The invention relates to a device and method for controlling the flow speed of a fluid flow in a hydraulic line.
In a multitude of applications, it is necessary to control the speed of a fluid flow inside a hydraulic line, for example in order to set a desired flow speed and/or to eliminate or at least smooth undesirable pressure pulsations and/or to reflect pressure pulsations at least in one flow direction. Hydraulic systems in which the flow speed must be controlled in this manner are present, among other things, in motor vehicles, for example in fuel injection systems, a power steering system, and a brake system. In these highly dynamic systems, the elimination or smoothing of pressure pulsations is of particular importance.
Conventional control devices such as control valves function by means of changing the effective internal geometry in terms of flow mechanics. In other words, a control valve of this kind contains a valve element that can be moved between at least two positions. A conventional control valve therefore contains at least one physically movable component. In highly dynamic processes, a conventional control valve involving this kind of mechanics is subjected to powerful wear phenomena.
The control device according to the invention with the defining characteristics of claim 1 and the control method according to the invention with the defining characteristics of claim 10 have the advantage over the prior art that no mechanical components are required in order to control the flow speed, i.e. no physically moving components are required. Consequently, the invention functions almost without wear. Moreover, a valve according to the invention does not require any moving parts, permitting implementation of extremely short switching times. This results in clear advantages for the control device and for a hydraulic system equipped with it.
The present invention is based on the general concept of producing a homogeneous two-phase mixture in a line segment provided for this purpose and setting the respective desired flow speed by varying the mass percentage of the gas phase in the two-phase mixture. In this connection, the invention makes use of the knowledge that within a homogeneous two-phase mixture, the speed of sound depends heavily on the mass percentage of the gas phase so that even very low mass percentages of the gas phase can suffice to significantly reduce the speed of sound of the two-phase mixture. For example, in a mixture of water and water vapor, the speed of sound of approximately 1400 m/s when the mixture contains no gas phase drops to approximately 16 m/s when the mixture contains a gas phase mass percentage of approximately 10−3. Also important for the invention is the consideration that the speed of sound of the two-phase mixture more or less represents the maximum achievable flow speed since supersonic flows result in extremely high shock losses.
In order to adjust a desired flow speed with the aid of the control device according to the invention, a two-phase mixture is thus intentionally produced in which the mass percentage of the gas phase is selected so that the resulting speed of sound of the two-phase mixture corresponds to the desired flow speed to be set.
In addition, a control device of this kind can be used in a particularly simple fashion to eliminate or at least smooth pressure pulsations. Because the mass percentage of the gas phase in the two-phase mixture, by means of the resulting speed of sound of the two-phase mixture, defines a maximum permissible flow speed through the line segment of the control device. Subsonic flow speeds can consequently pass through the line segment in a more or less undamped fashion, whereas supersonic flow speeds can be powerfully damped, i.e. significantly smoothed, by the extremely high shock losses. The desired smoothing or elimination occurs because pressure pulses have a locally excessive speed.
In a suitable fashion, the line segment can have a defined cross-sectional constriction or can itself represent a defined cross-sectional constriction within the hydraulic line. With the aid of such a cross-sectional constriction, it is possible to locally increase the flow speed in the fluid flow in the region of the control device inside the hydraulic line in order to thus more quickly arrive in the range of the speed of sound of the two-phase mixture even at lower flow speeds to the rest of the hydraulic line. It is thus advantageously possible to adapt the control device to the given control range.
In a modification, the two-phase mixture is suitably produced in the region of the cross-sectional constriction in order to be able to adjust the flow speed independently of the flow direction.
In another embodiment, the line segment adjoining the cross-sectional constriction can have a two-phase zone with an enlarged cross-section; the two-phase mixture is then produced in the region of this two-phase zone. In an embodiment of this kind, the control of the flow speed depends on the instantaneous flow direction. Initially, the mass content of the gas phase defines the maximum flow speed that can be set. If the two-phase zone is then situated downstream of the cross-sectional constriction, then it is in fact possible to set speeds within the cross-sectional constriction that exceed the speed of sound of the two-phase mixture. But if the two-phase zone is situated upstream of the cross-sectional constriction, then the fluid flow causes the two-phase mixture to also extend into the cross-sectional constriction. Since higher speeds are present there, the speed of sound of the two-phase mixture is reached much, much earlier so that in this flow direction, the control device already exerts its inhibiting or damping action at lower flow speeds in the rest of the hydraulic line. An embodiment of this kind can in particular achieve a direction-dependent reflection of pressure pulsations.
