The invention relates to a device for injecting a fluid, for example a fuel, in particular for an internal combustion engine.
More precisely, the invention relates, according to a first of its aspects, to a fluid injection device, called an injector, having a main injection axis and comprising at least:
A prestress means suitable for prestressing said stack and, in particular, an electroactive material, for example, piezoelectric ceramic shims or magnetostrictive elements distributed in the stack, is well known to those skilled in the art as is shown, for example, by European patent application EP 1 172 552. Installing this prestres means requires piercing of the electroactive material which weakens it. The ceramic shims crack and break easily when pierced, and/or when assembled, and/or when the injector operates thus reducing its service life.
To prevent problems of electric short circuit that can affect an operation of the injector, an awkward compromise usually has to be made between the compactness of the actuator housed in the casing and the complexity of a spatial distribution of the electrodes with their wires connecting each ceramic shim with means for exciting the electroactive material outside the casing. This makes it hard to assemble the injector since any unexpected contact of the stack against the casing, for example, when the actuator is inserted into the casing, can damage the spatial distribution of the electrodes with their wires.
The main object of the present invention, which is based on this novel observation, is to propose a fluid injection device designed at least to reduce at least one of the abovementioned limitations. For this purpose, the injection device, moreover according to the generic definition given thereto by the above preamble, is essentially characterized in that the prestress means comprises at least one clamping flange outside the stack and placed between the stack and the casing.
Thanks to this arrangement, the piercing of the electroactive material is no longer indispensable, which makes it less fragile, in particular, to mechanical stresses, for example, during assembly and/or operation of the injector. Moreover, the presence of the clamping flange between the stack and the casing protects the stack against an unexpected contact and/or an unexpected crumbling with the casing, for example, during assembly of the injector, that can damage, for example, the spatial distribution of the electrodes with their wires, and even the ceramic material itself.
According to a second of its aspects, the invention relates to an internal combustion engine using the fluid injection device according to the invention, that is to say such an engine in which this injection device is placed.
Other features and advantages of the invention will clearly emerge from the description made thereof below, as an indication and in no way limiting, with reference to the appended drawings in which:
As specified above, the invention relates to an injection device, or injector, designed to inject a fluid, for example a fuel 131 into a combustion chamber 15 of an internal combustion engine 151 (
The injector comprises two bodies which are for example cylindrical. A first body representing a casing 1 is extended, on a preferred axis AB of the injection device, for example, its axis of symmetry, by at least one nozzle 3 having a length on the axis AB and comprising an injection orifice and a seat 5 (or 5′).
The linear dimensions of the casing 1, for example, its width measured perpendicularly to the axis AB and/or its length measured along the axis AB, may be greater than those of the nozzle 3. The density of the casing 1 may be greater than that of the nozzle 3. The casing 1 may be connected to at least one circuit 130 of fuel 131 via at least one opening 9. The circuit 130 of fuel 131 comprises a device 13 for treating the fuel 131 comprising, for example, a tank, a pump, a filter.
