The present invention relates to a fluid transfer system and method for transferring fluid from a reservoir and to delivery device typically being nozzle. The present invention relates in particular to transferring urea in highly accurate metered amounts from a reservoir to a nozzle arranged within an exhaust system of a combustion engine or combustion engines.
It has been found that introduction of urea into the exhaust gasses streaming from an combustion engine and into a catalytic system may dramatically increase the efficiency of the catalytic element's capability to convert NOx gasses. While urea in it self is relatively harmless to the environment and the amounts introduced into the combustion system thereby can be overdosed, such wasting of urea is often undesirably as the technology is often applied to moving vehicles and such waste would require larger storage capacities than what is actually needed if urea is dosed correctly.
A need for introducing the required amount of urea into the exhaust gasses only is therefore present. Furthermore, urea is most efficiently introduced into the exhaust gasses as a spray of droplet which typically requires that the urea is pressurized and fed to a nozzle.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a fluid transfer system and method providing an efficient controllable delivery of fluid from a reservoir to a nozzle.
Thus, in a first aspect the present invention preferably relates to a fluid transfer system for transferring fluid from a reservoir to a receiving device, preferably being a nozzle, the fluid transfer system comprising
The through flow device may preferably comprise or is a dosing pump, a pump, a measuring unit, a measuring pump, or a combination thereof.
In the present context a number of terms are used. Even though these are used in their ordinary meaning, a further exemplary explanation is given on some of the terms.
Dynamical error in delivered amount: A dynamical error occurs when the demand for delivered fluid varies with time and is caused by a delay between when the amount is delivered an when it should have been delivered. The delay is typically due to elasticity in the fluid delivery system, delay in prosecution of controlling and/or sensing signal and/or the like. A dynamical error may be defined as the maximum value of the difference between the desired amount and the actual delivered amount during a pre-defined time. The dynamical error is not accumulated.
Accumulative error in delivered amount: An accumulative error in delivered amount is typically defined as an error which is not balanced over time.
Dosing pump: A unit delivering a precise amount of liquid controlled by an electrical signal from a control unit and which is capable of doing so against a high pressure.
Pump (p pump): A unit delivering an uncontrolled flow of liquid against a high pressure or a unit capable of maintaining a high pressure.
Measuring unit: A unit giving information (most often as electrical signals) about flow of liquid without influencing flow or pressure.
Measuring pump: A combination of a pump and the measuring unit.
Through flow device: A device adapted to receive fluid from a reservoir and transfer the fluid and/or measuring the amount of fluid being transferred from the reservoir and to a receiving device.
Demand: The amount to be delivered. Demand may be the immediate demand expressed in e.g. liter per hour [1/h] or demand accumulated over an interval expressed in e.g hour [h].
Delivery: The amount to be delivered. Delivery may be the immediate delivery expressed in e.g. liter per hour [l/h] or delivery accumulated over an interval expressed in e.g hour [h].
The invention involves preferably at least two ways of dosing fluid (further ways are explained later on). The first one may be summarized in the following manner:
1. Use of a dosing pump: In such embodiments, the dosing pump provides very accurately the amount demanded and the dosing pump is accordingly controlled to provide a delivery corresponding to a demand. The pressurization of the fluid is preferably obtained by a combination of a fluid buffer arranged downstream of the dosing pump and a shut-off valve arranged downstream of the buffer.
The second one is based on using a measuring unit. In such embodiments, the fluid is pressurized in some manner; typically the fluid is stored pressurized in a reservoir or pressurized by a pump. A demand is typically expressed at regular intervals and the total amount to be delivered in a given interval is typically estimated to equal the demand (in l/h) at the beginning of the interval multiplied with the length (in hour) of the interval. Use of a dosing unit may be summarized in the following manner:
2a: The delivery of fluid can be estimated from a functional relationship giving delivered amount per hour multiplied by the opening time of the shut-off valve. From such a relationship the time in a given interval the valve must be open for meeting a demand. During delivery the actual delivered amount is measured by the measuring unit, and if discrepancy is found between the estimated delivered amount and the actual delivered amount a feed back is made to the algorithm determining the opening time of the shut-off valve to take into account the discrepancy.
2b: The actual delivery is measured during delivery. Once the demand in a given interval has been met, the shut-off valve is closed.
