1. Technical Field
The present disclosure relates to electromagnetic valve actuators and engine valve guides for internal combustion engines.
2. Background Art
Significant improvements in engine function can result by replacing conventional camshaft valve actuation with electromagnetic valve actuators that facilitate independent control of each valve decoupled from the crankshaft. This type of actuator, when combined with the engine valve and associated return spring, can be referred to as a “mass oscillator”. The oscillatory motion of opening and closing the valve is primarily attributable to storing and releasing spring energy with control provided by upper and lower electromagnets selectively energized by the engine controller. When the valve is fully closed, the actuator spring is compressed and stores energy with the upper electromagnet energized to hold the armature stationary against the spring force. To open the valve, the upper electromagnet holding force is reduced to allow the release of stored spring energy which moves the armature and associate engine valve toward the open position. Friction losses oppose this motion and may prevent the armature from reaching the full-open position. To complete the valve opening event, the lower electromagnet is energized to attract and hold the armature in the fully open position. To reduce friction and wear, lubricating oil is generally supplied to the actuator and/or valve stem during operation. However, the lubricating oil contributes to viscous friction loss, which opposes valve stem motion and increases exponentially with decreasing operating temperature. At extremely low temperatures, the force of the springs in combination with the force of the electromagnet may be insufficient to overcome the viscous friction losses and the valve may not operate as intended.
A multiple cylinder internal combustion engine includes a valve actuation system with an electromagnetic valve actuator having an armature disposed between upper and lower electromagnets with an armature stem extending only through the lower electromagnet and guided by a one-piece bushing with increased clearance about at least a portion of the inner circumference in at least a middle portion of the bushing to reduce oil shear length and associated viscous friction in the actuator. The armature stem actuates an associated engine valve stem that is guided by a two-piece valve guide including a lower half with a stepped outer diameter that cooperates with a counter-bored hole in the cylinder head to provide both a positive stop and to concentrically locate the valve guide with the armature stem. The upper and lower halves of the engine valve guide also have increased clearance relative to the valve stem around at least a portion of the inner circumference to reduce oil shear length and associated viscous friction. Reducing viscous friction of the actuator and associated valve guide improves system robustness by decreasing the system sensitivity to changes in ambient and operating temperature.
In one embodiment, a single-piece armature stem bushing includes an inner low friction lining material bonded to an outer backing material. The bushing includes upper and lower concentric guide bores of a first diameter with a groove formed by a second, larger diameter in the inner lining material and extending between the upper and lower guide bores. A transverse lubricating hole is formed to intersect the groove and provide pressurized lubricating oil to the armature stem. Another embodiment includes a plurality of axial grooves in the lining material that are circumferentially spaced and extend the length of the bushing.
An embodiment of the two-piece engine valve guide includes a lower guide having a first end with a first outside diameter for extending through a first diameter of the counter-bored hole in the cylinder block, a second counter-bored diameter in the cylinder head holds and locates the lower valve guide in its proper position, with an external flange that seats against the bottom of the counter-bore to provide a positive stop and axially position the lower guide within the cylinder head. The lower guide has a smaller inside diameter toward the first end and a larger inside diameter extending through the opposite end. The smaller diameter provides a close clearance to the engine valve stem to guide and align the engine valve with the armature stem of the actuator. An upper guide has an outside diameter generally matched to the larger diameter of the lower guide and is pressed into the larger diameter of the counter bored hole in the cylinder head to contact the lower guide. The upper guide has a smaller inside diameter at one end and a larger inside diameter at the opposite end to provide increased clearance relative to the valve stem to reduce viscous friction associated with lubricating oil contained therein. When both halves of the engine guide are installed into the cylinder head, the two smaller inside diameters provide support for and align the engine valve. The larger clearance diameter, in the middle region of the engine valve guide, provides space for lubrication oil to be displaced.
