Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6283154
-
Patent Number
6,283,154
-
Date Filed
Monday, February 28, 200024 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, September 4, 200123 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Shaver; Kevin
- Keasel; Eric
Agents
- Lerner; Herbert L.
- Greenberg; Laurence A.
- Stemer; Werner H.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 251 12919
- 251 12916
- 137 62565
- 137 59617
- 137 630
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A control valve contains a housing with an inlet connection, an outlet connection and a return connection. A first seat valve with a first valve body and a second seat valve with a second valve body are disposed in the housing. The first seat valve is disposed between the outlet connection and the return connection and is normally closed and the second seat valve is disposed between the inlet connection and the outlet connection and is normally open. The second valve body is disposed coaxially in the first valve body.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a control valve for a reservoir injection system for diesel engines. The control valve has a housing with a valve chamber, an inlet connection, an outlet connection, a return connection and a first valve body disposed in the valve chamber. Such a configuration is known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,407,131.
A diesel engine with direct injection is the internal combustion engine with the highest thermodynamic efficiency. With respect to the fuel injection, different technologies are employed for various engines. Systems with pressure intensification in the fuel injector are used, particularly in the commercial vehicle sector. An example of a fuel injector with pressure-intensifying transmission is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,460,329. In this publication, the fuel reaches the pressure intensifier in the injector via an electromagnetic control valve configured as a spool valve. The fuel is put under high pressure by the pressure intensifier at fixed times or crank angles by use of electromagnetic activation of the control valve. In the conventional manner, the fuel put under high pressure then acts in such a way that the valve needle of the injector is raised from its seat and frees the path for the fuel to the injection nozzle so that the fuel is injected into the combustion chamber of the diesel engine.
Another type of control valve for a fuel injector with a cam-operated pressure intensifier is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,407,131. In this case, the control valve is a seat valve, which is normally open and which can be closed with the aid of an electromagnet. In the open condition, the fuel supplied from the tank by a low-pressure fuel feed pump flows back through the control valve to the tank.
Fuel injection into the combustion chamber of a cylinder of the diesel engine is initiated by an electrical or electronic engine control activating the electromagnet of the control valve. The magnetic force generated by the electromagnet causes the control valve to close. The fuel in the injector, which can no longer drain away, is consequently put under pressure by the cam-actuated piston of the pressure intensifier. The injection begins when the pressure has reached the specified nozzle needle opening pressure. The fuel injection is ended by the electromagnet no longer being supplied with current. After the collapse of the electromagnetic field, the seat valve opens again so that the fuel can again drain away and the pressure in the injector falls.
The opening and closing of the seat valve naturally takes place in correlation with the positions and movements of the piston in the cylinder of the engine and of the pressure intensifier piston of the injector, which is in mechanical connection with the crankshaft.
An injection pump appliance is known from British Patent Specification GB 1 470 166, which describes a control valve for use in a fuel reservoir injection system with a fuel injector, upstream of which is fitted the control valve. The control valve has a housing with a valve chamber, in which an inlet connection and an outlet connection and a return connection are provided. An axially movable, first valve body, which forms a first seat valve (which selectively creates a fluid connection between the outlet connection and the return connection), is disposed in the valve chamber. In addition, a second valve body, which forms a second seat valve, is provided in the valve chamber of the control valve. The first seat valve is disposed between the outlet connection and the return connection and is normally closed. The second seat valve is disposed between the inlet connection and the outlet connection and is normally open.
The known configurations have the disadvantage that in the case of both the spool valves and the seat valves, the sealing function is insufficient. The spool valves are only insufficiently sealed over the sealing gap and, in the case of the seat valves, the sealing function is undertaken by the seat in one direction only.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a control valve for use in a reservoir injection system for a diesel engine which overcomes the above-mentioned disadvantages of the prior art devices of this general type, in which the sealing function is improved.
With the foregoing and other objects in view there is provided, in accordance with the invention, a control valve for use in a fuel reservoir injection system having a fuel injector with a pressure intensifier fitted upstream of the control valve, the control valve including:
a housing having a valve chamber formed therein, an inlet connection, an outlet connection, and a return connection;
a first valve body disposed and axially movable in the valve chamber, the first valve body forming a first seat valve which can selectively create a fluid connection between, the outlet connection and the return connection; and
a second valve body disposed in the valve chamber and forming a second seat valve, the first seat valve disposed between the outlet connection and the return connection and being normally closed, the second seat valve disposed between the inlet connection and the outlet connection and being normally open.