It should be noted that the above summaries are examples only, that variations of these two occurs and they are therefore not intended to be construed in a narrowing way. However, they are believed to provide an indication on a framework for the present invention. For instance, in some embodiments according to the present invention, the measuring unit and pressurization unit are integrated into each other.
As it will appear in the following, a pump will in some embodiment pressurize fluid received from the tank. However, in some other embodiment the system receives pressurized fluid from the tank and in such embodiment the pump will not be necessary.
The present invention relates in a second aspect preferably to a method of transferring fluid from a reservoir to a receiving device, preferably being a nozzle, the fluid transfer system comprising
Also in this connection the through flow device may preferably comprise or is a dosing pump, a pump, a measuring unit, measuring pump or a combination thereof.
The controlling of the shut-off valve to meet a given demand is preferably performed based on direct control of the shut-off valve based on the system characteristic for obtaining a minimum dynamic error and a correction signal from the measuring unit to modify an algorithm for controlling the valve in order to avoid accumulative error.
The present invention and in particular preferred embodiments thereof will now be described in details with reference to the accompanying figures, wherein
The dosing pump 7, of the embodiment according to
In order to render the different functions of the system of
All parts of the system may be integrated into a single unit. However, the tank and the nozzle are typically not integrated parts of the system, whereby the system may be placed at an appropriated place of e.g. a truck.
The nozzle 5 is a nozzle that provides atomized fluid once the pressure of the fluid fed to the nozzle 5 is above a threshold Pmax. Above that threshold the amount of fluid being atomized equals the amount of fluid provided by the dosing pump 7. However, below the threshold, the nozzle 5 will not be able to atomize all fluid, as the amount of fluid streaming towards the nozzle is too small to build up a pressure above the threshold. When this occurs, the shut-off valve 9 controls whether fluid is fed to the nozzle 5 or not in the manner disclosed below. In typical applications the amount of fluid to be atomized ranges from e.g. 0.1% to 100% of the maximum amount of fluid to be atomized and atomization of a continuous flowing fluid over such an interval is typically not considered feasible.
The shut-off valve 9 is a valve that opens when the pressure in the fluid pumped towards it is above a maximum pressure limit Pmax (
Referring to
When the demand for atomized fluid is at medium flow the atomization enters into the regime disclosed schematically in
A minimum flow regime is schematically shown in
The various flow regimes, high, medium and minimum, are defined by selecting Pmax and Pmin in combination with selecting the length of “set time interval”. Actual values of these parameters are selected in accordance with an actual nozzle configuration. In a typical embodiment, Pmax is selected to be 8.4 bar, Pmin is selected to be 8.1 bar and “set time interval” is selected to be one or a few seconds. In such embodiments, the minimum amount of fluid being fed to the nozzle 5 is around 0.010 l/h, the flexibility of the buffer 8 is 160 mm3/bar.
The opening and closing of the shut-off valve 9 is electromagnetically controlled from a valve controlling unit 10 as shown in
The buffer 8 may provide the effect that the frequency at which the shut-off valve 9 operates can be decreased compared to a system where no buffer 8 is incorporated in the system.
When the shut-off valve 9 is closed and the dosing pump 7 pumps fluid the pressure within the fluid transfer system increases. The fluid is considered to be incompressible and once the shut-off valve 9 is opened the pressure in the fluid transfer system will, if no buffer 8 is incorporated and the dosing pump 7 is not pumping, drop to the level outside the nozzle 5 almost instantaneously. However, as the buffer 8 is a resilient member the contraction of the buffer's 8 volume will maintain the pressure within the fluid transfer higher than Pmin for a much longer period, thus the time between two consecutive openings of shut-off valve 9 can be of sufficient length to secure a sufficient life time of the shut-off valve 9. Besides improving the valve life time expectancy the buffer will make it possible to use a much slower (and thus cheaper) valve. If the buffer is too big it can introduce an unacceptable dynamic error.
A pressure sensor 13 measures the pressure within the buffer 8. The measured pressure is used for controlling the state of the shut-off valve 9 (open or close) and the pressure measured is used as if it was the pressure measured at the inlet of the valve. The measured pressure is signaled to a controlling unit 10 via the connection 14.
