The invention refers to a Common-Rail injection device as well as to a method of injecting a predetermined volume of fuel.
To fulfill the more and more tight requirements of emission legislations and fuel economy needs, many new technologies have recently been developed to improve fuel direct injection systems for internal combustion engines. An important trend of the still ongoing R&D works is the precise control of the injected fuel quantity into the cylinders, as demanded by the engine load dependent combustion processes. In modern diesel injection systems, this is usually achieved by the selection of the injector, the start of the injection and the coordination of the injection pressure and the valve opening time. In this context, many new developments emerged in the last years, such as new magnetic/piezoelectric actuators with optimized opening and closing properties, optimization of the needle structure, and improvements of the injection orifice geometries, etc. In spite of this, the control of the fuel injection is still far from being perfect. Due to the rapid opening and closing of the injector valves, pressure pulsations are caused that penetrate throughout the entire injector system. Usually, such pressure pulsations propagate at the speed of sound and travel from one injector to the other passing the connecting pipes and also the Common-Rail. The maximum amplitude of these pressure pulsations can reach up to ±30% of the mean injection pressure. Since the flow rate through the injector nozzles is proportional to the pressure difference from the pre-chamber to the inside of the cylinder, pressure pulsations will cause different fuel flow rates through the individual injection into the cylinder. Hence, even though the opening time of the injector valves can be precisely controlled, the pressure pulsations distort the attempt of well-controlled fuel-air ratio adjustments for the combustion process. Pressure pulsation dampers are needed for a better control of the fuel injection into the cylinders of Otto-engines.
There are numerous pressure pulsation dampers described in the literature and also within various patents (e.g. see patents [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] and articles [7, 8, 9, 10]). Most of these dampers work on the principle of detuning of a resonator section in an injector, producing a basic frequency of:
where C is the velocity of sound of petrol and LCN is the length of the considered injector from the Common-Rail to the nozzle exit. Placing an orifice at the Common-Rail exit, detunes the resonator and for a frequency of C=2LCN a damping of the basic frequency of equation (1) occurs. Pressure pulsation damper of this type are available for Otto-engines.
There are other damping mechanisms employed for injector systems nowadays introduced in Otto-engines. The reader is referred to the literature to learn about the different pressure pulsation dampers employed in internal combustion engines. For the present work the damping employed in ref. [11] is of particular interest since it employs the same pressure damping mechanism as that used in the authors work. The latter utilizes the viscous damping of the pressure pulsations:
E
diss=({dot over ({tilde over (V)})}+{dot over (V)}pul)ΔP (2)
and the fact that {dot over (V)}pul-pulses move with the velocity of sound, i.e. about 10-times faster than the fluid pulse. Being reflected at the end of the authors ring type pressure pulsation damper, the {dot over (V)}pul-pulses penetrate several times the energy dissipation section in the time the fluid flow pulse penetrates it only once. Hence, the dissipations are as follows:
Thus
All this is described in the authors patent applications DE 10 2012 212 745 A1 and PCT/EP2013/065318.
The object underlying the present invention is to provide a Common-Rail injection device by which fuel quantity injected into the cylinders can precisely be controlled. In particular, pressure pulsations penetrating through the entire injector system shall be avoided.
The object is solved by the features of claims 1 and 4. Embodiments of the invention are described by the features of claims 2 and 3.
In order to control the volume v of fuel to be injected by the control device there can be controlled a valve, a piezoelectric injection device or the like.
In the present work the authors' layed out, designed, built and employed one of their ring-type pressure pulsation damper to eliminate all pressure pulsations due to the opening and closing of the injector valves. A sketch of the ring slot damper is shown in the
This results, obtained using a commercial injector BOSCH HDEV 5.2 combined with and without damper, are shown in pressure signals in the
Based on the temporal pressure distributions, the instantaneous flow rate during the injection can be obtained using the following equation:
where ΔPCI(t) is the pressure difference before and after the damper (see
The total injected fuel amount, with a closed value between the Common-Rail and the fuel pump, is theoretically only dependent on the pressure loss in the Common-Rail. As shown in the
M
inj=ρf∫0t
Where Minj is the total mass injected, ρf is the fuel density, cs is a system dependent constant and ΔPCR(t) is the time varying pressure drop in the Common-Rail. Thus, by integrating the pressure lost in the Common-Rail during the valve opening time, the total injected mass by one injection can be obtained as Eq. (6).
Hence, two ways are described above to measure the instantaneous flow rates from the pressure signal detected from the pressure difference over the employed pulsation dampers or deduced from the pressure in the Common-Rail.
A manufactured pressure pulsation damper was applied, in a test rig, to test its performance and, at the same time, to develop new methods to determine the injected mass flow rate. As shown in the
A detailed description of the setup of the carriers of the pressure pulsation dampers is shown in the
Note that the pressure oscillations induced by the fuel pump were excluded by closing the valve between the pump and the Common-Rail during the injection. Since the pressure pulsations generated by the fuel pump contribute only in a minor way, compared to the pressure pulsation caused by the opening and closing of the injector valve. Therefore, in order to provide a detailed understanding of the valve-induced pressure pulsations, in the present work, the individual injections were carried out at constant Common-Rail pressure.
As mentioned before, in the authors' verification experiments, the raw signals from the pressure sensors were transmitted to the software MATLAB and a pre-programmed data processing was carried out. The injection time and pressure distributions, during the value opening, were extracted based on the two intersection points of the pressure curves in Common-Rail and the injector, see
The instantaneous flow rate of the injection can be determined using Eq. (5). The obtained results with injection time of 1.5 ms and 2.0 ms are plotted in the
In order to verify this method of injection flow rate measurements, the total injected mass of one injection was measured by collecting the total mass of a number of injections and then by measuring their weight using a high-accurate electric balance. The obtained pressure signals were processed using the upper described method and the obtained results were compared with the experimental measurements in the
Furthermore, due to the fact that the valve between fuel pump and the Common-Rail was closed during this set of experiments, the pressure loss of the Common-Rail during the injection is solely because of its volume loss. Hence, the total injected mass can also be determined by the temporal pressure distribution in the Common-Rail. The points in
Here C is an empirical constant depending on the system set-up
At present, the fuel injection flow rates into Otto engines can only be measured under laboratory conditions, using the HDA-Moehwald or IAV-system, see refs. [14] and [15], both employing the same measurement method. They employ fluid injection into filled chambers, and, if the compressibility of the injected fuel is known, the instantaneous pressure changes in the chamber can be used to measure the instantaneous flow rate of the employed injector
There have been other attempts to measure instantaneous flow rates in strongly time-dependent flows. Such attempts are described in refs. [16], [17] and [18] and are based on center line velocity measurements in pipes, yielding the one information needed to deduce the entire velocity profile at a certain time. With this profile, the instantaneous flow rate through the pipe could be obtained by integration over the computed velocity profile.
The proposed Common-Rail injection device utilizes inexpensive components that could be mounted into the injection systems of automobiles driven by Otto engines in order to permit instantaneous volume flow rates to be measured utilizing the pressure difference signals over a pulsation damper and/or the pressure reduction in the corresponding Common-Rail.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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14193671.6 | Nov 2014 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/077023 | 11/18/2015 | WO | 00 |