The above object is consequently achieved, in accordance with the invention, in that in the case of the control valve, which contains the housing with the valve chamber, the inlet connection, the outlet connection, the return connection and the first valve body which is axially movable in the valve chamber. The valve body forms a first seat valve that can selectively create a fluid connection between the inlet connection and the outlet connection or between the outlet connection and the return connection. The second valve body is provided and forms the second seat valve, the first seat valve is disposed between the outlet connection and the return connection and being normally closed and the second seat valve is disposed between the inlet connection and the outlet connection and being normally open.
The second valve body is advantageously configured coaxially in the first valve body. The second valve body can be connected to an armature plate, which is opposite to a magnet unit. In the case of an activation of the magnet unit, the second valve body moves first and closes the second seat valve before the first valve body, entrained by the second valve body, moves and opens the first seat valve.
The control valve according to the invention is, therefore, a pressure-balancing valve with two seat valves disposed one within the other. The two seat valves can be manufactured independently of one another. When the control valve is assembled, the two seat valves are then disposed in pairs and adjusted. The configuration provides the advantage of a functional improvement by pressure balance in each position of the valve. This minimizes the adjustment forces necessary. In addition, the two seat valves of the control valve according to the invention can be manufactured and adjusted independently of one another, so that the manufacture of the control valve is simple. The valve opening is variable, the two seat valves open and close one after the other and not together so that it is not necessary to take account of complex transition functions.
Other features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in a control valve for use in a reservoir injection system for a diesel engine, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.
The construction and method of operation of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
The single FIGURE of the drawing is a diagrammatic, sectional view through a control valve for a fuel injector.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring now to the single FIGURE of the drawing in detail, there is shown a diagrammatic, sectional view of a ⅔-type control valve
10
for use in a reservoir injection system for diesel engines. The injection system operates with fuel injectors having pressure intensifiers. Each cylinder of the diesel engine is provided with a fuel injector of this type.
The control valve
10
contains a valve housing
12
with a valve chamber
14
. The housing
12
has an inlet connection
16
and an outlet connection
18
. A fuel supply line from a non-illustrated pressure reservoir, which contains fuel at a certain pressure, is connected to the inlet connection
16
. From the outlet connection
18
, the fuel reaches, as required, the pressure intensifier of a non-illustrated fuel injector. In the valve housing
12
, both the inlet connection
16
and the outlet connection
18
open into the valve chamber
14
. In the embodiment shown of the control valve
10
, the inlet connection
16
opens into a peripheral annular groove
16
a
in a wall of the valve chamber
14
and the outlet connection
18
opens into an annular groove
18
a
in the wall of the valve chamber
14
. The annular groove
18
a
being at an axial distance from the annular groove
16
a.
The valve housing
12
has, in addition, a return connection
19
, which likewise opens into the valve chamber
14
and creates the connection to an unpressurized fuel return. The opening of the return connection
19
into the valve chamber
14
is spatially separated from the inlet and outlet connections
16
,
18
or the annular grooves
16
a
,
18
a.
A first valve body
20
is disposed in the valve chamber
14
so that it has limited axial movement. The first valve body
20
has a conical valve surface
22
in the form of a peripheral shoulder on the valve body
20
, which valve surface
22
can come into contact with a valve seat
24
, matched to it, in the form of a relief in the wall of the valve chamber
14
. The contact between the valve surface
22
and the valve seat
24
is effected by a compression spring
26
.
The valve surface
22
on the first valve body
20
and the valve seat
24
are disposed in such a way that when the valve surface
22
is raised from the valve seat
24
, there is a fluid connection through the valve chamber
14
between the outlet connection
18
(or groove
18
a
) and the return connection
19
. If the valve surface
22
is in contact with the valve seat
24
, the fluid connection between the outlet connection
18
and the return connection
19
is interrupted by the first valve body
20
. Together with the valve surface
22
, which is formed on it, and the associated valve seat
24
, the first valve body
20
therefore forms a first seat valve in the control valve
10
. The first seat valve is disposed between the outlet connection
18
and return connection
19
and is normally closed.
A second valve body
40
is inserted coaxially into the first valve body
20
. For this purpose, the first valve body
20
is provided with an internal cavity
28
, into which the second valve body
40
is inserted in such a way that its axial movement is limited. The second valve body
40
has a conical valve surface
42
in the form of a peripheral shoulder on the valve body
40
, which surface
42
can come into contact on a valve seat
44
, matched to it, in the form of a relief in the wall of the cavity
28
in the first valve body
20
.
The valve surface
42
on the second valve body
40
and the valve seat
44
are disposed in such a way that if the valve surface
42
is lifted from the valve seat
44
, there is a fluid connection between the inlet connection
16
and the outlet connection
18
. For this purpose, the wall of the first valve body
20
is provided (in the flow direction) with openings
30
,
32
above and below the valve seat
44
, through which openings
30
,
32
the fuel can flow from the inlet connection
16
via the annular groove
16
a
into the cavity
34
and through which the fuel can flow out of the cavity
34
via the annular groove
18
a
to the outlet connection
18
.