The connection 15 from the shut-off valve 9 to the nozzle 5 is sufficiently stiff to assure that once the shut-off valve 9 is opened the pressure increase in the connection 15 will in a substantial manner not result in any deformation of the connection 15. If, on the other hand, the connection was not substantially stiff, opening of the shut-off valve 9 would cause the connection 15 to expand resulting in that the amount of urea streaming out of the outlet of the shut-off valve 9 would not substantial instantaneously equal the amount streaming out of the nozzle 5 which normally would be considered as introducing errors into the fluid transfer system. In order to provide suitable stiffness, the connection 15 is typically a line made of stainless steel. The stiffness of the connection 15 helps also to minimize droplets from being formed at the outlet of the nozzle as the shutting-off of the shut-off valve if done sufficiently fast will result in that no fluid will stream out of the nozzle. If, on the other hand, the connection 15 was not sufficiently stiff the connection would contract once the shut-off valve is shut-off resulting in fluid being forced out of the nozzle and a droplet formed at outlet of the nozzle. Such droplet may crystallize and result in clogging of the nozzle. It is noted that such stiff connection may be applied to all the embodiments of the invention.
In the following
The fluid transfer system of
Also this embodiment may be assembled into a unit as disclosed in connection with the above embodiment.
Also in this embodiment, the transfer system is equipped with a sensor 27 sensing the end positions in the relative movement between piston 24 and sub-piston 29. A further sensor 32 is arranged for sensing the upper dead position of the crank 31.
When the sub-piston 29 is moved towards it lower position, the piston 24 will once the spring 26 is fully expanded follow this displacement. This will result in that the pressure above the membrane 25 is decreased causing the valve 23 to open and the valve 28 to close, thereby fluid will be drawn from the tank and into the pump/measuring unit. When the sub-piston 29 thereafter moves towards it upper position the valve 23 closes. During this displacement of the sub-piston 29, the spring will be compressed as the shut-off valve 9 is closed during this movement and the force from the pressure on the membrane 25 is larger than the force applied by the spring 26 on the piston 24. When the spring 26 has been maximally compressed and the crank 31 is stopped in upper dead position (signaled by the sensor 32 to the control unit 20) the nozzle can atomize urea in PWM mode as previously described and the spring 26 will start to expand. Such expansion of the spring 26 will result in that fluid may still be pressurized and delivered even though the crank 31 is not rotating. In fact it may be essential for the function of the system that the shut-off valve 9 only is operated when the crank 31 and thus the sub-piston is not moving.
This embodiment has many similarities with the embodiment shown in
This embodiment comprises a pump/measuring unit connected at the inlet to a tank via a one-way valve 23 and at the outlet of the pumping/measuring unit a one-way valve 28 is arranged. The two one-way valves 23 and 28 play the same role as the two one-way valves in a normal pump. The pump/measuring unit comprises a piston 24 and a membrane 25 similar to the piston and membrane of the above discussed embodiments. The piston 24 in this embodiment is directly connected to a crank 31 via a connecting rod 30.
The pump is typically controlled to maintain a substantially constant pressure at the shut-off valve 9. The shut-off valve 9 is typically opened and closed in a pulsating (PWM) manner based on the actual need for urea. Due to the highly defined geometry each revolution of the crank represents a well defined and known volume delivered, and a sensor 32 may detect the amount pumped by picking up a signal for each revolution or a known fraction of a revolution. This detection is uncritical as an error is not accumulating. The signals will via the connection 34 provide information for changing the PWM of shut-off valve 9 in order to minimize the accumulative error.
The shut-off valve 9 can be operated without interruption in the earlier described manner (PWM).
It should be noted the pump may have two membranes operating in opposite phases, one membrane having a suction stroke, while the other is pumping.
In the above a number of different embodiments are disclosed which each deals with delivery of liquefied Urea into an exhaust system. A common characteristic of the different embodiments is the presence of a shut-off valve 9 arranged before the nozzle. Although the shut-off valve may be dispensed with it is preferably applied in order to control the flow of urea to the nozzle; in some embodiments the shut-off valve is in combination with a buffer used to secure sufficient pressure of the fluid and in other embodiments used to control the amount of fluid delivered to the nozzle. A combination thereof is, of course, also possible.
