The invention relates to a filter arrangement for a liquid-conducting system, preferably a cooling circuit of an engine, comprising a filter housing with an inlet and an outlet for liquid flowing along a flow path through the filter housing, furthermore comprising a filter which is arranged in the filter housing in the flow path of the liquid for filtering dirt particles out of the liquid.
Filter arrangements of the type mentioned above are used, for example, in cooling circuits of internal combustion engines of cars or trucks. Engine components such as the engine block are often produced by casting methods. Especially in the case of cast aluminum parts, lost sand casting molds are used, in order to be able to produce even complicated geometries by casting techniques. Despite costly cleaning methods for the cast parts produced, it is not possible in practice to avoid sand residues remaining in engine components. Such dirt particles, for example when present in cooling liquid lines of the engine, result in undesirable wear, even to the extent of a malfunction or leakage in the liquid-conducting system. Therefore, it is known to arrange filters in the cooling liquid lines of the cooling circuit of the engine to filter out such dirt particles. Over time, however, there occurs a clogging of the filter with accumulating dirt particles. This impairs the filter function and in the worst case may impair the cooling function of the cooling circuit.
Starting from the explained prior art, the problem which the invention proposes to solve is to provide a filter arrangement of the kind mentioned above which reliably filters out dirt particles from the cooling liquid and at the same time assures a long service life of the filter and a reliable cooling effect of the cooling circuit at all times.
For a filter arrangement of the kind mentioned above, in one example, the invention solves the problem by a collecting chamber which is arranged upstream of the filter and into which dirt particles which are filtered out by the filter drop because of gravity when liquid no longer flows through the filter housing, wherein the collecting chamber forms a dead space, and therefore dirt particles located in the collecting chamber are not entrained by liquid flowing through the filter housing.
The filter arrangement according to the invention may be used for example in the cooling circuit of an engine of a motor vehicle, such as a car or truck. The engine may be an internal combustion engine. However, the engine may also be, for example, an electric motor. The liquid flowing through the filter arrangement is then in particular a cooling liquid. The liquid may be cooling water, for example.
In the filter housing of the filter arrangement is found a filter for filtering out dirt particles from the liquid. The filter may have a conical or cylindrical shape, for example. However, other filter geometries are of course also conceivable. The filter in operation may receive a flow of liquid from the inside, for example. The liquid then emerges from the inlet at first into an inner chamber bounded by the filter and then passes through the filter to the outside into a region communicating with the outlet of the filter housing. Yet it is also possible for the filter in operation to receive a flow of liquid from the outside. The liquid from the inlet then passes at first through the filter from the outside and enters an internal chamber bounded by the filter. This internal chamber may then communicate with the outlet. The filter for example may comprise a fine sieve or the like, which retains the dirt particles contained in the liquid. The dirt particles are solid particles, especially fine solid particles. As already explained, this may involve mold sand from lost sand casting molds, for example, which were used in the making of engine components. When no more liquid is flowing through the liquid-conducting system, for example when the engine has been shut off, the dirt particles held back by the filter drop by gravity into a collecting chamber of the filter arrangement. The collecting chamber is preferably situated likewise in the filter housing. Looking in the flow direction of the liquid, the collecting chamber is situated upstream of the filter. The collecting chamber forms a dead space, i.e., a space not involved in the liquid flow when liquid is flowing through the filter arrangement. The dirt particles held back and having descended into the collecting chamber are thus not entrained by the liquid again flowing through the filter housing when the engine is restarted.
The filter arrangement according to the invention thus forms a combination of a filter fabric in the liquid flow and a suitable configuration, especially a labyrinth, which diverts dirt particles held back by the filter into the collecting chamber when the cooling fluid is motionless, where they are no longer caught up in the liquid flow and thus no longer get into the cooling liquid circuit. A clogging of the filter is prevented. At the same time, unwanted influences of the dirt particles on the liquid-conducting system, especially wear, leaks, and slackening cooling action, are reliably prevented.
The collecting chamber may form a blind hole. In operation, the collecting chamber may be filled at any time with standing liquid. In that case, liquid flowing through the filter arrangement does not enter the collecting chamber, but instead flows accordingly past the collecting chamber.
In the state of the filter arrangement in which the latter is installed in a liquid-conducting system, the collecting chamber may be located below the filter. Thus, no deflecting is needed for the dirt particles falling by gravity from the filter into the collecting chamber. This results in an especially simple and reliable collecting of the dirt particles in the collecting chamber.
