1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is directed toward an evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system for a motor vehicle having a vapor canister, an engine, and at least one control unit.
2. Description of the Related Art
Automotive vehicles include fuel delivery systems having a fuel tank and fuel delivery lines. The fuel delivery lines typically include a plurality of conduits and associated connections operatively interconnecting the fuel tank with an internal combustion engine. A fuel pump is used to deliver the fuel under pressure from the tank to the engine via the fuel delivery lines. Many automotive vehicles are powered using gasoline as fuel. Gasoline is a volatile substance that generates gasses that, if untreated, are harmful to the environment. These gasses are generally referred to as evaporative emissions. Because they are gasses, these emissions can escape from the fuel system even through very small orifices that may present themselves throughout the fuel delivery system. Accordingly, various governmental authorities in countries throughout the world have long mandated that automotive vehicles include systems for preventing the release into the atmosphere of untreated or un-combusted fuel vapor generated in the fuel delivery system.
Thus, gasoline powered automotive vehicles typically include evaporative emission control systems that are designed to effectively deal with the evaporative emissions. Such systems typically include a vapor canister operatively connected in fluid communication with the fuel tank and the intake of the internal combustion engine. The vapor canister typically includes carbon or some other absorbent material that acts to trap the volatile evaporative emissions generated by the fuel system. A canister purge valve controls the flow of evaporative emissions between the canister and the intake of the engine. In turn, the operation of the canister purge valve is typically controlled by an onboard computer, such as the engine control module, or the like. During normal vehicle operation, and subject to predetermined operational characteristics, the canister purge valve is opened to subject the vapor canister to the negative pressure of the engine intake manifold. This purges the vapor canister of trapped gaseous emissions, effectively regenerating the canister so that it may absorb additional vapor.
During vehicle shutdown, the canister purge valve is closed and the evaporative emissions generated in the fuel system are routed from the fuel tank to the vapor canister where they are absorbed and stored for later purging as described above. During vehicle shutdown, the fuel system is effectively sealed from the ambient environment.
In addition to conventional evaporative emission control systems as described above, many governmental authorities have further mandated that these systems have self-diagnostic capabilities to determine if any leaks are present in the closed fuel system. As public concern over pollution has risen, some governmental authorities have promulgated tougher standards for automotive evaporative emission control systems. For example, the California Air Resource Board (CARB) now requires evaporative emission systems to detect leaks as small as 0.020 inches in diameter. Many of these systems employ sensors adapted to detect the presence of a vacuum that is naturally generated in the emission space of the fuel tank after shutdown and after the fuel system has cooled. Other known evaporative emission systems employ positive or negative pressure generated by some related system to test the sealed integrity of the fuel system.
While on-board diagnostic evaporative emission systems of the type proposed in the related art have generally worked for their intended purposes they have also suffered from the disadvantage of being relatively complex and costly. They also generally consist of a number of components which must be separately controlled and interconnected via flexible or hard conduits sometimes referred to as “on-board plumbing”. In many of the systems presently employed in the related art, each component often requires its own mounting strategy and associated fasteners. The on-board plumbing must be routed so as not to clutter the engine. This objective is not always met in evaporative emission systems known in the related art and they can be expensive to service. Further, and because of the ever-shrinking space available for the vehicle power plant, the effective use of space through efficient component packing is a parameter which designers must constantly seek to improve.
Thus, there remains a need in the art for an evaporative emission system which reduces the number of components needed to effectively monitor the system. Further, there is a need for such a system that reduces the complicated on-board plumbing of the type required for systems known in the related art. There is also a need in the art for an evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system that is inexpensive to manufacture and easy to service in the field. Finally, there is a need in the art for an evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system that has improved response time and accurate repeatability and that is smaller than present systems employed in the related art.
The present invention overcomes the deficiencies in the related art in an evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system for a motor vehicle that has a vapor canister, an engine and at least one control unit. The purge actuation monitoring system of the present invention includes an integrated valve body and a cover mounted to the valve body so as to define a vent chamber between the cover and the valve body. The cover has a fresh air port providing fluid communication between the ambient air and the vent chamber. The integrated valve body includes a main flow passage and a canister port adapted to establish fluid communication between the vapor canister and the main flow passage. A first one-way umbrella valve is mounted to the integrated valve body and is responsive to a predetermined positive pressure in the main flow passage to control the flow of fluid from the vapor canister to the ambient air, through the vent chamber and to the fresh air port. In addition, a second one-way umbrella valve is mounted to the integrated valve body and responsive to a predetermined negative pressure in the main flow passage to control the flow of ambient air through the fresh air port and the vent chamber and through the main flow passage and the second canister port. The system further includes a vacuum-actuated switch supported by the integrated valve body and in electrical communication with the control unit. The switch is responsive to a predetermined negative pressure in the main flow passage to send a signal indicative of the predetermined negative pressure to the control unit.
In this way, the canister purge actuation monitoring system of the present invention reduces the number of components needed to effectively monitor the evaporative emission system as well as the complicated onboard plumbing of the type required for systems known in the related art. The system senses the presence and duration of a purge vacuum that is imposed on the vapor canister when the canister purge valve is open and also senses the presence of a leak in the evaporative emission system, to the extent this condition occurs. The evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system of the present invention is inexpensive to manufacture and easy to service in the field. Moreover, it has an improved response time and accurate repeatability when compared to known systems in the related art. Finally, the evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system is designed so as to present a smaller, less bulky profile. Accordingly, it is easier to “package” the evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system of the present invention on the vehicle.
