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The present invention is related to steam engines, and to internal-combustion engines of the electric spark plug or other electrical ignition type, and to internal-combustion engines of the compression-ignition type, though it has no function or action of ignition or combustion. It is therefore related to CLASS D15, SUBCLASS 2, which is a non-defined “Steam type.”
It is written that when he was a young man, in 1873, Rudolf Diesel enrolled in mechanical engineering studies in Augsburg, Germany. One day, in the physics laboratory at the school, he was shown a device called a “pneumatic lighter.” It was a small cylinder, rather like a bicycle tire pump with a plunger. Its barrel was made of glass so one could see through it, and when the plunger pushed air through it, the air was greatly compressed and consequently acquired a substantial rise in temperature. The astounding aspect of the devise was that when the plunger was pushed, within the barrel of the device one saw, of a sudden, a hot and bright spark, probably from combustion of some dust material or such. The demonstration had a profound impact upon him. Much later he was to convert what he had learned from that experience into his idea of a “heat engine,” which would eventually result in his invention of the internal-combustion compression-ignition engine, ultimately called the “diesel” engine.
Having read of that experience and the application of the principles of its operation to the diesel engine, I, too, was impressed, but I acquired other ideas from it. I saw the creation of heat with a structure of a cylinder and piston as a first step in the function of a machine: a devise to convert heat into mechanical motion. But I also saw that combustion was only one possible process in heat conversion for a machine. I saw a more basic second step, considering the structure and behavior of matter and energy from a more philosophical view. I thought a more direct and more economical conversion of heat to motion could be achieved by creating heat as a first step, but having that heat, rather than put fire to some fuel, facilitate a change of state of some matter in a simple action: from a liquid to a vapor, as from water to steam. Historically, steam was one of the early sources of energy for mechanical motion. I so acquired the idea of making as an invention the below described machine for converting water to steam, and using the steam thus created to effect mechanical motion to do work.
The purpose and objective of the invention is to, through the motion of a piston in a cylinder, intake air into the cylinder and compress it by the moving piston, whereby the temperature of the air is increased (the air occupying with the same amount of substance a much smaller volumetric space), then introducing a small amount of water into the cylinder, the heat of the compressed air being thereby transferred to the water and the water then being changed in state from liquid to vapor, water to steam. The steam then occupies an even greater volumetric space and exerts pressure on the piston, pushing it back in a reciprocal motion. This motion is then converted to a rotary motion in the invention mechanism, and the rotary motion produced may thereby be put to work. The invention proffers the benefits of a new “fuel” (water), very available and at low cost, for powering an engine, while it produces no combustion.
This section is related to the included three sheets of drawings and the figures they present, and to the following section describing the structure and operation of the invention, in one preferred embodiment, as a four-stroke compression engine.
One preferred embodiment of the invention is as the well known four-stroke engine, though a two-stroke engine serves as well as another acceptable embodiment of the invention. The invention has a structure much like that of a compression-ignition engine, a “diesel” engine, and its operation is also rather imitative of such an engine. The three sheets of drawings which form the base for this detailed description present four figures of the engine's structure.
The central area, the core area, is comprised principally of the cylinder block 6, and this structure encloses the cylinder main chamber 7A. The piston 8 moves up and down, in a reciprocal motion, in the cylinder main chamber 7A. The reciprocal motion is captured by the piston 8 having fixed to it a piston pin 9, to which in turn a connecting rod 10 is connected. The connecting rod 10 can be used to transfer the motion of the piston 8 to any item outside of the cylinder main chamber 7A.
The lower area, the crankcase area, is where the linear motion of the piston 8 is transferred to outside of the cylinder main chamber 7A. In the crankcase area the piston's connecting rod 10 extends downward. The end of the connecting rod 10 has a cap 10A mounted to it, and the connecting rod 10 and its cap 10A allow it to be connected to a wheel pin 11, located off-center on a wheel 12. The said wheel pin 11 acts as one end of a lever, the fulcrum being at the wheel center or axel 13, and the wheel 12 is made to revolve about the center 13. The piston 8 moves in a linear motion reciprocally in the cylinder block 6. The linear motion of the piston 8 in the cylinder 6 is converted to a rotary motion about the center or axel 13 of the rotatable wheel 12. The up and down strokes of the piston 8 become thereby half turns of the rotary device. The axel 13 of the rotatable wheel 12 serves as the crankshaft 13 of the engine. The front and back of the engine are extended from the cylinder block 6 downward to provide a connected support between the cylinder block 6 and a bearing assembly that sustains the crankshaft 13. The entire group of elements and connections serve to transform the linear motion of the piston 8 to a rotary motion of the crankshaft 13. An enclosing structure bounds the area as the crankcase 14, and a crankcase gasket 15 seals the connection of the crankcase 14 and its components to the central area of the engine.
