This patent application claims priority from Italian Patent Application No. BO2004A 000466 filed on Jul. 23, 2004.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electromagnetically actuated fuel injector.
2. Brief Description of Related Developments
An electromagnetic fuel injector normally comprises a tubular supporting body having a central channel, which acts as a fuel conduit and terminates in an injection nozzle regulated by an injection valve controlled by an electromagnetic actuator. The injection valve has a pin connected rigidly to a movable armature of the electromagnetic actuator, and which is moved by the electromagnetic actuator between a closed position and an open position respectively closing and opening the injection nozzle in opposition to a spring which keeps the pin in the closed position.
One example of an electromagnetic fuel injector of the above type is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,027,050-A1, which relates to a fuel injector having a pin which cooperates at one end with a valve seat, and is integral at the opposite end with a movable armature of an electromagnetic actuator; the pin is guided by the armature at the top, and at the bottom by the end portion of the pin sliding inside a guide portion of the valve seat.
Known electromagnetic fuel injectors of the above type are widely used, by combining good performance and low cost. Since injectors with an electromagnetically actuated pin, however, are unable to operate at very high fuel pressures, injectors with a hydraulically operated pin have been proposed, i.e. in which movement of the pin from the closed to the open position, in opposition to the spring, is produced by hydraulic forces. Examples of such injectors are described in Patent Applications EP-1036932-A2, EP-0921302-A2, and WO-0129395-A1.
Though of good dynamic performance and capable of operating at very high fuel pressures, injectors with a hydraulically actuated pin are complicated and expensive to produce, by requiring a hydraulic circuit with a piezoelectrically or electromagnetically actuated control valve. Moreover, there is always a certain amount of backflow of fuel, which is drained at ambient pressure, and which has the negative effects of constituting a loss of energy, and of tending to heat the fuel.
When assembled in an injection system, the injector is connected to a pressurized-fuel feed conduit. More specifically, the tubular supporting body of the injector is connected in fluidtight manner to the feed conduit to connect the central channel of the supporting body hydraulically to the feed conduit. The fluidtight connection is normally made using a connector, which provides for a conical connection with no elastic seals, i.e. an inclined surface of the supporting body is kept pressed against a corresponding inclined surface of the connector with no elastic seal in between. However, to ensure long-term sealing of such connections, even in the presence of continuous vibration (typical of an internal combustion engine), the component parts, particularly the inclined surfaces pressed against each other, call for extremely precise machining, and as such are time-consuming and expensive to produce.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an electromagnetically actuated fuel injector designed to eliminate the aforementioned drawbacks, and which, in particular, is cheap and easy to produce.
According to the present invention, there is provided an electromagnetically actuated fuel injector, as recited in the accompanying claims.
A number of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
Supporting body 4 is formed by connection of a one-piece tubular top member 8, housing electromagnetic actuator 6, to a one-piece tubular bottom member 9, housing injection valve 7. Tubular top member 8 preferably comprises a cylindrical, internally threaded seat for receiving a threaded portion of tubular bottom member 9. A one-piece cylindrical sleeve 10, preferably made of plastic material, such as PEEK 30 CF, may be fitted about part of tubular top member 8 and part of tubular bottom member 9 to relieve tubular bottom member 9 of the axial and transverse loads (e.g. tightening stress) to which injector 1 is subjected.
Electromagnetic actuator 6 comprises an electromagnet 11 housed in a fixed position inside supporting body 4, and which, when excited, moves an armature 12 of ferromagnetic material along axis 2 from a closed position to an open position to open injection valve 7 in opposition to a spring 13 which keeps armature 12 in the closed position closing injection valve 7. Electromagnet 11 comprises a dry coil 14 powered electrically by an electronic control unit (not shown) and located outside supporting body 4; and a magnetic core 15 housed inside supporting body 4 and having a central hole 16 to permit fuel flow to injection nozzle 3. A cylindrical tubular retaining body 17 is fitted in a fixed position inside central hole 16 in magnetic core 15 to permit fuel flow to injection nozzle 3 and to keep spring 13 pressed against armature 12. Magnetic core 15 is preferably connected to supporting body 4 by an annular weld inside supporting body 4.
Coil 14 of electromagnet 11 is housed inside a tubular seating body 18, which is closed at the bottom, surrounds supporting body 4, and is welded to supporting body 4 by an annular weld. At the top, seating body 18 is closed by an annular plug 19 welded to seating body 18 to isolate coil 14 inside seating body 18. It is important to note that, by virtue of its location, coil 14 dissipates considerable heat, and is isolated from the fuel and so unaffected by the mechanical effect and chemical aggression produced by the pressurized fuel.
