The field includes opposed-piston engines. More particularly, the field relates to a barrier assembly, which includes a barrier ring, for a cylinder assembly constructed to reduce heat rejection from the cylinder assembly in an opposed-piston engine.
Construction of an opposed-piston engine cylinder assembly is well understood. The cylinder assembly includes a liner (sometimes called a “sleeve”) retained in a cylinder tunnel formed in a cylinder block. The liner includes a bore and longitudinally displaced intake and exhaust ports, machined or formed in the liner near respective ends thereof. Each of the intake and exhaust ports includes one or more circumferential arrays of openings in which adjacent openings are separated by a solid portion of the cylinder wall (also called a “bridge”). An intermediate portion of the liner exists between the intake and exhaust ports. In an opposed-piston engine, two opposed, counter-moving pistons are disposed in the bore of a liner with their end surfaces facing each other. At the beginning of a power stroke, the opposed pistons reach respective top dead center (TDC) locations in the intermediate portion of the liner where they are in closest mutual proximity to one another in the cylinder. During a power stroke, the pistons move away from each other until they approach respective bottom dead center (BDC) locations in the end portions of the liner at which they are furthest apart from each other. In a compression stroke, the pistons reverse direction and move from BDC toward TDC.
The intermediate portion of the cylinder lying between the intake and exhaust ports bounds a combustion chamber defined between the end surfaces of the pistons when the pistons are near their TDC locations. This intermediate portion bears the highest levels of combustion temperature and pressure that occur during engine operation. The presence of openings for engine components such as fuel injectors, valves, and/or sensors in the intermediate portion diminishes the cylinder assembly's strength and makes the cylinder liner vulnerable to cracking, particularly through the fuel injector and valve openings.
Heat loss through the cylinder liner is a factor that degrades engine performance throughout the operating cycle of an opposed-piston engine. Combustion occurs as fuel is injected into air compressed between the piston end surfaces when the pistons are in close mutual proximity, forming the combustion chamber. Loss of the heat of combustion through the liner reduces the amount of energy available to drive the pistons apart in the power stroke. By limiting this heat loss, fuel efficiency would be improved, heat rejection to coolant would be reduced, and higher exhaust temperatures can be realized. Smaller cooling systems and lower pumping losses are just some of the benefits of limiting heat loss through the cylinder assembly. It is therefore desirable to retain as much of the heat of combustion as possible within the cylinder assembly.
An opposed-piston cylinder assembly construction according to the present disclosure satisfies the objective of heat containment, thereby allowing opposed-piston engines to operate higher heat retention than opposed-piston engines of the prior art.
The highest concentration of heat in an opposed-piston engine cylinder assembly occurs in the annular portion of the cylinder liner between the top dead center (TDC) locations of the pistons, where combustion takes place. Nearly half of the total heat flux into the liner occurs in this annular portion. Accordingly, construction of a barrier ring for insertion into the cylinder liner in such a manner as to yield a high thermal resistance will reduce heat flux through the annular liner portion.
In some implementations, provided herein is a barrier assembly that includes a barrier ring, a groove adjacent to the portion of the cylinder liner near the combustion chamber, and a space or gap between the barrier ring and the back wall of the groove. The combustion chamber is partially defined by a first end surface on a first piston and a second end surface on a second piston when the first and second pistons are near their top dead center positions in the cylinder assembly. In a related aspect, provided herein is a barrier ring for use in the barrier assembly. The barrier ring includes an open-ended tube with a wall defining a volume inside the tube. The tube includes a first and a second set of openings in the wall, in which the first set of openings allows for communication between engine hardware and the combustion chamber, and the second set of openings allows for pressure equalization between two volumes separated by the barrier ring. Methods of making and using the barrier ring and barrier assembly are also provided herein.
The compression sleeve 40 is formed to define generally cylindrical space between itself and the external surface 42 of the liner through which a liquid coolant may flow in an axial direction from near the intake ports toward the exhaust ports. The intermediate portion 34 is reinforced by the compression sleeve 40, as described in greater detail in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/675,340, and cooling fluid is circulated in the compression sleeve 40 in generally annular spaces 55 and 59. The cooling fluid that circulates in these generally annular spaces 55, 59 flows to other components of the opposed-piston engine, not shown in
The barrier ring 200 discussed herein is a part of a barrier assembly (e.g., a heat barrier assembly) that is inserted into, or located in, the bore of a cylinder assembly and that prevents heat incident upon the barrier ring from the combustion chamber from passing to other parts of the opposed-piston engine. The barrier ring can be thin compared to the walls of the cylinder assembly, and numerous openings, perforations, or holes, can be present in the ring. The materials of the barrier ring, barrier ring shape, openings in the barrier ring, and combination of the barrier ring with insulation or air gaps influence the ability of the barrier assembly to keep heat from escaping to other volumes in the engine.
In most engines, a circumferential clearance space between pistons and the inner wall of the cylinder liner is provided to allow for thermal expansion. After long hours of operation carbon builds up in this clearance space, on the top land of a piston, which can result in increased friction and ring wear; at worst it can cause ring jacking. It is preferable that carbon removal not occur where the ports are located. Carbon debris near the ports can contaminate charge air entering the bore or be swept into the gas stream exiting the cylinder assembly after combustion, degrading the performance of the engine.
In the configuration shown in
Alternatively, in some implementations, the barrier ring 200 may be flush with the sides 226 of the groove when the engine is cool. When the engine warms up, the barrier ring 200 can bow away from the cylinder liner, into the combustion chamber. The bowing portion of the barrier ring can rub against the sidewalls of the pistons 35, 36 as the pistons move through the cylinder, toward or away from TDC. In such implementations, the clearance in the interface 240 between the barrier ring edge and groove sidewall when the engine is cold, discussed above, may or may not be present.
