In fuel injection systems for direct-injection internal combustion engines, fuel injectors that contain one or more electrically triggerable valves are employed. For instance, an electrically triggerable magnet valve or piezoelectric valve may be provided for controlling a needle valve and thus for controlling the course of injection. Further valves may be used, for instance for a pressure boost. Separately testing the functionality of the various valves and the components connected to these valves or controlled by these valves, however, is often a challenge. The electrical contacting of these valves, however, is often a challenge.
Since the electrically triggerable valve or valves are typically accommodated in the interior of an injector body, the electrical contacting of these electrically triggerable valves presents considerable technical difficulties. In many cases, on top of the injector body there is an electrical contact that can be connected to a corresponding control system and power supply system located outside the injector body. Via this contact (which may be either a multiple plug, or a plurality of individual plugs), all the electrically triggerable valves received in the interior of the injector body are as a rule triggered. In the interior of the injector body, this electrical contact must be connected to corresponding contacts of the electrically triggerable valve or valves of the injection system. This connection is typically done by means of flexible electrical cables and a simple soldering process.
This method for electrically contacting the electrically triggerable valves is associated with various disadvantages, however. For instance, the method is technically quite labor-intensive, since typically the cables must be initially soldered by hand against the corresponding electrical contacts. In practice, this method step requires great effort and is very time-consuming. Moreover, the connection between the electrically triggerable valves and the electrical contact on the injector body can be undone again only with difficulty. For removing or disassembling the injector body, the undone soldered connections must typically be unsoldered again. Such a labor-intensive process makes it uneconomical to repair the injectors or replace individual parts of the injector body.
According to the invention, a fuel injector for injecting fuel into a combustion chamber of an internal combustion engine is therefore proposed which avoid the described disadvantages of the prior art. The fuel injector has an injector body contact, at least one electrically triggerable valve let into the injector body, and at least one electrical injector body contact accessible from an outside of the injector body. At least one of the electrically triggerable valves should have at least one electrical valve body contact. A fundamental concept of the present invention is to use a solid conductor for the electrical connection between the at least one valve contact and the at least one injector body contact, which solid conductor, in contrast to a simple cable or wire, does not become deformed under its own weight and is contactable via plug contacts, for instance, instead of a soldered connection. Slight plastic deformation of the solid conductor under its own weight and under additional exertion of force can be tolerated, if the design of the solid conductor remains substantially unchanged. The at least one solid conductor thus represents a kind of artificial lengthening of the electrical valve contacts.
The at least one solid conductor and the at least one electrical valve contact are connected via an electrically conductive connection and/or via at least one electrically conductive connecting element. In the latter case, the at least one connecting element is connected to the at least one solid conductor and the at least one electrical valve contact via a respective electrically conductive connection.
With the concept of the invention, it is possible particularly in a simple way to attain fuel injectors which can be disassembled into a plurality of individual parts and reassembled without being destroyed. The injector body contact and the at least one electrically triggerable valve can be disposed in different individual parts, and the at least one solid conductor is reversibly connected to at least one injector body contact. This connection can be made in particular via a plug connection. On one end, for instance, the solid conductor is connected solidly or in a way in which it can be undone only with difficulty to a valve contact, and on the other end it is connected detachably to an injector body contact. Along the way from the valve contact to the injector body contact, the solid conductor may extend through further individual parts of the injector body, particularly through one or more conductor conduits. The solid conductor can then be electrically insulated from the injector body by means of a shrink-fit hose, for instance.
The fuel injector described makes a greatly simplified production process possible, compared to the prior art. First, the individual parts described are produced individually and tested. Next, the at least one valve contact is joined solidly or in a way that can be undone only with difficulty to a solid conductor. Then the individual parts are joined together to make a single injector body, and the at least one solid conductor is connected reversibly to the at least one injector body contact.
The invention is described in further detail below in terms of the exemplary embodiments shown in the drawings. Identical reference numerals designate components that are the same as one another or correspond to one another in their function.
Individually, the drawings show:
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The injector body 110 furthermore has two magnet valves 111, 112: a first magnet valve 111, disposed in the control module 132, for controlling the pressure boost in the pressure booster module 138, and a second magnet valve 112, disposed in the nozzle module 140, for controlling the actual injection event via an injection valve member (not shown).
The separation between the control module 132 and the rest of the injector body 110 along the first parting line 124 is of considerable practical significance. This separability or disconnectability has the effect that the (“dry”) control module 132 and the (“wet”) part of the injector body 110 located below the first parting line 124 can be designed, produced and tested separately, and then put together. Moreover, because of this separability, individual components of the injector body 110 can easily be replaced for maintenance purposes, for instance, which is in accordance with the “system repair concept” (SRC).
The magnet valve 112 in the nozzle module 140 is electrically triggerable via two electrical valve contacts 114. The injector body 110, on its upper end, has an electrical injector body contact 116 that is accessible from above. In the modular construction of the injector body 110 as shown, the capability of breaking down the injector body 110 and of simple modular assembly is achieved by providing that the valve contacts 114 be connected electrically to the injector body contact 116 in such a way that simple assembly and capability of breaking down the injector body continue to be assured.
In this exemplary embodiment, for connecting the two electrical valve contacts 114 to the injector body contact 116, two conductor conduits 120 are provided, which extend through the modules 138, 136 and 134. The conductor conduits 120 are formed by bores in the pressure booster module 138, in the line connection module 136, and in the sealing plate 134. Once the injector body 110 has been put together, these bores are each flush at the parting lines 128 and 126, so that the result is a single, continuous conductor conduit 120.