A second body representing an actuator 2 is mounted axially, preferably able to move, in the casing 1. A needle 4 has, on the axis AB, a length and a first end 6 defining a valve element, in a zone of contact with the seat 5 (or 5′) of the nozzle 3. The linear dimensions of the actuator 2, for example, its width measured perpendicularly to the axis AB and/or its length measured along the axis AB, may be greater than those of the needle 4. The density of the actuator 2 may be greater than that of the needle 4. The needle 4 and the actuator 2 are connected together by a zone of junction ZJ (
The actuator 2 is extended, on the axis AB, by the needle 4, and is arranged in order to directly vibrate the needle 4 with a setpoint period i, thus ensuring between the first end 6 of the needle 4 and the seat 5 (or 5′) of the nozzle 3 a relative axial movement suitable for alternately opening and closing the valve element, as illustrated in
The actuator 2 has a stack with two axially opposed transverse faces C, D and including at least one electroactive portion 22 comprising an electroactive material 221 (
The stack comprises at least one portion, called the amplifier 21, axially attached to the needle 4 at the location of one D of said transverse faces C, D, the electroactive portion 22 and the needle 4 being placed axially on either side of the amplifier 21. The latter is designed to transmit the vibrations of the electroactive material 221 to the needle 4 amplifying them so that the movements of the needle 4 at the valve element are greater than the integral of the deformations of the electroactive material 221. The amplifier 21 may have a substantially cylindrical shape (
The stack also comprises at least one other portion 23, called the rear weight 23, playing a role of even distribution of the stresses on the electroactive material 221. The amplifier 21 and the rear weight 23 are placed axially on either side of the electroactive portion 22. The rear weight 23 has a wall axially opposite to the electroactive portion 22, said wall being indistinguishable from the transverse face C of the stack axially opposite to the needle 4.
The amplifier 21, the electroactive portion 22 and the rear weight 23 are, on the one hand squeezed together by a prestress means suitable for prestressing at least partially said stack, and, on the other hand suitable for being traversed by acoustic waves initiated by the vibrations of the electroactive portion 22.
The prestress means comprises at least one clamping flange 25 outside the stack and placed between the stack and the casing 1.
Preferably, the electroactive material 221 is piezoelectric, which may take the form of, for example, one or more ceramic piezoelectric shims stacked axially on one another in order to form the electroactive portion 22 of the stack. The selective deformations of the electroactive material 221, for example, the periodic deformations with the setpoint period τ, generating the acoustic waves in the injector finally culminate in the relative longitudinal movements of the head 7 (or 7′) of the needle 4 relative to the seat 5 (or 5′) or vice versa, suitable for alternately opening and closing the valve element, as evoked above with reference to
The prestress means comprises at least one means 250 for adjusting the axial force for clamping the stack. This allows the prestress means to squeeze the electroactive portion 22, for example, between the rear weight 23 and the amplifier 21, as illustrated in
In particular, it is possible to have the adjusting means 250 placed axially between the clamping flange 25 and the stack (
Preferably, the clamping flange 25 has a thermal expansion (in particular, a coefficient of thermal expansion) that is substantially identical to that of the stack and, in particular to that of the electroactive material 221. For example, the difference between the coefficients of expansion of the electroactive material 221 and of the materials of the stack may be chosen so that the differential expansions of these parts do not induce, in the operating temperature range of the injector, a variation in the prestress of the electroactive material 221 of more than 10% of the nominal stress value (induced by the prestress means 250). For the ceramic electroactive material 221, the clamping flange 25 may be made of an iron and nickel alloy with carbon and chrome, for example, an alloy of the “invar” type. Thanks to this arrangement, the prestress of the electroactive material 221 tends to remain constant irrespective of the temperature variations of the injector. The same expansion of the stack (and in particular of the electroactive material 221 and that of the clamping flange 25) ensures a thermal compensation for the expansions due to the temperature variations of the injector. Assembling the stack and therefore the actuator 2 becomes quicker because it requires no other means for compensating for said thermal expansions. In this embodiment, the rear weight 23 may be indistinguishable from the adjusting means 250 (a situation not shown in the figures).
Alternatively, the clamping flange 25 may have a thermal expansion (in particular a coefficient of thermal expansion) that is different from that of the stack and, in particular, from that of the electroactive material 221. In this case, the prestress means comprises at least one elastic means 251 (for example at least one rubber seal, an elastic shim, a spring) placed between the clamping flange 25 and the stack. The elastic means 251 makes it possible to provide a virtually constant prestress of the electroactive portion 22 and, in particular, of the electroactive material 221, irrespective of the elongations of the clamping flange 25 due to the thermal expansions. Thanks to this arrangement, it is possible to continue assembling the stack and therefore the actuator 2 on an industrial scale, for example, when the invar clamping flanges 25 are out of stock. Therefore this embodiment helps to make the manufacture of the injector more reliable.
