This invention relates to a set of magnets arranged at an intake line to a combustion device, more specifically magnets arranged at an air intake channel to a combustion engine or a fuel combustion device. The purpose of an embodiment of the invention is either to reduce a fuel consumption of the device while a power output of the device is maintained at the same level, or to increase the power output while the fuel consumption is maintained, or a combination of a balanced reduction in fuel consumption and an increased power output according to the user's needs.
Magnets in connection with fuel inlets to engines are known from several patents. U.S. Pat. No. 4,414,951 shows a set of magnets arranged around a fuel intake line to a carburetor. U.S. Pat. No. 4,755,288 shows a magnetic field generator for magnetically treating fluid flowing through a conduit. U.S. Pat. No. 5,500,121 is a magnetic fluid treatment device. U.S. Pat. No. 6,041,763 is a device for preconditioning fuel before it enters an internal combustion chamber or a furnace. GB 2 122 253 describes a pair of permanent horseshoe magnets arranged on a fuel pipe and spaced apart. U.S. Pat. No. 5,331,807 describes a magnet arranged on the air intake pipe and another magnet arranged on a fuel line to a motor. GB 2 293 782 describes two magnets arranged on a fuel intake line. U.S. Pat. No. 5,615,658 describes a set of magnets arranged on an air inlet.
This invention comprises a new arrangement of magnets for being arranged generally perpendicularly to the air path into a combustion chamber, for reducing the fuel consumption and for possibly reducing the particle emission arising from incomplete combustion. Alternatively, the magnets arranged according to the invention may increase the power of a combustion of a constant feed of fuel as compared to a combustion running without magnets arranged.
The invention is a device for pre-conditioning of combustion air at an inlet path to a combustion chamber, in which said inlet comprises a set of two or more magnetic fields arranged along said inlet path,
The invention may alternatively be summarized as a device for pre-conditioning of combustion air at an inlet path to a combustion chamber, in which said inlet comprises a set of two or more magnetic fields arranged along said inlet path;
Another alternative definition of the invention is a device for pre-conditioning of combustion air at an inlet path to a combustion chamber, in which said inlet comprises a set of two or more magnetic fields arranged along said inlet path,
The invention is illustrated in different embodiments in the attached drawings. The drawings are made for illustrating the invention and shall not be construed so as to be limitations of the invention. The invention is defined in the attached claims.
a illustrates a general principle of the invention, in which air flowing along a desired or given path into a combustion chamber must pass two or more Magnetic fields having each their magnetic moment arranged perpendicularly to said path. The insert in the lower half of the sheet illustrates a plane that is transverse to the air path, seeing along the air path, showing the opposite arrangement of one magnetic moment and a consecutive magnetic moment along the path.
b illustrates a preferred embodiment of the invention, in which three magnetic moments are arranged consecutively and perpendicularly to an inlet pipe for air, said air inlet pipe eventually feeding air into a combustion chamber in a combustion engine. We have discovered that this arrangement results in a reduced fuel consumption for equal energies produced, or higher power output for equal fuel mass consumed.
c is a cross-section of the air supply line (5) as seen along said air path (2) at a position of the first magnet (7a) arranged on an outer surface of an air supply line (5).
d is a cross-section of the air supply line (5) as seen along said air path (2) at a position of the first magnet (7a) arranged on an inner surface of said air supply line (5).
e is a cross-section of the air supply line (5) as seen along said air path (2) at a position of the first magnet (7a) arranged inside the pipe wall of the air supply line (5).
f is a cross-section of the air supply line (5) as seen along said air path (2) at a position of the first magnet (7a) arranged on an outer surface of a flattened section (5s) of the air supply line (5), said flattened section (5s) preferably having the same cross-section area as preceding and subsequent sections of said air supply line (5).
g shows an embodiment according to the invention having the magnets (7a, 7b, 7c), here three in number, arranged along an air inlet pipe (5).