A method according to one embodiment of the present disclosure includes forming an armature stem bushing from a generally flat piece of backing material to which a low friction lining material, having a groove formed therein, is bonded, positioning the formed bushing within a lower electromagnet of a valve actuator, and machining upper and lower concentric guide holes in the bushing. The method may include forming the groove in the generally flat piece of material in a coining process where lining material is compacted and displaced to form the groove. Similarly, a transverse lubricating hole may be pierced or punched through the generally flat sheet prior to forming the bushing into a generally cylindrical shape. The method may also include inserting a two-piece engine valve guide into a cylinder head by pressing a lower half of the valve guide having a flange into a corresponding counter-bored hole in the cylinder head until the flange contacts the bottom of the counter-bored hole, pressing an upper half of the valve guide into the counter-bored hole until it contacts the lower half, and finish machining concentric guide holes through the upper and lower halves of the valve guide.
The present disclosure includes embodiments having various advantages. For example, embodiments according to the present disclosure incorporate low-cost, high-volume formed bushing technology to reduce viscous friction without compromising armature support in the valve actuator. Embodiments having an increased clearance in a middle portion of an armature stem bushing and/or engine valve guide decouple the wetted surface area from the bearing support length permitting both low viscous friction and low load reactions from misalignment forces. Reduction in the viscous friction coefficient by about 80% using embodiments according to the present disclosure provides more robust valvetrain operation with reduced temperature sensitivity.
The above advantages and other advantages and features will be readily apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
As those of ordinary skill in the art will understand, various features of the present disclosure as illustrated and described with reference to any one of the Figures may be combined with features illustrated in one or more other Figures to produce embodiments of the present disclosure that are not explicitly illustrated or described. The combinations of features illustrated provide representative embodiments for typical applications. However, various combinations and modifications of the features consistent with the teachings of the present disclosure may be desired for particular applications or implementations. The present disclosure relates to an electromagnetically actuated valvetrain for a multiple cylinder internal combustion engine. The representative embodiments used to illustrate and describe the disclosure relate generally to a four-stroke, multi-cylinder port injected internal combustion engine with electromagnetic valve actuation. Of course, the present disclosure is independent of the particular engine/vehicle technology or number of cylinders and may be used in a wide variety of applications with various implementations including spark-ignition, compression-ignition, direct injected and/or port injected engines, for example.
In the representative embodiment illustrated in
Controller 30 has a microprocessor 24, called a central processing unit (CPU), in communication with memory management unit (MMU) 26. MMU 26 controls the movement of data among the various computer readable storage media 28 and communicates data to and from CPU 24. Computer readable storage media 28 preferably include volatile and nonvolatile storage in read-only memory (ROM) 32, random-access memory (RAM) 34, and keep-alive memory (KAM) 36, for example. KAM 36 may be used to store various operating variables while CPU 24 is powered down. Computer-readable storage media 28 may be implemented using any of a number of known memory devices such as PROMs (programmable read-only memory), EPROMs (electrically PROM), EEPROMs (electrically erasable PROM), flash memory, or any other electric, magnetic, optical, or combination memory devices capable of storing data, some of which represent executable instructions, used by CPU 24 in controlling the engine or vehicle into which the engine is mounted. Computer-readable storage media 28 may also include floppy disks, CD-ROMs, hard disks, and the like.
CPU 24 communicates with various engine/vehicle sensors and actuators via an input/output (I/O) interface 38. Interface 38 may be implemented as a single integrated interface that provides various raw data or signal conditioning, processing, and/or conversion, short-circuit protection, and the like. Alternatively, one or more dedicated hardware or firmware chips may be used to condition and process particular signals before being supplied to CPU 24. Examples of items that may be directly or indirectly actuated under control of CPU 24, through I/O interface 38, are fuel injection timing, rate, and duration, throttle valve position, spark plug ignition timing (for spark-ignition engines), intake/exhaust valve actuation, timing, and duration, front-end accessory drive (FEAD) components such as an alternator, and the like. Sensors communicating input through I/O interface 38 may be used to indicate crankshaft position (PIP), engine rotational speed (RPM), wheel speed (WS1, WS2), vehicle speed (VSS), coolant temperature (ECT), intake manifold pressure (MAP), accelerator pedal position (PPS), ignition switch position (IGN), throttle valve position (TP), air temperature (TMP), exhaust gas oxygen (EGO) or other exhaust gas component concentration or presence, air flow (MAF), selected and/or current transmission gear or ratio (PRN), transmission oil temperature (TOT), transmission turbine speed (TS), torque converter clutch status (TCC), reduced displacement mode switch (MDE), for example.