Preferably, the elastic means 251 is placed between the stack and the adjusting means 250 (
Preferably, the adjusting means 250 takes the form of a screw, preferably a threaded screw, the clamping flange for its part having a corresponding drill hole, preferably central, that is to say in line with the axis AB and tapped (
In particular, the clamping flange 25 rests on the two opposite transverse faces C, D of the stack (
The amplifier 21 may have at least one segment narrowing on the axis AB oriented toward the needle 4, for example, a segment 211 for connection with the electroactive portion 22. In this case, the clamping flange 25 may at least partially closely follow the shape of said narrowing segment of the amplifier 21, as illustrated in
It should be understood that the prestress means may comprise several clamping flanges 25 placed symmetrically around the stack and radially at a distance from one another at a predetermined angle measured in a plane perpendicular to the axis AB. The presence of several flanges ensures the even distribution of the stresses when the stack is clamped.
Means 11 (or 11′) for returning the actuator 2 may be provided in order to keep the head 7 (or 7′) of the needle 4 pressing against the seat 5 (or 5′) of the nozzle 3 in order to ensure the closure of the valve element irrespective of the pressure in the combustion chamber 15.
The clamping flange 25 and the casing 1 may have at least one longitudinal zone of contact, represented with the aid of the dots referenced UW in
The nozzle 3 with the casing 1 and the needle 4 with the actuator 2 form respectively a first and a second medium for propagating acoustic waves. Each of these two media has at least one linear acoustic impedance I which depends on a surface Σ of a cross section of the medium perpendicular to the axis AB, on a density ρ of the medium and on a velocity c of the sound in the medium: I=fI(Σ,ρ,c). To illustrate this ratio, let us examine various simplified examples relating to the needle 4 of the nozzle 3 and illustrated respectively in
The needle 4 and the nozzle 3 each take the form of a body the radial dimensions of which perpendicular to the axis AB are small relative to its length along the axis AB. In a solid bar 400 cited here as a simplified model of the needle 4 (
Any variation in linear acoustic impedance I induces an echo, that is to say a weakening of the acoustic wave being propagated in a direction of the bar (for example, from right to left in
The injector may comprise at least one zone of linear acoustic impedance breakage, existing at a distance from the zone of contact of the seat 50 with the first end 6 of the needle 4 along the nozzle 3 (
As illustrated schematically in
T
B
=n
B*[τ/2] (E1)
where nB is a multiplying coefficient, a non-zero positive integer, called the first multiplying coefficient, and the distance, called the second distance LA, between on the one hand the zone of contact between the first end 6 and the seat 5 (or 5′), and on the other hand the first zone of linear acoustic impedance breakage along the needle 4 or the actuator 2, is such that the propagation time, called the “acoustic time-of-flight” TA, of the acoustic waves initiated by the electroactive portion 22 of the stack and traveling over this second distance LA=fA(TA) satisfies the following equation:
T
A
=n
A*[τ/2] (E2)
where nA is another multiplying coefficient, a non-zero positive integer, called the second multiplying coefficient, for example nA≠nB.
It should be understood that the equations referenced E1 and E2 above must be considered as verified give or take a certain tolerance in order to take account of the manufacturing constraints, for example, a tolerance of the order of ±10% of the setpoint period τ, that is to say of the order of ±20% of the half-setpoint period τ/2. Taking this tolerance into consideration, the equations referenced E1 and E2 above may be respectively rewritten as follows:
T
B
=n
B*[τ/2]±0.2*[τ/2] (E1′)
T
A
=n
A*[τ/2]±0.2*[τ/2] (E2′)
It should be noted that, in practice, the first distance LB=fB(TB) expressed in acoustic time-of-flight TB and the second distance LA=fA(TA) expressed in acoustic time-of-flight TA, measured on corresponding parts manufactured on an industrial scale, may have slight variations relative to the reference values calculated with the aid of the equations E1 and E2 above. These slight variations may be due to an effect of fitted weights. The latter may correspond, for example, to the head 7 (or 7′) of the needle 4 and/or to a guide boss (not shown) in a plane perpendicular to the axis AB of the end 6 of the needle 4 in the nozzle 3. Said tolerance makes it possible to take account of said effect of fitted weights in order to correct the expressions in acoustic time-of-flight of the first distance LB=fB(TB) and of the second distance LA=fA(TA) with the aid of the equations E1′ and E2′ above.