As indicated, delivery of urea according to the present invention may mainly be performed in four different manners:
I. Open loop operation: From the knowledge of system parameters (such as nozzle constant, pressure of the fluid before the nozzle, temperature and viscosity of the fluid, characteristics of the shut-off valve etc.) the delivery of urea to the nozzle according to the need demanded (demand) from the motor control unit is controlled according to an administering algorithm determining opening and closing periods for the valve. The valve is operated solely on basis of system parameters (e.g. on basis of temperature and pressure measurements) without any feedback from actually delivered volume. Typically, such an operation results in a high cost system.
II. Use of a dosing pump as shown
III. Use of a measuring pump maintaining an approximately constant pressure being high enough to ensure atomization. The measuring pump pressurizes the fluid and signals to a motor control unit that a well defined amount of urea has been delivered. This is indicated in
IV. Use of a measuring unit as shown in
PWM provides the possibility to choose a suitable pulse interval while taking into account the dynamics (typically the buffer effect) of the catalytic system.
The strategy shown in
In
The administrating algorithm determining activation of the shut-off valve (pulse width) may comprise a number of elements, such as deviations in the accumulated delivery from accumulated demand, error in accumulated delivered amount between two feed back times, the rate of change at which such error changes etc.
With reference to
Between C2 and C3 the demand for delivery is increased and as the accumulated demand is higher than the accumulated delivery at C3, the pulse width is consequently increased in order to increase the delivery. At C4 it is found that the increase is not sufficient to meet the demand and at C4 the pulse width is again increased.
A more realistic situation with varying demand and thus varying pulse width within an interval is shown in
Obviously there exist a number of strategies to modify the algorithm for pulse width in the following interval. A simple one is aiming to deliver the accumulated demand volume for the next interval (that means ΔCn+1=ΔCn+2) by multiplying the pulse width function by a factor (ΔCn−ΔCn+1)/V(control). Of course it will never be absolutely correct as the demand is varying but as this variation is continuous and intervals are rather short it will give a serviceable approximation. Another strategy will be to aim to have zero accumulative error (ΔCn+2=0).
Embodiments which advantageously can be used in connection with the above strategy are shown in
The measuring unit 19 comprising a cylinder 39 in which a corbie-stepped piston 38 is slidable arranged. The corbie-stepped shape of the piston 38 is provided by the piston part 38c whereby the area 38a is larger than the area 38b as shown in the figure. The measuring device 19 receives fluid through valve 36. The fluid is pressurized to a pressure P and is received from pressurized reservoir or a pump. The outlet of valve 36 connected to the larger displacement volume 40a of cylinder 39, and connected to the smaller displacement volume 40b of the cylinder 39 via a valve 37. The connection between the valve 37 and the smaller displacement volume 40b also comprises a discharge 41 in the configuration shown in
Above the end of the piston part 38c opposite the end connected to the piston 38 a displacement volume 42 is provided. This displacement volume 42 receives fluid at the same or substantial same pressure P as fed to the valve 36. In a preferred embodiment, the fluid supplied to valve 36 and displacement volume 42 comes from the same source.
When valve 36 is closed and valve 37 is open, the pressure in displacement volume 42 will push the piston 38 to the left with reference to
The embodiment of
The size of the areas 38a and 38b may be selected so that the same amount delivered to the discharge irrespective of the way the piston 38 moves. This may be achieved when the size of area 38a is twice the size of area 38b. Furthermore, the sizes of the displacement volumes have the following ratio 2:1:1 (40a:40b:42). Embodiments like the one shown in
By arranging the valves 36 and 37 as indicated on
In the embodiment of
Even though, the present description has focused on different embodiments each having distinct features it should be emphasized that features disclosed in connection with one embodiment is applicable in connection with another embodiment.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2005 01817 | Dec 2005 | DK | national |
This application is a divisional of and claims the benefit of priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/158,003, filed Sep. 24, 2008, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,866,333 which is a National Phase application of and claims the benefit of priority to International Application PCT/DK2006/050084, filed Dec. 22, 2006, which designated the United States and was published in English, and claims priority to Danish Patent Application No. PA 2005 01817, filed Dec. 22, 2005. The disclosures of all of the aforementioned application are hereby expressly incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12158003 | US | |
Child | 12964555 | US |