Other advantages of the invention will be readily appreciated as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring now to the drawings, a representative evaporative emission system for an automotive vehicle is schematically illustrated at 10 in
Referring now to
The integrated valve body 26 has a main flow passage 36 and a canister port 38 which is adapted to establish fluid communication between the vapor canister 12 and the main flow passage 36. In one preferred embodiment, the system 24 of the present invention is operatively mounted directly to the vapor canister 12 via the canister port 38 (
Referring now specifically to
The main flow passage 36 defines a longitudinal axis C and a canister purge port 56. The second one-way umbrella valve 42 is mounted in the integrated valve body 26 so as to control the flow of fluid through the canister purge port 56. The canister purge port 56 defines an acute angle β relative to a plane P extending perpendicular to the longitudinal axis C of the main flow passage 36 (
The vacuum actuated switch 46 includes a diaphragm 60 that is operatively supported by a retainer 62. The retainer 62 is mounted to the integrated valve body 26. As best shown in
Another embodiment of the evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system for a motor vehicle is generally indicated at 124 in
The integrated valve body 126 has a main flow passage 136 and a canister port 138 which is adapted to establish fluid communication between the vapor canister 12 and the main flow passage 136. In one preferred embodiment, the system 124 of the present invention is operatively mounted directly to the vapor canister 12 via the canister port 138 (
With continuing reference to
The main flow passage 136 defines a longitudinal axis C and a canister purge port 156. A second one-way umbrella valve 142 is mounted in the integrated valve body 126 so as to control the flow of fluid through the canister purge port 156 (
The vacuum actuated switch 146 includes a diaphragm 160 that is operatively supported by a retainer 162. The retainer 162 is mounted to the integrated valve body 126. The switch 146 further includes a flexible switch element 164 and a pair of terminals supported by the integrated valve body 126 (
The operation of the evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring systems 24, 124 as well as all subcomponents described above is identical. Accordingly, the function of the system of the present invention will be described in relation to the components of the system 24 illustrated in
As noted above, evaporative emissions generated by the gasoline fuel may be collected in the vapor canister 12. Air that has been stripped of the volatile gasses may pass through the vapor canister 12 into the evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system 24 of the present invention. When the positive pressure of the evaporative emissions exceed a predetermined level, the valve element 50 of the first one-way umbrella valve 40 will move to open the vent port 58. This operative condition is illustrated in
It is possible for the absorbent material, such as carbon, used in the vapor canister 12 to become saturated with volatile vapors. Accordingly, the vapor canister 12 must be periodically purged. This purging process must be controlled. Accordingly, during certain predetermined periods of engine operation, the engine control unit 22 signals the canister purge valve 20 to open thereby subjecting the vapor canister 12 to a vacuum generated at the engine via the intake manifold 16. When the purge valve 20 is opened, the evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system 24 is also subject to the vacuum generated by the engine via the intake manifold 16. This causes fresh air to flow from the air filter 18 through the fresh air port 34, into the vent chamber 32 and past the valve element 54 of the second one-way umbrella valve 42. This operative condition is illustrated in
To this end, the vacuum switch port 68 is calibrated such that the vacuum actuated switch 46 triggers once the vacuum generated during the vapor canister purge process has reached a predetermined level. More specifically, the vacuum switch port 68 communicates with both the main flow passage 36 and the vacuum switch chamber 70. The vacuum switch port 68 is subject to the purge vacuum that exists in the main flow passage 36 and is sized so that the diaphragm 60 moves the switch element 64 into contact with the pair of terminals 66 such that the switch 46 is triggered at a predetermined negative pressure. The switch 46 is connected in electrical communication with the engine control unit 22. When it triggers, the switch 46 sends a signal to the engine control unit 22. The engine control unit 22 uses this information to send a signal closing the canister purge valve 20. The vacuum switch port 68 is also calibrated in size to detect if any leaks are present in the evaporative emission system. If the switch 46 does not trigger in a predetermined period of time after the canister purge valve 20 has been opened, this indicates there exists a leak of a size greater than the vacuum switch port 68. Thus, the evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system 24, 124 of the present invention thus serves a leak detection function for the vehicle evaporative emission system.
In this way, the canister purge actuation monitoring system of the present invention reduces the number of components needed to effectively monitor the evaporative emission system as well as the complicated onboard plumbing of the type required for systems known in the related art. The system senses the presence and duration of a purge vacuum that is imposed on the vapor canister when the canister purge valve is open and also senses the presence of a leak in the evaporative emission system, to the extent this condition occurs. The evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system of the present invention is inexpensive to manufacture and easy to service in the field. Moreover, it has an improved response time and accurate repeatability when compared to known systems in the related art. Finally, the evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system is designed so as to present a smaller, less bulky profile. Accordingly, it is easier to “package” the evaporative emission canister purge actuation monitoring system of the present invention in the engine compartment.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4703737 | Cook et al. | Nov 1987 | A |
5317909 | Yamada et al. | Jun 1994 | A |
5383437 | Cook et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
5437257 | Giacomazzi et al. | Aug 1995 | A |
5474050 | Cook et al. | Dec 1995 | A |
5635630 | Dawson et al. | Jun 1997 | A |
6009746 | Cook et al. | Jan 2000 | A |
6016793 | Cook et al. | Jan 2000 | A |
6073487 | Dawson | Jun 2000 | A |
6192743 | Perry | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6253598 | Weldon et al. | Jul 2001 | B1 |
6282945 | Weldon et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6378510 | Green et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6405718 | Yoshioka et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6779512 | Mitsutani | Aug 2004 | B2 |
6823850 | Hurley | Nov 2004 | B1 |
6832509 | Morinaga et al. | Dec 2004 | B2 |
7047950 | Hurley | May 2006 | B2 |
7216636 | Hurley | May 2007 | B2 |
20030005915 | Mitsutani | Jan 2003 | A1 |