The individual bores of the conductor conduit 120, in this exemplary embodiment, in the various modules 138, 136, 134 each have a rectilinear course. With the provisions of the invention, a curved course of the bores can also be achieved. However, the bores in the individual bores 138, 136, 134 do have a different inclination relative to an injector axis 142. While the conductor conduit 120 in the pressure booster module 138 has an inclination of 1° to the injector axis 142, the inclination in the line connection module 136, in this exemplary embodiment, is 2.2°. These different angles of inclination relative to the injector axis 142 are due to the fact that the injector body 110 tapers in its cross section toward the bottom, that is, from the control module 132 to the nozzle module 140.
The contacting between the valve contacts 114 and the injector body contact 116 must accordingly meet several peripheral conditions:
This problem is solved according to the invention in the exemplary embodiment shown in that the connection between the two electrical valve contacts 114 of the magnet valve 112 and the injector body contact 116 is effected in part via two solid conductors 118. The solid conductors 118 extend through the two conductor conduits 120 and connect the valve contacts 114 to electric plug contacts 122, which in turn are connected to the injector body contact 116 via an electrical connection 144 (for instance, two cables each soldered at one end to an electric plug contact 122 and at another end to the injector body contact 116). The solid conductors 118 are thus fixedly or detachably connected electrically to the valve contacts 114 (see below).
The connection of the solid conductors 118 to the plug contacts 122 is done reversibly, so that this connection can be made upon assembly of the injector body 110 by simply pressing the solid conductors 118 into the plug contacts 122. Conversely, in the event of maintenance, the solid conductors 118 can be easily removed from the plug contacts 122 again, and thus the injector body 110 can be broken down again without having to unsolder electrical connections.
The solid conductors 118 are selected to be rigid enough that on the one hand they do not substantially change their shape under their own weight, and can thus be easily threaded through the conductor conduits 120 with their different inclinations to the injector axis 142 and plugged into the plug contacts 122. The solid conductors should have a certain plasticity, so that no mechanical stresses arise either at the transition between portions of the conductor conduits 120 that have different angles of inclination. The term “solid conductor” does not necessarily narrow the choice of materials to solid materials; on the contrary, hollow conductors (tubes) may for instance also be used as solid conductors 118, as long as they have sufficient mechanical rigidity.
In the exemplary embodiment shown in
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The solid conductors 118 in this exemplary embodiment axe also relatively sheathed with shrink-fit hoses 212. The shrink-fit hoses 212 insulate the solid conductors 118 electrically from the walls of the conductor conduits 120 of the injector body 110. To economize on costs, the shrink-fit hoses 212 are not shrunk onto the solid conductors 118 in their entirety, but rather only in some portions. The shrink-fit hoses 212 extend upward from the electrically insulating thermoplastic 210. Alternatively to a shrink-fit hose 212, rigid or elastic electrically insulating plastic sleeves, for instance, can also be used as electric insulators for the solid conductors 118. The electrical insulation, particularly of the shrink-fit hose 212, however, ends in each case below the upper ends 214 of the solid conductors 118, so that the upper ends 214 of the solid conductors 218 are not sheathed in an electrically insulating way and can be plugged in an electrically connecting way into the plug contacts 122. In this way, without a complicated soldering or welding process, by simply putting the segments of the injector body 110 together, an electrically conductive connection between the valve contacts 114 and the injector body contact 116 can be made. On the other hand, the injector body 110 can easily be dismantled again for maintenance purposes, with the plug connection 122 disconnected from the solid conductors 118 again simply by the exertion of force. Unsoldering or disconnecting the connection in some other way is not necessary, since the connection is reversible.
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The thermoplastic, electrically insulating plastic sheathing 210 (see
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The entire connection between the valve contact 114 and the solid conductor 118 in this exemplary embodiment is also sheathed by an electrically insulating plastic 210. This sheathing, which has already been described above, may be done in particular by an injection molding process.
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In a first method step 910, a first module of a fuel injector, such as a control module 132, is produced. This first module has at least one externally accessible injector body contact 116. The injector body contact 116 is electrically conductively joined to an electrical plug contact 122.
In a second method step 912, a second module, such as a nozzle module 140, is produced that has at least one electrically triggerable valve 112. The electrically triggerable valve 112 also has electrical valve contacts 114.
In a third method step 914, the at least one electrical valve contact 114 is joined to at least one solid conductor 118. The solid conductor 118 should have the properties described above. The connection between the solid conductor 118 and the valve contact 114 is made in each case directly or via an electrically conductive connecting element 410 as described above via one of the connections 310, 610, 612, 810 according to the invention.
In a fourth method step 916, the two modules 132, 140 are then connected directly or indirectly to an individual injector body. Additional modules 134, 136, 138 may be introduced as well (see above), and the solid conductors 118 are in particular guided through conductor conduits 120. The at least one solid conductor is reversibly connected directly or indirectly (for instance via plug contacts 122 and an additional electrical connection 144) to the at least one injector body contact 116.
The described method for producing fuel injectors represents a considerable improvement over conventional methods in which electrical cables are used to connect between the valve contacts 114 and the injector body contacts 116. Complicated soldering processes and tedious passing of the cable through the individual segments of the injector body 110 are dispensed with.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 056 667.4 | Nov 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/55652 | 10/31/2005 | WO | 00 | 5/7/2007 |