Some controller architectures do not contain an MMU 26. If no MMU 26 is employed, CPU 24 manages data and connects directly to ROM 32, RAM 34, and KAM 36. Of course, embodiments of the present disclosure could utilize more than one CPU 24 to provide engine control and controller 30 may contain multiple ROM 32, RAM 34, and KAM 36 coupled to MMU 26 or CPU 30 depending upon the particular application.
In operation, air passes through intake 50 and is distributed to cylinders via an intake manifold, indicated generally by reference numeral 52. System 10 preferably includes a mass airflow sensor 54 that provides a corresponding signal (MAF) to controller 30 indicative of the mass airflow. A throttle valve 56 may be used to modulate the airflow and control pressure in intake 50 to control engine torque. During some regions of engine operation, the electromagnetic valve actuator, in combination with the controller, is fully capable of controlling air flow into the engine cylinder to further improve engine efficiency. Throttle valve 56 is preferably electronically controlled by an appropriate actuator 58 based on a corresponding throttle position (TP) signal generated by controller 30 and the current engine operating mode. The throttle position (TP) signal may be generated in response to a corresponding engine output or torque requested by an operator via accelerator pedal 66. A throttle position sensor 60 provides a feedback signal to controller 30 indicative of the actual position of throttle valve 56 to implement closed loop control of throttle valve 56.
A manifold absolute pressure sensor 70 is used to provide a signal (MAP) indicative of the manifold pressure to controller 30. Air passing through intake manifold 52 enters combustion chamber 14 through appropriate control of one or more intake valves 16. Intake valves 16 and/or exhaust valves 18 may be controlled using electromagnetic actuators 72, 74, a conventional camshaft arrangement, a variable camshaft timing arrangement, or a combination thereof depending on the particular application and implementation.
According to one embodiment of the present disclosure, each electromagnetic actuator 72, 74 includes an armature 120 disposed between an upper electromagnet 122 and a lower electromagnet 124. Armature 120 includes an armature stem 126 that extends through a formed one-piece bushing (best illustrated in
Electromagnetic actuators 72, 74 respond to control signals from controller 30 to open and close associated intake valves 16 and exhaust valves 18, which include valve stems guided by corresponding two-piece valve guides 140 that have increased clearance about at least a middle portion to reduce viscous friction as, best illustrated and described with reference to
As also shown in
In the representative embodiment of a valve actuation system according to the present disclosure illustrated in
Electromagnetic actuator 72 (74) may include an upper electromagnet 122 and/or a lower electromagnet 124 having embedded permanent magnets 134, 136 to enhance system performance as described in detail in commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 7,124,720. In the representative embodiment of
Armature stem 126 is coupled to a corresponding valve stem 160 of engine valve 16 (18). Upper and lower return springs 162, 164 are secured by corresponding upper and lower spring retainers 166, 168, respectively. An additional retainer 170 functions to secure valve stem seal 172 over the upper end of two-piece valve guide 140, which is pressed within a corresponding counter-bored hole within cylinder head 180. Two-piece valve guide 140 includes a lower half or lower guide 190 in contact with an upper half or upper guide 192. Lower guide 190 includes a stepped outer diameter or flange 194 that cooperates with the counter-bored hole in cylinder head 180 to provide both a positive stop and sufficient interference to form a permanent installation. Upper guide 192 includes one end in contact with a corresponding contacting end of lower guide 190 when installed. Lower and upper valve guides 190, 192 each include a first clearance relative to valve stem 160 at a guiding end and a second, larger clearance relative to valve stem 160 at each opposite contacting end to reduce viscous friction associated with lubricating oil on valve stem 160 as valve 16 (18) opens and closes.
