The present invention relates to single piston, cam driven high pressure fuel pumps for generating high pressure fuel in common rail direct injection gasoline engines.
It is known in the industry that the pump must incorporate an outlet check valve to prevent pressure bleed back from the rail while the pump is in the intake stroke cycle. It has become an industry requirement to incorporate a pressure relief valve within the pump to protect the entire high pressure system from an unexpected excess pressure caused by a system malfunction. In order to protect the rail and injectors, the pressure relief valve must be in hydraulic communication with the rail, i.e., in parallel with the pump flow. Two such executions are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,401,593 and 8,132,558.
The executions described in the prior art are successful in their ability to achieve a reasonable relief pressure by hydraulically disabling the relief device during the pumping event when normal high pressure line pulsations occur. However, in high output pump applications there are some significant limitations. Firstly, the necessary increased flow rate and required upsizing of the relief valve device becomes prohibitive in packaging within a modern single piston pump. Secondly, the added flow rate into the low pressure side of the pump by the upsized relief valve device can cause significantly increased low pressure pulsations, leading to failure of the low pressure side components.
The present invention solves the aforementioned drawbacks of the prior art by addition of an auxiliary pressure relief valve device in direct communication with the high pressure pumping chamber, relieving pressure into the low pressure side of the pump during the pumping event. This has the advantage of maintaining a reasonable relief pressure of the primary relief valve, close to the normal operating rail pressure. As in the prior art, this primary relief valve opens only during the charging stroke of the pump. The new auxiliary valve relieves pumping chamber pressure during the pumping stroke, thereby “averaging” the flow back to the low pressure side of the pump. This keeps the low pressure pulsations to a minimum, and alleviates the need for a very large primary relief valve. Because the auxiliary relief valve is in direct communication with the pumping chamber, it can easily be installed within the pump housing.
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The control valve 5 is acted upon by a control valve spring 7 and a solenoid 6 to control the quantity of fuel delivered by the high pressure pump. This is accomplished by coordinating the action of the control valve 5 and the motion of the pumping piston 8, such that the control valve 5 closes when the pumping piston 8 is driven in an upward motion by the engine camshaft 9. When the fuel is thus pressurized, it travels through an outlet check valve 11, a high pressure line 14, and into a common rail 16 that feeds engine fuel injectors 15. Because the injectors 15 are fed from a common rail 16, injector timing is flexible.
Desired rail pressure is controlled by a closed feedback loop in the Electronic Control Unit (ECU) 18 including control of the high pressure fuel output via the solenoid 6 and control valve 5 compared to the rail pressure sensor 17 output signal to the ECU 18. A primary pressure relief valve 12 is required to protect the high pressure system in case of a system malfunction. The outlet check valve 11 and primary pressure relief valve 12 are preferably contained in a common fitting assembly 13, but this is not required for the present invention.
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A relief valve sealing seat 21 having a through bore 25 is configured at the inlet side 35 of the valve body 20. A ball 22, a spring seat 23 and a spring 24, are configured intermediate the sealing seat 21 and an outlet bore 26. The outlet bore 26 is at the outlet side 36 of the valve body, and configured in hydraulic communication with the fuel passage 37. In an alternate embodiment (not shown), the various components may be assembled separately into a bore in the pump housing 3 which comprises the valve body 20.
The relief valve spring 24 is placed within the valve body 20 to apply a load through the spring seat 23 and force the ball 22 sealingly against the relief valve sealing seat 21, which is press-fit into the valve body 20. The opening pressure may be adjusted by pressing the relief valve sealing seat 21 deeper into the valve body bore 20 until the spring 24 is adequately compressed. Once the relief pressure is set, the auxiliary relief valve assembly 19 is installed into the pump housing 3 by press-fitting the valve body 20 into the pump housing 3.
During auxiliary relief valve operation, fluid flows from the pumping chamber 10 and passes through bore 25 and around the ball 22. Once fluid passes around the ball 22, fluid passes around the spring seat 23 and through the bore 26. Once fluid passes through the bore 26 it can then pass into the low pressure side of the pump upstream of the control valve 5.
A pressure relief spring 32 imparts a biasing force upon spring seat 33, which biases and seals a pressure relief ball 31 against the outlet/pressure relief seat 27. Adjustment cup 34 is interference fit into the end of the fitting assembly in hydraulic communication with the pumping chamber 10, bearing against spring 32 until the desired opening pressure of ball 31 is reached.
During normal pump operation, the fuel flow follows the arrows toward the right during the pumping phase of the operational cycle. During the charging phase the outlet check valve 28 closes, preventing any backflow through the fitting into the pumping chamber 10. If the pressure in the system during the charging phase exceeds the biasing force provided by the pressure relief spring 32, the pressure relief ball 31 will be forced toward the pumping chamber 10, allowing fuel to flow in the direction of the leftward directed arrows, into the pumping chamber 10.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2012/064963 | 11/14/2012 | WO | 00 | 5/16/2014 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61629377 | Nov 2011 | US |