The present disclosure generally relates to exhaust discharge systems for machines, and more particularly, to exhaust discharge systems for earth moving machines.
Internal combustion engines, including diesel engines, gasoline engines, natural gas engines, turbine engines, and other engines known in the art are used to drive many types of power systems. Exhaust from the internal combustion engines is typically discharged into the atmosphere. An exhaust stack may extend outward from an engine or from an enclosure of the engine in order to discharge the exhaust.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,402,758, issued Mar. 26, 2013, (the '758 Patent) describes an exhaust pipe that includes a body that has a plurality of inner diffusion ports extending through the body. The body is sized to have a cross-sectional area that is smaller than the cross-sectional area of the exit plane of the exhaust pipe to create a plurality of outer diffusion ports around at least a portion of the outer perimeter of the body to slow exhaust gas flow, decrease the distance that the plume of the exhaust gas travels, and spread gas over a larger exit area. While the '758 Patent may be beneficial, a better exhaust stack is desired.
In one aspect of the present disclosure, an exhaust discharge system is disclosed. The exhaust discharge system comprises an ejector tube and an exhaust stack. The ejector tube includes an outlet having an outlet cross-section. The ejector tube is configured to convey treated exhaust to the outlet. The outlet may be disposed inside a skirt portion of the exhaust stack. The outlet cross-section is oriented at an outlet angle to a first horizontal plane. The outlet angle may be an acute angle. The exhaust stack is disposed downstream of the ejector tube and is in fluid communication with the ejector tube via the outlet. The exhaust stack includes a first conduit and a second conduit. The first conduit defines a first flow passageway and is arranged around a first longitudinal axis. The first conduit may include the skirt portion and a body portion disposed downstream of the skirt portion. The skirt portion may be oriented to slope outward from the body portion. The second conduit is disposed downstream of the first conduit. The second conduit defines a second flow passageway and is arranged around a second longitudinal axis. The second conduit includes a sidewall and an exit port. The exit port has an exit-port cross-section, wherein the exit-port cross-section is oblong in shape. The second longitudinal axis is disposed at an intersection angle to the first longitudinal axis. The intersection angle may be in a range of 125° to 150°.
In another aspect of the disclosure, a method of assembling an exhaust discharge system for a machine is disclosed. The exhaust discharge system includes an ejector tube and an exhaust stack. The ejector tube includes an inlet and an outlet and is configured to convey treated exhaust from the inlet to the outlet. The exhaust stack includes a first conduit and a second conduit. The first conduit defines a first flow passageway and is arranged around a first longitudinal axis. The first conduit may includes a skirt portion and a body portion. The skirt portion may be oriented to slope outward from the body portion. The second conduit defines a second flow passageway downstream of the first flow passageway and is arranged around a second longitudinal axis. The second conduit includes a sidewall and an exit port. The exit port has an exit-port cross-section. The exit-port cross-section is oblong in shape. The second longitudinal axis is disposed at an intersection angle to the first longitudinal axis. The intersection angle may be in a range of 125° to 150°. The method may comprise: disposing the outlet of the ejector tube inside the skirt portion of the exhaust stack so that the outlet cross-section is oriented at an outlet angle to a first horizontal plane, the outlet angle an acute angle, the ejector tube configured to convey treated exhaust to the outlet.
In yet another aspect of the disclosure, an exhaust system disposed on a machine is disclosed. The machine has an engine and a housing that at least partially encloses the engine. The exhaust system may comprise an aftertreatment apparatus, an ejector tube and an exhaust stack. The aftertreatment apparatus is configured to receive exhaust from the engine and to output a treated exhaust. The ejector tube is configured to receive the treated exhaust from the aftertreatment apparatus. The ejector tube includes an outlet having an outlet cross-section. The ejector tube is configured to convey the treated exhaust to the outlet. The outlet may be disposed inside a skirt portion of an exhaust stack. The outlet cross-section is oriented at an outlet angle to a first horizontal plane, wherein the outlet angle may be an acute angle. The exhaust stack is disposed downstream of the ejector tube. The exhaust stack is in fluid communication with the ejector tube via the outlet. The exhaust stack includes a first conduit and a second conduit. The first conduit defines a first flow passageway and is arranged around a first longitudinal axis. The first conduit may include the skirt portion and a body portion disposed downstream of the skirt portion. The skirt portion may be oriented to slope outward from the body portion. The skirt portion includes a base disposed on the housing. The second conduit is disposed downstream of the first conduit. The second conduit defines a second flow passageway and is arranged around a second longitudinal axis. The second conduit includes a sidewall and an exit port. The exit port has an exit-port cross-section, wherein the exit-port cross-section is oblong in shape. The second longitudinal axis is disposed at an intersection angle to the first longitudinal axis. The intersection angle may be in a range of 125° to 150°.