As such, valve guide 140 supports and guides valve stem 160, which is actuated by armature stem 126. Valve guide 140 includes a lower guide 190 having first and second outer diameters cooperating with corresponding first and second inner diameters of the counter-bored hole in cylinder head 180 to provide a positive stop and proper location of valve guide 140 during installation of lower guide 190. Upper guide 192 has one end in contact with a contacting end of lower guide 190 when installed in the counter-bored hole in cylinder head 180. Both lower valve guide 190 and upper valve guide 192 have first and second inside diameters with the second inside diameters being larger than the first inside diameters and extending from the contacting end toward a guiding end to reduce viscous friction associated with movement of valve stem 160 through lubricated guide holes in the guiding ends. Upper valve guide 192 may also include first and second outer diameters with the larger outer diameter at the end contacting the lower valve guide 190 and the smaller outside diameter at the guiding end to accommodate valve stem seal 172 and retainer 170.
One-piece bushing 130 may be formed from a flat sheet or piece 200 that includes a backing material 220 to which a lining material 222 is bonded using a furnace sintering operation, for example. Use of a low-friction lining material 222 bonded to a backing material 220 allows selection of a desired lining material to improve actuator performance while backing material 220 provides structural support during installation and any in-place finish machining. Groove 150 may be formed using a coining process, which compacts and displaces lining material 222 and may also compact backing material 220 as shown. Use of formed bushing technology to provide a one-piece armature bushing having increased diametric clearance in a middle portion of the bushing for an electromagnetic valve actuator according to the present disclosure provides a low-cost, high-volume solution that improves actuator performance by reducing viscous friction during cold temperature operation without compromising armature stem support. The increased clearance in the center of bushing 130 provided by groove 150 reduces the oil shear length of lubricating oil contained within the bushing during operation.
As also shown in
The method may also include positioning a two-piece valve guide in a cylinder head of the engine as represented by steps 264, 266, and 268. A lower valve guide half having a stepped outside diameter forming a shoulder or flange is pressed into a corresponding counter-bored hole in the cylinder head until its shoulder seats against the shoulder or bottom of the larger diameter of the counter-bored hole as represented by block 264. An upper valve guide half is then inserted into the counter-bored hole until it contacts the lower valve guide half as represented by block 266. Concentric upper and lower guide diameters may optionally be finish machined through the upper and lower guides as represented by block 268. In some engine applications, the valve guides can be installed with the valve steam clearance diameter finish machined to eliminate the finish machining in-place as represented by block 268. An intake or exhaust valve is then positioned with its valve stem extending through the upper and lower guide holes of the two-piece valve guide for actuation by the armature stem. As previously described, the upper and lower valve guide halves each have a larger clearance relative to the valve stem at one end relative to an opposite end to reduce viscous friction associated with lubricating oil within the valve guides.
As illustrated and described with reference to the various embodiments, the present disclosure provides a system and method for reducing temperature sensitivity in an electromagnetically actuated valvetrain of an internal combustion engine. Embodiments of the disclosure incorporate low-cost, high-volume formed bushing technology to reduce viscous friction without compromising armature support in the valve actuator. Providing an increased clearance in a middle portion of an armature stem bushing and/or valve guide decouples wetted surface area from the bearing support length permitting both low viscous friction and low load reactions from misalignment forces. Reduction in the viscous friction coefficient by about 80% using embodiments according to the present disclosure provides more robust valvetrain operation with reduced temperature sensitivity.
While the best mode has been described in detail, those familiar with the art will recognize various alternative designs and embodiments within the scope of the following claims. Several embodiments have been compared and contrasted. Some embodiments have been described as providing advantages or being preferred over other embodiments in regard to one or more desired characteristics. However, as one skilled in the art is aware, one or more characteristics may be compromised to achieve desired system attributes, which depend on the specific application. These attributes include, but are not limited to: cost, strength, durability, life cycle cost, marketability, appearance, packaging, size, serviceability, weight, manufacturability, ease of assembly, etc. The embodiments discussed herein that are described as inferior to another embodiment with respect to one or more characteristics are not outside the scope of the disclosure.
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