The upper area, the head area, is contained as an area separate from, though connected to, the central area. The base 17 of the structure enclosing the head area is separated from the central area by a head gasket 16. The enclosing structure also has a top 18, which, together with the base 17, performs a part in the operation of the valves in the head area. And there are a number of supporting parts, 19A1, 19A2, 19A3, and 19A4, completing the head enclosure. The supporting part 19A4 serves another purpose to the operation of the engine by being open to the outside in a portion of it, thus serving as the intake port 20A for admitting air from the outside to the engine in its intake stroke.
There are other parts related to the head area which are located above or below the enclosed area. Leading the action is the camshaft 21A and the cam 22A. The camshaft 21A is connected or geared to the crankshaft 13, the principal take-off connection to the engine's motive power.
The camshaft 21A moves the wheel-like cam 22A. The cam 22A has one portion of its wheel-like form having a greater radius than the rest, its greatest radial portion being called the cam nose 23A. When the cam 22A turns, the nose 23A pushes against a push lifter 24A which pushes against a push rod 25A. The push rod 25A is guided upward through the enclosed portion of the head assembly. The push rod 25A thereby rises through the base 17 to above the top 18 of the head assembly.
The rising push rod 25A raises in turn the push-up end 30A1 of the intake rocker arm 30A2. The intake rocker arm 30A2 is supported by a pin 30A4, a rotatable fulcrum which thereby mounts the intake rocker arm 30A2. The rotating fulcrum 30A4 transfers the rising motion of the push-up end 30A1 to a descending force against the push-down end 30A3. The intake rocker arm fulcrum 30A4 is fixed in its location by a fulcrum support 30A5, its base 30A6 fixed to the top 18 of the head enclosure structure,
In
In the operation of the engine, the movement of the piston 8 in the operational process of the invention begins at what may be termed the “top” end of the cylinder main chamber 7A. At the top end the cylinder is initially closed. Moving downward in the intake stroke, the piston 8 leaves the cylinder main chamber 7A relatively empty. When the intake valve 40A1 is opened, air is allowed to enter, and is drawn into the cylinder main chamber 7A from outside by the downward motion of the piston 8, the air entering by way of the intake port 20A, an opening in the right end panel 19A4. Near the end of the intake stroke, the intake valve cam 22A rotates, passes out of the nose 23A area, and releases the pressure against the push lifter 24A, allowing the intake valve spring 40A4 to close the intake valve 40A1.
A matching structure and function of the intake stroke exists as the fourth stroke, the “exhaust” stroke. In
There is another opening at the top, shown in FIG, 2 and
In the embodiment portrayed in the drawings there are a number of other parts and assemblies which are not portrayed, though they are important to the successful function of the engine. These are located outside of the engine proper, but are connected to the engine and are supplied their energy of operation from the output of the engine's motion. These include the assemblies transferring motion from the crankshaft 13 to the valve camshafts, as well as to the special camshaft which operates the injection pump 400 and the injector 55, shown in
In the second stroke, the “compression” stroke, the air is compressed by the upward motion of the piston 8, the air thus coming to occupy a much smaller volume of space at the top of the stroke, But just before the piston 8 reaches the top in the compression stroke, the intake valve 40A1 is closed and, at the appropriate moment, the power connection valve 40B1, shown in
An alternative embodiment of the engine would be without the auxiliary chamber 7B and would substitute the injector 55 for the power connection valve 40B1, at that valve's location, This configuration would facilitate for the power stroke a direct injection alternative, water injected directly into cylinder main chamber 7A, just before the power stroke.
When the power stroke nears its end, the cam controlling the power connection valve 40B1, or that controlling the injector 55, would close its operation.
In