Other important defining characteristics and advantages of the present invention ensue from the dependent claims, the drawings, and the accompanying description of the figures.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown in the drawings and will be explained in detail below; components that are the same or are functionally equivalent have been provided with the same reference numerals.
All depictions are schematic in nature.
According to
The control device 1 is also equipped with a generator apparatus 4, which makes it possible to produce a homogeneous two-phase mixture in the fluid in the line segment 2. The two-phase mixture formed in the generator apparatus 4 is symbolized in the figures by a crosshatching and is labeled with the reference numeral 5. In this way, during operation, the generator apparatus 4 forms a two-phase zone 6 inside the line segment 2, in which the two-phase mixture 5 is present and which is indicated by a curly brace and labeled with the reference numeral 6 in the figures.
In a suitable fashion, the line segment 2 inside the hydraulic line 3 constitutes a definite cross-sectional constriction. To this end, in the embodiments depicted here, the line segment 2 is equipped with a definite cross-sectional constriction 7 that is likewise indicated by a curly brace. The cross-sectional constriction 7 in the embodiment according to
The homogeneous two-phase mixture 5 can be produced in essentially any way in the region of the two-phase zone 6. The embodiments explained below are therefore merely presented as illustrative examples and do not limit universal applicability.
In one useful embodiment, the generator apparatus 4 can produce the gas phase of the two-phase mixture 5 directly from the fluid phase of the fluid flow being transported in the hydraulic line 3. For example, the generator apparatus 4 can excite the fluid in the two-phase zone 6 in order to produce the gas phase, for example by correspondingly subjecting it to ultrasonic radiation or microwaves. In this case, the gas phase is generated directly in the fluid phase so that the homogeneous two-phase mixture 5 is produced directly in the fluid flow.
Alternatively, first a partial flow of the fluid can be diverted, which is then vaporized to produce the gas phase; the gas phase thus produced is then conveyed back to the fluid phase to produce the homogenous two-phase mixture 5.
According to
So that the generator apparatus 4 is able to introduce the generated gas phase 11 into the two-phase zone 6 for the production of the homogenous two-phase mixture 5, in the embodiments shown here, the line segment 2 is equipped with a gas-permeable wall 12 in the vicinity of the two-phase zone 6. With a corresponding gas pressure in the bypass chamber 8, the gas phase 11 can permeate the gas-permeable wall 12, thus producing the two-phase mixture 5 in the two-phase zone 6. It is possible to achieve the required homogeneity of the two-phase mixture 5 through a suitable embodiment of the gas-permeable wall 12 and/or of the flow routing within the two-phase zone 6. For example, it is possible to make the wall 12 gas-permeable by embodying it in a perforated or porous form. For example, the wall is composed of a porous ceramic material or of a membrane that is permeable to gas, but impermeable to fluid.
The control device 1 according to the present invention serves to control the flow speed of a fluid flow in the hydraulic line 3. Since the line segment 2 within the hydraulic line 3 constitutes or contains the cross-sectional constriction 7, this determines the location of the greatest flow speed. The speed of sound of the pure fluid phase thus defines the maximum flow speed that can be set with the aid of the control device 1.
The invention is based on the knowledge that within the two-phase mixture 5, the speed of sound depends heavily on the mass percentage of the gas phase so that even a comparatively low mass percentage of the gas phase results in a significant reduction in the speed of sound. The minimum speed that can be set then defines the minimum flow speed that can be set with the aid of the control device 1.
