in response to at least the value of the barometric pressure signal from sensor 54. Controller 50 also may receive inputs from ambient air temperature and humidity sensors, which are included in a bundle of sensors, 56. Controller 50 may be constituted as either a microprocessor based controller, or an analog controller, or a relay logic panel, or other type of controller known to those skilled in the art of machine and engine control and suggested by this disclosure.
As shown in
Regardless of the method used to determine air availability, controller 50 will act to reduce air/fuel ratio when air availability decreases below a threshold value. Throttle setting, or position, is used as a first input to the table of
The table of
At throttle setting N5 of
As noted above, a number of surrogates may be employed to substitute for an unvarnished barometric pressure signal. In essence barometric pressure is a measure of air or, more importantly, oxygen availability. In turn, air availability is a surrogate for oxygen availability. Air availability may be determined by a number of methods including: measuring pressure within an inlet manifold associated with said engine; by measuring pressure within a crankcase associated with the engine; by measuring output pressure of a cooling system blower located within the locomotive; by global position sensing and associated lookup of altitude; by measuring the temperature of the exhaust of the engine and ambient temperature; by measuring ambient oxygen concentration; by measuring of exhaust smoke opacity, or by means of a manually activated high-altitude switch.
According to another aspect of the present invention a railroad locomotive may be modified to operate according to the present invention by providing a single unit control module incorporating air availability sensing and throttle position monitoring. The control module will determine a desired engine speed and desired load, drawn from the population of predetermined speeds and loads, as shown in
Although the present invention has been described in connection with particular embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that various modifications, alterations, and adaptations may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention set forth in the following claims.
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6279550 | Bryant | Aug 2001 | B1 |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080202377 A1 | Aug 2008 | US |