Preferably, nA=nB for the second and the first multiplying coefficients with, in particular, nA=nB=1 in order to minimize the linear dimensions of the injector on the axis AB in order to leave a maximum of space for inlet and/or exhaust ducts. Therefore, starting from the zone of contact between the seat 5 (or 5′) and the first end 6 of the needle 4, the nozzle 3 has constant acoustic properties on successions of length representative of the first distance LB=fB(TB) that are substantially equal to one another in acoustic time-of-flight and of which the expression in acoustic time-of-flight TB preferably amounts to a single half-setpoint period τ/2. Similarly, starting from the zone of contact between the seat 5 (or 5′) and the first end 6 of the needle 4, the latter has constant acoustic properties over successions of length representative of the second distance LA=fA(TA) that are substantially equal to one another in acoustic time-of-flight and the expression of which in acoustic time-of-flight TA preferably amounts to a single half-setpoint period τ/2.
During an established condition of its operation, that is to say during operation at a predetermined temperature outside the starting and stopping phases of the injector, the latter advantageously makes it possible to alternately open and close the valve element in a manner that is not very sensitive to the pressure in the combustion chamber 15. In the example illustrated in
In the light of the above details, it should be understood that, in the general case for the first and the second multiplying coefficients such as nB≠nA, it is the incident waves and the reflected waves offset by a few periods τ that compensate for one another in the seat 5 in order to make it dynamically fixed. This compensation may not be total when, for example, the difference between nB and nA is greater than a predetermined value and/or a dissipation of the acoustic waves in the nozzle 3 (and finally of its linear acoustic impedance) exceeds a certain threshold. That is why the configuration of the injector with nB=nA and in particular nB=nA=1, appears a priori as being more reliable acoustically and is still preferable to that in which nB≠nA.
It should be understood that the first distance LB=fB(TB) and the second distance LA=fA(TA) respectively with respect to the first “nozzle 3+casing 1” medium and the second “needle 4+actuator 2” medium for propagation of the acoustic waves are preferably defined with the aid of the respective acoustic times-of-flight TB=nB*[τ/2] and TA=nA*[τ/2], in an acoustic context. The latter is due to the presence of the vibrations, for example the ultrasonic vibrations, of the setpoint period τ, initiated by the electroactive portion 22 of the stack indistinguishable from the actuator 2 in the present example, as evoked above. In other words, the first distance LB=fB(TB) and the second distance LA=fA(TA) are between two acoustic limits. In general, a first acoustic limit being used to define both the first distance LB and the second distance LA is represented by one end of an assembly in question (“nozzle 3+casing 1” or “needle 4+actuator 2”). In a simplified manner, it is possible to consider that this first acoustic limit is indistinguishable from the zone of contact between the first end 6 of the needle 4 (if necessary extended axially by the head 7 (or 7′)) and the seat 5 (or 5′) of the nozzle 3, as illustrated in
In the example illustrated in
In the example illustrated in
Similarly, the first acoustic limit being used to determine the first distance LB=fB(TB) in relation with the first “nozzle 3+casing 1” medium for propagation of the acoustic waves is taken halfway up the corresponding convergent frustoconical seat 5′.