Together with the valve surface
42
formed on it and the associated valve seat
44
, the second valve body
40
therefore forms the second seat valve
44
in the control valve
10
. The second seat valve
44
is disposed between the inlet connection
16
and the outlet connection
18
and is normally open.
A compression spring
46
between the second valve body
40
and the valve housing
12
ensures that the valve surface
42
is not in contact with the valve seat
44
in the initial condition and that, therefore, the second seat valve
44
is normally open.
The valve surface
42
on the second valve body
40
points, axially, in the opposite direction to the valve surface
22
on the first valve body
20
.
An armature plate
50
is fastened to the second valve body
40
, for example by a bolt
48
, in the axial extension of the two coaxial valve bodies
20
and
40
. The armature plate
50
is located opposite to a magnet unit
52
with an electromagnet. The electromagnet can be activated by a non-illustrated control unit. When current is supplied to the magnet unit
52
, the armature plate
50
, and the second valve body
40
connected to it, are attracted axially in the direction of the magnet unit
52
against the action of the compression spring
46
.
In the initial condition, which is represented in the drawing, the medium (oil or fuel) in a non-illustrated reservoir is in connection with the pressure intensifier in the injector via the inlet connection
16
, the open second seat valve
44
with the valve body
40
and the outlet connection
18
. In this condition, no current is supplied to the magnet unit
52
and the compression spring
26
presses the valve surface
22
on the first valve body
20
into its valve seat
24
, whereas the compression spring
46
raises the valve surface
42
on the second valve body
40
from the valve seat
44
. The transmission piston of the pressure intensifier is then located in the position in which it is extended downward.
The injection procedure is prepared by a supply of current to the magnet unit
52
. The armature plate
50
, which is bolted to the second valve body
40
, is attracted by the magnet unit
52
so that, firstly, the valve surface
42
of the second valve body
40
comes into contact with its valve seat
44
and, by this, the second seat valve
44
in the control valve
10
is closed. The second valve body
40
subsequently entrains the first valve body
20
, so that the valve surface
22
on the first valve body
20
is raised from its seat
24
and the first seat valve
24
in the control valve
10
opens. The transmission piston of the pressure intensifier is then connected to the return. A return spring (not shown) displaces the pressure medium to the return.
The termination of the flow of current to the magnet unit
52
introduces the beginning of the injection. Because of this, the armature plate
50
falls away again from the magnet unit
52
and the first seat valve
24
with the valve body
20
closes, whereas the second seat valve
44
with the valve body
40
between the inlet connection
16
and the outlet connection
18
opens. As in the initial condition, the system pressure is therefore again located on the transmission piston and displaces the fuel quantity stored in front of it via the injection line to the injection nozzle. The injection then terminates when the closing pressure of the nozzle is reached.
Claims
- 1. A control valve for use in a fuel reservoir injection system having a fuel injector with a pressure intensifier fitted upstream of the control valve, the control valve comprising:a housing having a valve chamber formed therein, an inlet connection, an outlet connection, and a return connection; a first valve body disposed and axially movable within said valve chamber, said first valve body forming a first seat valve which can selectively create a fluid connection between said outlet connection and said return connection; a second valve body forming a second seat valve, said first seat valve disposed between said outlet connection and said return connection and being normally closed, said second seat valve disposed between said inlet connection and said outlet connection and being normally open; and an armature plate and a magnet unit disposed opposite said armature plate, said second valve body being connected to said armature plate; wherein during an activation of said magnet unit, said second valve body moves first and closes said second seat valve before said first valve body moves, entrained by said second valve body, and opens said first seat valve.
- 2. The control valve according to claim 1, wherein said second valve body is disposed coaxially within said first valve body.
- 3. The control valve according to claim 1, wherein said fuel reservoir injection system operates within a diesel engine.
- 4. The control valve according to claim 1, further comprisinga valve housing forming a valve seat for said first valve body, whereby said first valve body forms a valve seat for said second valve body.
- 5. The control valve according to claim 4, further comprising a compression spring for pressing said first valve body downward into contact with a corresponding valve seat.
- 6. The control valve according to claim 5, further comprising a second compression spring for keeping said second valve body downward and away from said corresponding valve seat.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
199 08 418 |
Feb 1999 |
DE |
|
US Referenced Citations (8)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
0823550A1 |
Feb 1998 |
EP |
2157496 |
Jun 1973 |
FR |
1470166 |
Apr 1977 |
GB |