Armature 12 forms part of a movable assembly, which also comprises a shutter or pin 20 having a top portion integral with armature 12, and a bottom portion cooperating with a valve seat 21 (
As shown in
Pin 20 terminates with a substantially spherical shutter head 24, which rests in fluidtight manner on valve seat 21. Shutter head 24 also rests in sliding manner against a cylindrical inner surface 25 of guide member 23, by which it is guided in its movement along longitudinal axis 2. Recesses 26 (only one shown in
As shown in
The outside diameter of annular member 29 of armature 12 is substantially equal to the inside diameter of the corresponding portion of central channel 5 of supporting body 4, so that armature 12 can slide with respect to supporting body 4 along longitudinal axis 2, but is prevented from moving crosswise to longitudinal axis 2 with respect to supporting body 4. Pin 20 being connected rigidly to armature 12, armature 12 therefore also acts as a top guide for pin 20, which is therefore guided at the top by armature 12 and at the bottom by guide member 23.
In an alternative embodiment not shown, a bounce-damping device is connected to the underside face of disk-shaped member 30 of armature 12 to reduce bounce of shutter head 24 of pin 20 on valve seat 21 when pin 20 moves from the open position to the closed position closing injection valve 7.
In actual use, when electromagnet 11 is deenergized, armature 12 is not attracted by magnetic core 15, and the elastic force of spring 13 pushes armature 12, together with pin 20, downwards, so that shutter head 24 of pin 20 is pressed against valve seat 21 of injection valve 7 to isolate injection nozzle 3 from the pressurized fuel. Conversely, when electromagnet 11 is energized, armature 12 is attracted magnetically by magnetic coil 15 in opposition to the elastic force of spring 13, and armature 12, together with pin 20, moves up into contact with magnetic core 15, so that shutter head 24 of pin 20 is lifted off valve seat 21 of injection valve 7, thus permitting pressurized-fuel flow through injection nozzle 3.
As shown clearly in
Tubular top member 8 is preferably made of high-tensile stainless steel with poor magnetic characteristics (i.e. nonmagnetic, and therefore of low magnetic permeability comparable to that of air). An iron-cobalt alloy, such as hardened and tempered ISI 440C, may be used, for example. Seating body 18, annular plug 19, magnetic core 15, and armature 12 (or at least tubular member 9 of armature 12) are made of magnetic stainless steel (i.e. with a much higher magnetic permeability than air), such as VACUFLUX 50.
In an alternative embodiment not shown, supporting body 4 is formed in one piece and made entirely of high-tensile stainless steel with poor magnetic characteristics.
Injector 1 as described above is cheap and easy. to produce, by being formed by connecting a small number of parts, each of which is cylindrically symmetrical and therefore easy to produce by means of standard, easily automated turning operations involving no dedicated tooling. Moreover, simulation and testing have shown injector 1 as described above to be capable of operating at very high fuel pressures (close to 1000 bars) while still maintaining excellent dynamic performance (i.e. precise injection times).
As shown in
Connector 32 is cylindrically symmetrical about longitudinal axis 2, and comprises a cylindrical top member 33, which is substantially equal in outside diameter to the inside diameter of feed conduit 31, and has a threaded outer end portion which screws inside feed conduit 31. Connector 32 also comprises a central member 34 larger in outside diameter than top member 33 and terminating with a truncated-cone-shaped surface 35; and a cylindrical bottom member 36 smaller in outside diameter than the inside diameter of central channel 5 of supporting body 4, and which is located inside central channel 5. For this purpose, the top end of supporting body 4 has a truncated-cone-shaped surface 37, which is positioned contacting truncated-cone-shaped surface 35 of central member 34 of connector 32.
To keep connector 32 pressed against supporting body 4, an annular fastening member 38 is screwed to a threaded outer surface 39 of supporting body 4 so as to contact, with a given pressure, an annular top surface 40 of central member 34 of connector 32.
An elastic annular seal 43 is fitted between an outer surface 41 of bottom member 36 and an inner surface 42 of central channel 5. To facilitate assembly of annular seal 43, bottom member 36 terminates with an annular enlargement 44 for retaining seal 43 on bottom member 36 during assembly.
In the
In the
Connector 32 as described above provides for ensuring long-term sealing, even in the presence of continuous vibration, and is cheap and easy to produce, by the component parts not requiring particularly accurate machining.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2004A 000466 | Jul 2004 | IT | national |