a relates to a larger combustion engine. For a larger fuel combustion device, e.g. a power plant with a steam turbine driven electric generator, a marine engine, or a marine turbine, all requiring a large feed of air, the diameter of an inlet pipe may be on the order of 5 to 50 centimeters, or the pipe wall thickness may be several mm, possibly in magnetically permeable steel, thus reducing the effectively sensed magnetic field acting on the passing air, so other embodiments of magnets may be arranged at the end of the pipe as shown in
b is an end view of the air inlet grille of
c is a side view of the same inlet grille of
d illustrates an undesired effect of magnetic field lines of magnet (7a) returning directly through an adjacent and oppositely directed magnet (7b).
e illustrates a desired effect of magnetic field lines of one magnet (7a) continuing through a neighbour and equally directed magnet (7a).
a is a perspective view of another alternative preferred embodiment of the invention, showing an radial air inlet device for similar usage as for the air inlet illustrated in
b is an end view of the same, here showing one first set of magnets arranged on the peripherally arranged cylindrical sleeve-shaped grille (11) covering an aperture (12) between a pipe's (5) end piece and an oppositely arranged end plate (13), and having their magnetic moments pointing in a common counterclockwise direction, and a second set of magnets arranged outside of the firs set and having their magnetic moments directed in a clockwise direction.
c is a side view corresponding to the side view of
A general principle of the invention is illustrated in the attached
In
b illustrates a preferred embodiment of the invention, in which three magnetic moments are arranged consecutively and perpendicularly to an inlet pipe for air, said air inlet pipe eventually feeding air into a combustion chamber in a combustion engine. We have discovered that this arrangement results in a reduced fuel consumption for equal energies produced, or higher power output for equal fuel mass consumed. However, for a larger fuel combustion device, e.g. a power plant with a steam turbine driven electric generator, a marine engine, or a marine turbine, the embodiment of
c is a cross-section of the air supply line (5) as seen along said air path (2) at a position of the first magnet (7a) arranged on outer surface the air supply line (5). In this view, magnet (7b) is the subsequent magnet for the air to pass. Magnetic moment (10b) is illustrated with an angle α of about 150°.
If the air supply line (5) is of large diameter or particularly permeable magnetic material, the magnetic field (8a, 8b, 8c, . . . ) of magnets (7a, 7b, 7c, . . . ) may be considerably reduced in field force and also significantly deviated in direction, so it may be advantageous to arranged the magnets (7a, 7b, 7c, . . . ) at the inner wall of said air supply line (5), as illustrated in
e is a cross-section of the air supply line (5) as seen along said air path (2) at a position of the first magnet (7a) arranged inside the pipe wall of the air supply line (5). This embodiment is possible in arrangements using moulded-in magnets in a synthetic, non-magnetic material like plastic of polyethylene which may be used in the production of air supply pipes. Like above, it may be advantageous to provide curved surface magnets both in order for providing a rounded inner wall of the pipe and to provide a slender pipe. Please notice that for the embodiments shown in
f is a cross-section of the air supply line (5) as seen along said air path (2) at a position of the first magnet (7a) arranged on an outer surface of a flattened section (5s) of the air supply line (5), said flattended section (5s) preferably having the same cross-section area as preceding and subsequent “ordinary” shaped sections of said air supply line (5). This flattened section (5s) of air supply line (5) provides closer passage to a magnetic pole (Sa or Na, Nb or Sb, . . . ) for a larger proportion of the air passing through the air supply line (5, 5s). As the magnetic field is stronger adjacent to a magnetic pole (Sa, Na, Nb or Sb, . . . ) of a magnet (7a, 7b . . . ), more air will be subject to a stronger field using a flattened section (5s) of the air supply line than for using a round pipe for the air supply line (5), given a flat surface of the magnet (7a, 7b, . . . ).