The second acoustic limit specific to each of the two assemblies is represented by the respective first zone of linear acoustic impedance breakage I, as detailed above. For example, the second acoustic limit may correspond to the location where the diameter of the assembly in question varies in a plane perpendicular to the axis AB, for example, at the zone of junction ZJ of the needle 4 with the amplifier 21 of the stack or of the location of recessing SX of the nozzle 3 in the casing 1 (
Specifically, machining in a single piece is the simplest solution to apply during manufacture of said parts on an industrial scale.
It should however be understood that the acoustic limits of the bodies may not correspond to their physical limits. Specifically, in addition to the geometry of the bodies, the acoustic properties reflected, for example, with the aid of the linear acoustic impedance discussed above, also depend on the other parameters such as the density of the bodies and the velocity of the sound in the bodies.
To make the injector perform even better in acoustic terms, the length L measured between the two opposite transverse faces C, D of the stack formed by the amplifier 21, the electroactive portion 22 and the rear weight 23 (
T=n*[τ/2], (E3)
where n is a multiplying coefficient, a non-zero positive integer, called the third multiplying coefficient, for example, n≠nB≠nA. By analogy with the nozzle 3 and the needle 4, the actuator 2 (indistinguishable in the present example from the stack as already specified above) may therefore have a symmetrical acoustic structure such that an echo of an acoustic wave transmitted in a location of the symmetrical stack tends to return, after one or more reflections at the limits of the stack represented by the opposite transverse faces C, D in
By analogy with the equations referenced E1 and E2 above, it should be understood that the equation referenced E3 above should be considered as verified give or take a certain tolerance to take account of manufacturing constraints, for example, a tolerance of the order of ±10% of the setpoint period i, that is to say of the order of plus or minus ±20% of the half-setpoint period τ/2. Taking this tolerance into consideration, the equation referenced E3 above can be rewritten as follows:
T=n*[τ/2]±0.2*[τ/2] (E3′)
It should be noted that, in practice, the length L=f(T) expressed in acoustic time-of-flight T and measured on corresponding parts manufactured on an industrial scale may have slight variations relative to the reference values calculated with the aid of the equation E3 above. These slight variations may be due to an effect of fitted weights. The latter may correspond, for example, to appendages or to machinings for gripping or assembly. Said tolerance makes it possible to take account of said effect of fitted weights in order to correct the expression in acoustic time-of-flight of the length L=f(T) with the aid of the equation E3′ above.
For the same reasons as those evoked above with relation to nB and nA, it is preferable for n=nB=nA and, in particular, for n=nB=nA=1.
It should be understood that, because of its geometry (and in particular its thickness measured on a plane perpendicular to the axis AB, negligible relative to the diameter D4 of the needle 4), its density, its velocity of sound, the clamping flange 25 makes a negligible contribution acoustically. The presence of the clamping flange 25 therefore does not significantly influence the length L=f(T) of the stack expressed in acoustic time-of-flight T.
When the clamping flange 25 has the coefficient of thermal expansion that is the same as that of the stack and, in particular, as that of the electroactive material 221, it should be understood that, acoustically, the second transverse face C of the stack corresponds to that of the adjusting means 250 opposite to the needle 4 (and not to that of the rear weight 23 opposite to the needle 4), the definition already discussed above of the first transverse face D of the stack for its part remaining unchanged, so that the length L=f(T) of the stack still remains between the two opposite transverse faces C, D, as illustrated in
When the clamping flange 25 has the coefficient of thermal expansion that differs from that of the stack and, in particular, from that of the electroactive material 221, it should be understood that, acoustically, the definitions already discussed above of the first transverse face D and the second transverse face C of the stack remain unchanged (in particular, the second transverse face C of the stack corresponds to that of the rear weight 23 opposite to the needle 4), so that the length L=f(T) of the stack always remains between the two opposite transverse faces C, D, as illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0704636 | Jun 2007 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR2008/051147 | 6/25/2008 | WO | 00 | 4/14/2010 |