In order to be able to set a desired flow speed in the fluid flow, the control device 1 is also equipped with a control unit 13, which actuates the generator apparatus 4 via a corresponding control line 14. The control unit 13 is designed so that it can vary the mass percentage of the gas phase in the two-phase mixture 5 depending on the desired flow speed. For example, the dependence of the speed of sound of the two-phase mixture 5 on the mass percentage of the gas phase is stored in the form of a characteristic curve or a mathematical formula in a memory in the control unit 13. Likewise, a control loop can be provided, whose control variable is the mass percentage of the gas phase and whose reference variable is the flow speed. By means of a desired/actual comparison of the flow speed, it is then possible to determine whether it is necessary to introduce more gas into the fluid in order to reduce the flow speed or whether it is necessary to throttle the introduction of the gas phase into the fluid phase in order to increase the flow speed.
The embodiment of the control device 1 in
The control device 1I can, for example, be used to set a predetermined flow speed. To this end, the control unit 13 triggers the generator apparatus 4 so that a two-phase mixture 5 develops in the two-phase zone 6, whose speed of sound corresponds to the desired flow speed to be set. Then the fluid flow transported in the hydraulic line 3 can no longer exceed the set flow speed since it corresponds to the speed of sound in the two-phase mixture 5 so that extremely high shock resistances must be overcome in order to exceed the sound barrier.
In the embodiment in
The control device 1I can also be used to damp, smooth, or eliminate pressure pulsations. In a pressure pulse, a locally superelevated speed prevails, which with a correspondingly adjusted two-phase mixture 5, is greater than the speed of sound of the two-phase mixture 5. Correspondingly, an incoming pressure wave cannot pass through the two-phase phase zone 6 or is only able to do so in a significantly damped fashion. With the aid of a mass percentage of the gas phase in the two-phase mixture 5, the control unit 13 can thus set a limit speed up to which oscillations in the flow speed can be tolerated and only pressure pulses with a higher speed are damped.
If the control device 1I simultaneously controls the flow speed inside the hydraulic line 3, then each pressure pulse produces a speed that exceeds the speed of sound of the two-phase mixture 5, thus permitting damping or elimination of every pressure pulse. The smoothing, damping, or elimination of pressure pulses in the embodiment of the control device 1I in
The embodiment of the control device 1 in
The essential differences between the control device 1II according to
For example, the control unit 13 sets a particular mass percentage of the gas phase in the two-phase mixture 5. This results in a particular speed of sound, which defines the maximum flow speed in the hydraulic line 3.
In the flow direction 15 shown in
In fact, the control device 1II according to
By way of example,
In such a “common rail” system, the individual injectors 22 interact with one another via the common high-pressure line 20. For example, the opening and in particular the closing of one injector 22 causes a pressure wave that propagates via the branch line 21 into the high-pressure line 20 and via the remaining branch lines 21 to the other injectors 22. Since the individual injectors 22 are associated with different cylinders of the engine, they thus operate independently of one another, at any rate not simultaneously. Correspondingly, the above-mentioned pressure pulses result in undesirable pressure fluctuations in the injectors 22, which has a disadvantageous impact on the precision of the injection process, for example with regard to the injection quantity and/or the injection pressure. Moreover, the fuel pump 18, particularly when interacting with a pressure control valve 23, can produce pressure pulses that propagate via the supply line 19 to the high-pressure line 20 and can travel through it to the individual injectors 22.
With the aid of the control device 1 according to the present invention, it is now possible, within such a “common rail system” to achieve a pulsation-free system region that is symbolized by the dashed lines in
In addition to the particular use explained here for the control device 1 according to the present invention, there are also any number of other possible uses, for example in a power steering system of a motor vehicle. In such power steering systems, a damping hose or corresponding pulsation damper is used due to noise considerations. Control devices 1 according to the present invention can be used to damp and/or reflect pressure pulsations in order, for example, to replace such a damping hose or pulsation damper. Another possible use, for example, is in a brake system of a motor vehicle. Undesirable pressure pulsations can occur there, too, which can be damped or eliminated with the aid of the control device 1 according to the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102004037537.2 | Aug 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/53463 | 7/18/2005 | WO | 2/5/2007 |