The collecting chamber may be separated from the flow path of the liquid through the filter arrangement by means of a covering. The covering is at least partly passable by the dirt particles. It further improves the retaining of the dirt particles in the collecting chamber.
According to one particularly practical embodiment, the covering may be designed as a sieve covering having a plurality of sieve openings for the dirt particles. Such a design, on the one hand, allows a reliable dropping of the dirt particles through the covering into the collecting chamber when the liquid is at rest, and on the other hand it reliably prevents an entraining of dirt particles from the collecting chamber when the liquid is (again) flowing through the filter arrangement.
The walls bounding the sieve openings according to a further embodiment may extend tubularly beyond the covering on a lower side of the covering facing the collecting chamber. The tubular projections at the lower side of the covering do not prevent the dirt particles from dropping into the collecting chamber, but they further improve the retention of the dirt particles in the collecting chamber when liquid is again flowing across the covering.
According to another embodiment, the covering can be designed as a lattice covering having a multiplicity of lattice slots for the dirt particles. The embodiment of the covering as a lattice covering in turn allows on the one hand a reliable dropping of the dirt particles through the covering into the collecting chamber when the liquid is at rest, and on the other hand it reliably prevents an entraining of dirt particles from the collecting chamber when the liquid is (again) flowing through the filter arrangement. In this regard, it should be mentioned that a combined sieve and lattice covering would also be basically conceivable, in which on the one hand a plurality of sieve openings and on the other hand a plurality of lattice slots are formed.
The lattice slots according to another embodiment may run perpendicularly to the flow direction of liquid coming from the inlet. Such a perpendicular orientation to the flow direction of the liquid further prevents an entraining of the dirt particles.
The side walls longitudinally bounding the lattice slots may extend beyond the covering on a lower side of the covering facing the collecting chamber. The longitudinal walls are the long walls of the lattice slots. Basically, the transverse, i.e., short walls of the lattice slots could also extend beyond the lower side of the covering. The extending pieces of the side walls at the lower side of the covering, in turn, do not impede the dirt particles from dropping into the collecting chamber, but they prevent the further entraining of the dirt particles by the liquid flowing across the covering.
The side walls extending beyond the covering at the lower side of the covering, especially the longitudinal side walls, may be inclined in the flow direction of liquid coming from the inlet. The long-side side walls then form slanting fins which further prevent the entraining of dirt particles.
According to another embodiment, the covering may have a closed portion and an open portion, wherein, during operation of the filter arrangement, liquid flowing through the inlet into the filter housing overflows the closed portion, in particular, the closed portion is the first to be overflowed. The covering for example may have precisely one closed portion and precisely one open portion. But it is also possible to provide more than one closed portion and/or more than one open portion. The closed portion prevents the further entraining of dirt particles by the overflowing liquid.
According to another embodiment, the covering may have a ramp which conducts liquid flowing through the inlet into the filter housing away from the collecting chamber. In particular, the ramp rises in the direction of flow of the liquid overflowing the covering. In this way, liquid is taken away from the collecting chamber, for example, upward in the installed state of the filter arrangement. Swirling, etc., which might otherwise result in an entraining of dirt particles present in the collecting chamber, is prevented. The ramp, for example, may be arranged on a closed portion of the covering, especially at the end of the closed portion facing toward the open portion.
According to another embodiment, the inlet at its end facing the filter housing may have at least one guide rib which conducts liquid flowing through the inlet into the filter housing away from the collecting chamber. The guide rib, for example, may be formed by a lower prolongation of the inlet. Also in this way liquid is conducted away from the collecting chamber, for example, upward in the installed state of the filter arrangement.
The invention also relates to a liquid-conducting system, preferably a cooling circuit of an engine, comprising at least one liquid line and a filter arrangement, which is arranged in the at least one liquid line, according to the invention. The liquid-conducting system may furthermore comprise the engine, especially the engine of a vehicle, such as a truck or car. As already explained, the engine may be an internal combustion engine or an electric motor, for example.
Sample embodiments of the invention shall be explained more closely below with the aid of figures. There are shown schematically:
Unless otherwise indicated, the same reference numbers in the figures denote the same objects.
In the cooling line 12 coming from the engine 10 there is furthermore situated a filter arrangement 26. The filter arrangement 26 shown in
The layout of the filter arrangement 26 shall be explained more closely with the aid of
The function of the filter arrangement depicted in
The function of the filter arrangement 26′ shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2017 121 647.2 | Sep 2017 | DE | national |