Reference will now be made in detail to specific embodiments or features, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Generally, corresponding reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or corresponding parts, unless otherwise specified.
The wheel loader 102 includes a rear portion 104 and a front portion 106. The rear portion 104 may include a cab assembly 108, a rear axle housing assembly 110, a power system 112 and drive train components (not shown) mounted to a rear frame 114. The rear wheels 116 may be mounted to the rear axle housing assembly 110.
The front portion 106 of the machine 100 may include a front frame assembly 124 and a front axle housing assembly 126. A boom assembly 128 and a lift arm assembly 130 may be mounted on the front frame assembly 124. An implement 132 may be attached to the boom assembly 128 and to the lift arm assembly 130. The front wheels 134 may be mounted on the front axle housing assembly 126.
Referring now to
The exhaust discharge system 138 may include an ejector tube 140 and an exhaust stack 142. The exhaust stack 142 is in fluid communication with the ejector tube 140. The ejector tube 140 is in fluid communication with the one or more aftertreatment apparatus 136 and is configured to receive the treated exhaust 190 from the one or more aftertreatment apparatus 136.
The ejector tube 140 includes an inlet 144 and an outlet 146. The ejector tube 140 fluidly receives from one or more aftertreatment apparatus 136 treated exhaust 190 via the inlet 144. The ejector tube 140 is configured to convey the treated exhaust 190 from the inlet 144 to the outlet 146. The outlet 146 is disposed inside a skirt 148 portion of the exhaust stack 142. As best seen in
The exhaust stack 142 (
As shown in
The second conduit 162 is disposed downstream of the first conduit 160. The second conduit 162 defines a second flow passageway 176 and may be arranged around (e.g., in one embodiment, the second conduit 162 may be centered on) a second longitudinal axis D. The second longitudinal axis D is disposed at an intersection angle β to the first longitudinal axis C. The intersection angle β is in the range of about 125° to about 150° as measured with one ray of the intersection angle β extending toward the base 172 and the other extending toward the exit port 152. The second conduit 162 includes a sidewall 178 and the exit port 152. The second conduit 162 is in fluid communication with the atmosphere (around the machine 100) via the exit port 152 (in other words, the exit port 152 emits treated exhaust 190 to outside of the machine 100).
The exit port 152 is disposed at the second end 158 of the exhaust stack 142 and has an exit-port cross-section 180 (see
In an embodiment, the sidewall 178 (
Also disclosed is a method of assembling an exhaust discharge system 138 for the machine 100. The method may comprise disposing the outlet 146 of the ejector tube 140 inside the skirt portion 148 of the exhaust stack 142 so that the outlet cross-section 150 is oriented at an outlet angle θ to a first horizontal plane, wherein the outlet angle θ is an acute angle in the range of 15° to 25°. The method may further comprise mounting the exhaust stack 142 on the machine 100 (e.g., an outside surface 174 of the housing 122 (that at least partially encloses the engine 118)).
In general, the foregoing disclosure finds utility in machines 100, especially earth moving machines. A new generations of power systems are being developed that provide improved engine performance in more space-efficient housings. Such engines often emit increased exhaust flow in which exhaust sound, flow and thermal temperatures must be managed to meet regulatory and commercial machine sound requirements.
Disclosed herein is an exhaust discharge system 138 that streamlines the treated exhaust 190 flow from the ejector tube 140 to the exit port 152 of the exhaust stack 142. The exhaust discharge system 138 reduces regional pressure in the exhaust stack 142, reduces turbulence in the exhaust stack 142 and increases the velocity of the exiting treated exhaust 190 without the use of an air injector or the like. For example, the disclosed exhaust stack 142 is free of an air injector.
Unless explicitly excluded, the use of the singular to describe a component, structure, or operation does not exclude the use of plural such components, structures, or operations or their equivalents. The use of the terms “a” and “an” and “the” and “at least one” or the term “one or more,” and similar referents in the context of describing the invention (especially in the context of the following claims) are to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural, unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The use of the term “at least one” followed by a list of one or more items (for example, “at least one of A and B” or one or more of A and B″) is to be construed to mean one item selected from the listed items (A or B) or any combination of two or more of the listed items (A and B; A, A and B; A, B and B), unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. Similarly, as used herein, the word “or” refers to any possible permutation of a set of items. For example, the phrase “A, B, or C” refers to at least one of A, B, C, or any combination thereof, such as any of: A; B; C; A and B; A and C; B and C; A, B, and C; or multiple of any item such as A and A; B, B, and C; A, A, B, C, and C; etc.
From the foregoing, it will be appreciated that while only certain embodiments have been set forth for the purposes of illustration, alternatives and modifications will be apparent from the above description to those skilled in the art. These and other alternatives are considered equivalents and within the spirit and scope of this disclosure and the appended claims.
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