One embodiment according to the invention is provided having the magnets (7a, 7b, 7c), here three in number, arranged along an air inlet pipe (5) as illustrated in
a , b, and c and
a is a perspective view an alternative preferred embodiment of the invention, showing an air axial air inlet (12) for a large engine or a large combustion engine or a combustion device for e.g. a bitumen heater for heating asphalt before mixing with rock mass and filler during production of asphalt e.g for road paving. The preferably circular inlet (12) is shown covered by an inlet grille (11) for preventing undesired passage of dust, leaves, cloths, or any object other than air. Such combustion devices may also comprise a marine engine or turbine, a marine generator, or a steam boiler for a power plant turbine, or similar.
b is an end view of the air inlet grille of
c is a side view of the same inlet grille of
a is a perspective view of another alternative preferred embodiment of the invention, showing a radial air inlet device for similar usage as for the air inlet illustrated in
b is an end view of the same, here showing one set of magnets arranged on the peripherally arranged cylindrical sleeve-shaped grille (11) covering an aperture (12) between a pipe's (5) end piece and an end plate (13), and having their magnetic moments pointing in a common clockwise peripheral direction, and another set of magnets arranged outside of the above mentioned set of magnets, and having their magnetic moments directed in an opposite, counterclockwise direction. Similar to
c is a side view corresponding to the side view of
The device according to the invention may advantageously use magnets (7) comprising neodymium of a quality called N36, N34 or N38 due to field strength and temperature resistance, but may otherwise use magnets comprising cobalt or strontium
Two different prototype embodiments of the invention have been made for testing whether there is a reduction in fuel consumption or not. One test has been conducted using a car under laboratory conditions, and an other test has been conducted using buses in ordinary traffic.
The laboratory test was conducted in three phases in an approved vehicle testing laboratory on an ordinary passenger car. The three phases comprised three test drive cycles in which the first set was called “A”, in which no magnets were used, the second test was called “B” using magnets arranged according to the invention, and the third and, for the time being, preliminarily final test, was called “A” again, was conducted without magnets, and delayed for several thousand kilometers of ordinary use after the “B” tests. Fuel consumption and particle emissions were measured for all three sets “A”, “B”, and “A” tests, each comprising three test runs. The tests have been made by the independent test laboratory AVL MTC at Haninge in Stockholm, Sweden. Each test run is a simulation of a driving pattern of exactly defined accelerations and retardations, with driving speeds between 0 and 120 km/h, called a “European Driving Cycle” EDC, and conducted in the laboratory by trained pilots. Before testing, the car is taken inside the laboratory and having the fuel system cleaned and refilled with a reference fuel. The test car is then left overnight in the laboratory at a constant standard temperature of 22 C before being tested. The test car used is a Volkswagen Passat TDI 1900 2003-model with automatic transmission. At the time of writing, two of the three phases have been reported from the AVL MTC laboratory, as cited in tables 1 and 2 below:
As can be seen from the left part of the sheet of
As can be seen from the right part of the sheet of
Another embodiment of the invention was arranged in ordinary diesel buses used on city lines of Gøteborgs Spårvägar in Gothenburg, Sweden. The test months were October 2002, January 2003, March 2003, April 2003, May 2003 and finally July 2003. Initially, 9 buses, bus no. 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508 and 510 were used in the experiment, and all continued up to May 2003, whereafter two buses, i.e. no. 503 and 505, went out of the experimental series for the last month. Magnets were arranged according to the invention on 3. March 2003, and the results from that month period have been omitted from the graph due to the transition for bus no. 501, 502, 503, 505, and 508 from “without magnets” to “with magnets”. For reasons unknown to us, the buses running without magnets up to 3. March 2003 do have a higher average consumption before May 2003. However, the consumption remains almost unchanged (after a drop in May 2003) after having magnets arranged in march. Contrarily, the consumption for buses without magnets during the entire test increases sharply after May 2003.
Table. 3: Diesel Consumption in l/10 km for 9 Buses, With and Without Magnets.
(The table has been inserted in the drawings part on sheet 14/14 due to the width of the table.)
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10571676 | Mar 2006 | US |
Child | 12693087 | US |