The present invention relates to a device for connecting a high-pressure line to an accumulator tank according to the preamble of claim 1.
One way of reducing discharges of emissions from diesel engines is to inject the fuel at very high pressure. A so-called “Common Rail” system is commonly used for effecting injection at a high pressure in the combustion spaces of a diesel engine. A Common Rail system comprises a high-pressure pump which pumps fuel at a very high pressure to an accumulator tank (“Common Rail”). The pressure in the accumulator tank during operation may be 350 bar or higher. The fuel in the accumulator tank is intended to be distributed to all the cylinders of the combustion engine. Fuel from the accumulator tank is injected into the combustion spaces of the respective cylinders by electronically controlled injection means. The fact that the pressure in the accumulator tank and in the high-pressure line which leads the fuel from the high-pressure fuel pump to the accumulator tank is so high imposes severe requirements upon the connection of the high-pressure line to the accumulator tank if it is to remain tight.
A known practice is to provide accumulator tanks with a permanent nozzle to make it possible to connect a high-pressure line, but providing an accumulator tank with a permanent nozzle involves a relatively large amount of work and is therefore expensive, since it has to be welded, forged or soldered firmly to the accumulator tank.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,408,826 refers to a device for connecting a high-pressure line to a cylindrical accumulator tank. The device comprises a connecting means which has a cylindrical hole so that it can be fastened to the accumulator tank. The connecting means also comprises a tubular threaded portion intended to cooperate with a nut in order to fasten an end of the high-pressure line to the accumulator tank. A problem with such a connection arises in cases where the cylindrical hole in the connecting means does not quite match the shape of the outside surface of the accumulator tank. This may result in the accumulator tank acquiring an undesirable oblique position relative to the tubular portion of the connecting means, resulting in the contact surfaces of the high-pressure line and of the accumulator tank assuming a corresponding oblique position when they are brought together. This may lead to play between said contact surfaces in an assembled state, with consequent leakage.
The object of the present invention is provide a device for connecting a high-pressure line to an accumulator tank whereby it is relatively easy to connect the high-pressure line to the accumulator tank and the risk of leakage between a contact surface of the high-pressure line and the contact surface of the accumulator tank is substantially totally eliminated.
The object indicated above is achieved with a device of the kind mentioned in the introduction which is characterised by the features indicated in the characterising part of claim 1. The inside wall surface of the connecting means which defines the hole for accommodating and fastening the cylindrical accumulator tank is thus given a shape which makes mutual pivoting movements possible between the connecting means and the accumulator tank. Making the joint between the fastening means and the connecting means involves moving the contact surface of the high-pressure line towards the contact surface of the accumulator tank. If at an initial stage the contact surfaces are positioned obliquely, the mobility defined above between the connecting means and the accumulator tank results in adjustment of the mutual positions of the contact surfaces until they assume an exactly mutual position, thereby ensuring that the contact surfaces will maintain a correct position relative to one another in a joined state. The pivoting movement between the connecting means and the accumulator tank which eliminates any obliqueness between the contact surfaces is effected when the contact surfaces are pressed against one another. Connecting the high-pressure line to the accumulator tank can thus be effected in a very simple manner. The risk of leakage due to obliquely positioned contact surfaces between the high-pressure line and the accumulator tank at the connection is therefore substantially totally eliminated.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, the first wall surface comprises a region situated at a minimum perpendicular distance from a first central axis which extends in an axial direction through the first hole. This means that a relatively limited region of the inside surface may be in contact with the outside surface of the accumulator tank. The result on both sides of this contact region is spaces between the inside surface of the hole and the outside surface of the accumulator tank. These spaces make mutual pivoting movements possible between the connecting means and the accumulator tank within an angular range defined by the shape of the inside wall surface. With advantage, said plane has a perpendicular extent relative to the first central axis. Said region of the inside wall surface therefore has a substantially annular region curving inwards which is in contact with the outside surface of the accumulator tank. With advantage, said plane has a position such that it has a second central axis extending in an axial direction through the second hole. Such a plane extends centrally through the contact surface of the high-pressure line and the contact surface of the accumulator tank. This makes equivalent pivoting movements of the connecting means possible relative to the accumulator tank on both sides of said plane.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, said first inside wall surface has a curved shape in said axial direction with the result that the perpendicular distance of the wall surface from said first central axis increases continuously with distance from the plane A. This is necessary if pivoting movements of the connecting means relative to the accumulator tank are to be possible within a relatively large angular range. Such an angular range may be of the order of a couple of degrees. With advantage, said first inside wall surface has a curved shape in said axial direction so that its gradient increases continuously relative to said first central axis with distance from the plane A. Stable positioning of the connecting means relative to the accumulator tank is thus facilitated at various angles within an angular range.