In any case, whether the spacer 228 is present as a ledge, as in
The barrier ring 200 can be made from any suitable material that can withstand repeated exposure to the temperatures and pressures experienced in the combustion chamber, as well as that can quickly dissipate heat. In some implementations, the material used to make the barrier ring will be different from the material used to form the cylinder liner or bore. Suitable materials for the barrier ring include high temperature nickel-chromium-based alloys such as Inconel®, a cobalt-chromium alloy such as Stellite® Alloy 6, stainless steel, and the like. The thickness of the barrier ring 200 is selected, along with the material used to fabricate the barrier ring and the pattern of openings made in the barrier ring, so that the barrier ring 200 is robust enough to withstand mechanical failure when exposed to the temperatures and pressures of the cylinder assembly interior while the engine is running. The thickness of the barrier ring can range from about 0.5 mm to about 3.0 mm, such as from about 1.0 mm to about 2.5 mm, including from about 1.0 mm to about 2.0 mm.
As described above, openings in the barrier ring can allow engine components to contact the interior of the combustion chamber and/or allow for equalization in pressure between the volumes in the cylinder that are separated by the barrier ring. The barrier ring is sized to fit into a groove in the bore of a cylinder liner where the combustion chamber is formed when the pistons are near their TDC positions. Together the barrier ring and the groove, including the space between the barrier ring and back wall of the groove, form the barrier assembly that prevents heat loss from the combustion chamber to the surrounding cylinder assembly and engine.
The openings in the barrier ring that allow engine components to reach into the combustion chamber can be located where fuel injection nozzles, compression release engine breaking valves, and sensors project from the cylinder into the combustion chamber (e.g., 46 in
There are various possible configurations for the openings in the barrier ring that are meant to allow for equalization in pressure between the spaces on either side of the barrier ring (e.g., 215 in
The size and shape of all of the openings in the barrier ring are optimized to achieve maximum heat-loss reduction while maintaining an acceptable pressure difference across the barrier ring. Pressure-equalizing openings can have any shape, such as circular, elliptical, triangular, rectangular, square, slit-like, and the like. Fillets can be used to eliminate stress concentration in the barrier ring. The arrangement of pressure-equalizing openings can vary to maximize heat-loss reduction and pressure equalization across the barrier ring. Groupings of pressure-equalizing openings can be used to vary the density of the openings. In some implementations, the selected opening locations can produce a ring with no pressure-equalizing openings along the center, or midline, of the barrier ring. Alternatively, the selected opening locations can produce a barrier ring with openings exclusively along the midline of the ring, or a barrier ring with openings along the midline and off the midline of the ring. Also, the location of the openings can be targeted to a particular angular pitch (e.g., frequency of openings along the ring). The angular pitch of the pressure-equalizing openings can be between 30° and 45°. Pressure-equalizing openings can be located randomly or have a definite pattern. These openings can all have similar sizes and shapes, or the sizes and shapes of the pressure-equalizing openings can vary, so long as the barrier ring maximizes the heat-loss reduction of the cylinder while minimizing mechanical stresses in the ring that can cause failure.
In general, the total surface area of the barrier ring can be made up of between 1% and 5% openings. In some implementations, the barrier ring can have a surface area that is less than 1% openings. In some implementations, openings can make up 5% or more of the surface area of the barrier ring.
Though
Additionally, or alternatively, cylinder assemblies for opposed-piston engines that use liners with a barrier ring can be used in conjunction with pistons that each have a barrier layer at their end surface. The barrier layer at the end surface of such pistons can allow for higher temperatures to be reached in the combustion chamber without diminishing performance. Such a combination of pistons with a heat-loss preventing barrier layer and the cylinder assemblies described herein can allow for reductions in conventional thermal management systems, better engine efficiency, and/or reductions in emission levels.
During a combustion event in an opposed-piston engine, a first piston and a second piston will move in a cylinder assembly, through the bore of an annular cylinder liner, in a direction along the long axis of the cylinder liner, from bottom dead center (BDC) towards top dead center (TDC). As the first and second pistons move axially, and both pistons are near their top dead center locations, they will eventually create a combustion chamber between their end surfaces. The air that is in the cylinder assembly between the end surfaces of the pistons heats up as the pistons move towards each other to form the combustion chamber. Fuel is injected into the combustion chamber, and the fuel mixes with the heated air. Combustion takes place between the end surfaces of the first and second pistons, releasing heat and creating pressure. The pressure pushes the first and second pistons apart. A barrier assembly, including a barrier ring as described herein and a groove in the cylinder liner, that is located inside the bore of the annular cylinder liner, on the periphery of the combustion chamber (e.g., between the TDC locations in the bore for the first and second pistons) prevents some of the combustion heat from reaching the outside of the cylinder assembly.
Cylinder assemblies for opposed-piston engines that use liners with barrier ring, as described herein, can be used with conventional thermal management systems to dissipate heat lost through the cylinder walls. By using cylinder liners with a barrier ring, as described above, the conventional cooling systems may not have to dissipate as much heat from cylinder assembly, around the combustion chamber. As a result of this, the cooling systems can be smaller in size, resulting in an overall more compact and efficient engine.
The scope of patent protection afforded these and other barrier ring embodiments that accomplish one or more of the objectives of durability and thermal resistance of an opposed-piston engine according to this disclosure are limited only by the scope of any ultimately-allowed patent claims.
This disclosure includes material related to the disclosure of the following commonly-owned US Patent Applications: U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/136,402; filed Jul. 29. 2011, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,485,147; U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/385,127, filed Feb. 2, 2012, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,851,029; U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/255,756, filed Apr. 7, 2014, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,121,365; pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/675,340, filed Mar. 31, 2015; and pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/732,496, filed Jun. 5, 2015.