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, said contact surfaces have a shape which makes centreing of the contact surfaces possible when they are brought towards one another. The contact surfaces have with advantage a corresponding shape so that they are guided to an optimum mutual position when they are brought towards one another. Such a centreing process may involve the connecting means being moved slightly in an axial direction relative to the accumulator tank so that the connecting means is rotated slightly about the accumulator tank and the connection piece pivots a little relative to the accumulator tank. Adjustment of the contact surfaces can thus be effected in all dimensions so that optimum contact and tightness between the contact surfaces can at all times be ensured. Said contact surfaces are preferably substantially conical in shape.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, said fastening means comprises cooperating threads adapted to effecting a threaded connection between the fastening means and the connecting means, thus making it possible for the contact surfaces to be brought towards one another in a linear movement. A threaded connection also makes possible a connection in which the contact surfaces are held together with great force. Said cooperating threads may comprise an internal or external thread on the fastening means which is adapted to cooperating with an opposite internal or external thread of the connecting means. In the one case the fastening means in the form of a nutlike element with internal threads may be screwed firmly onto a tubular portion of the connecting means with external threads. Alternatively, the fastening means in the form of a nutlike element with external threads may be screwed firmly into a tubular portion of the connecting means with internal threads.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention are described below by way of examples, with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
The first step in connecting the high-pressure line 7 to an accumulator tank 8 is to apply the first tubular portion 10a of the connecting means to the cylindrical accumulator tank 8. The connecting means 10 is brought to a position on the accumulator tank 8 in which the aperture 10a3 of the connecting means is situated substantially radially externally to the inlet duct 8b of the accumulator tank. The connecting means 10 may be brought to this position by axial movements and rotary movements relative to the accumulator tank 8. The high-pressure line 7 is thus provided with a fastening means 9 in the form of a nut 9a and a pressure sleeve 9b. The end portion 7b of the high-pressure line is inserted in the hole in the second tubular portion 10b. The internal thread 9a1 of the nut thus comes into contact with the external thread 10bi of the second tubular portion. The nut 9a is thereafter screwed onto the second tubular portion 10b. The nut 9a is thus subjected to a movement which is converted, via pressure sleeve 9b and the pressure surface 7b2, to a linear movement of the end portion 7b of the high-pressure line. The end portion 7b of the high-pressure line is thereby moved in through the aperture 10a3 of the connecting means and into the inlet duct 8b of the accumulator tank. The screwing movement of the nut 9a continues until the conically shaped surface 7b1 of the end portion comes into contact with the corresponding conically shaped surface 8b1 of the inlet duct. The nut 9a is tightened so that said conically shaped surfaces 7b1, 8b1 are pressed together with a predetermined force.
When the conically shaped surface 7b1 of the high-pressure line is pressed against the conically shaped surface 8b1 of the accumulator tank, the connecting means 10 may be subjected to a corrective axial movement and a corrective rotary movement if it is not already in an exact position relative to the accumulator tank 8. The fact that the connecting means 10 according to the present invention is connected to the accumulator tank 8 via said curved first inside surface 10a1 means that the connecting means 10 and the accumulator tank 8 may also be subjected to pivoting movements relative to one another within a restricted range. As the curvature of the first inside surface 10a1 increases continually with distance from said plane A, the connecting means 10 and the accumulator tank 8 may be subjected to pivoting movements to substantially any desired mutual angular positions within the limited range. The connecting means 10 and the accumulator tank 8 may thus be positioned obliquely relative to one another. If the conically shaped contact surfaces 7b1, 8b1 have a certain initial obliqueness during the connecting movement, pressure forces acting between the contact surfaces 7b1, 8b1 may be used to provide a pivoting movement of the connecting means 10 relative to the accumulator tank 8. The connecting means 10 is thereby subjected to a pivoting movement relative to the accumulator tank 8 until the contact surfaces 7b1, 8b1 reach a correct mutual position. It is therefore substantially always possible to bring the contact surfaces 7b1, 8b1 together in such a way that they abut against one another without any obliqueness. There is thus assurance of a tight connection between the high-pressure line 7 and the accumulator tank 8.
The invention is in no way limited to the embodiment to which the drawings refer but may be varied freely within the scopes of the claims. A cylindrical accumulator tank 8 need not necessarily have a circular cross-section but may have substantially any desired cross-sectional shape. The hole in the first tubular portion 10a which accommodates the accumulator tank 8 therefore likewise need not have a circular cross-sectional shape.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0602374-1 | Nov 2006 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/SE07/50766 | 10/23/2007 | WO | 00 | 5/14/2009 |