The invention relates to a fuel feed unit for a motor vehicle having a fuel pump which is driven by an electric motor, and having a rotor of the fuel pump arranged between two housing parts, the rotor being fastened in a rotationally fixed manner to a shaft of the electric motor.
Fuel feed units of this type are frequently used in modern-day motor vehicles and are known from practice. The housing parts of the fuel pump are produced mainly from metal or a sintered ceramic, or have a sintered bush, which is pressed into plastic, as a bearing for the shaft. The housing parts are separated from the rotor by a particularly small clearance and thus form a gap seal of the fuel pump. Heat input as a result of friction or heat from the electric motor leads, however, to the housing parts and the rotor expanding, and thus to a reduction in the gap between the housing parts and the rotor. As a result, further friction occurs in the fuel pump which, in the worst case, causes the later to become jammed. The fuel pump seizes after a very short time in particular during dry running of the fuel feed unit.
The problem on which the invention is based is that of developing a fuel feed unit of the type mentioned in the introduction in such a way that the fuel pump is largely prevented from seizing, in particular during dry running.
The problem is solved according to the invention in that at least one of the housing parts has an expansion joint.
This embodiment allows the housing part to expand in the event of heat input or friction. The change in shape of the housing parts can be absorbed by means of corresponding arrangement of the expansion joint or of a plurality of expansion joints and can thus be kept away from the mounting of the shaft and from the rotor. The gap seal between the housing parts and the rotor can be kept largely constant by means of the invention even in the event of thermal expansion of the housing parts. As a result, the generation of further friction is kept particularly low, and the fuel pump is largely prevented from seizing. The fuel feed unit according to the invention can therefore be operated in a dry state and thus without fuel for a particularly long period of time without the fuel pump seizing.
The fuel feed unit according to the invention can be produced in a particularly cost-effective manner if at least one of the housing parts is produced from plastic and if the plastic forms a bearing shell for directly mounting the shaft. In known fuel feed units for gasoline fuels, the housing parts, including the bearing for the shaft, could not be produced entirely from plastic since a change in shape as a result of swelling of the plastic on contact with fuel, in addition to that caused by the heat input from the electric motor, prevents the housing parts from being sealed off with respect to the rotor. The expansion joints according to the invention absorb the change in shape of the plastic as a result of swelling and thus prevent the gap seal with respect to the rotor and a bearing gap with respect to the shaft from being altered. A further advantage of the use of plastic as a housing part is that heat generated by the electric motor is particularly badly conducted. This leads to a further reduction of friction in the fuel pump.
According to another advantageous refinement of the invention, changes in shape occurring in both the axial and radial directions can be easily compensated for by means of corresponding arrangement of the expansion joints if the housing part which faces toward the electric motor has a radial section which runs toward the shaft and an axial section which leads away from the rotor parallel to the shaft.
According to another advantageous refinement of the invention, heat input into the housing part which faces the electric motor can be kept particularly low if the expansion joint is arranged on the axial section near the rotor and is embodied as a spacing of the housing part from the shaft.
According to another advantageous refinement of the invention, friction in the region of the bearing of the shaft can be further reduced if the expansion joint runs over approximately half of the axial section.
According to another advantageous refinement of the invention, friction in the region of the bearing of the shaft can be further reduced if the expansion joint on the axial section runs over the entire height of the radial section. The radial section of the housing part which faces toward the electric motor can as a result expand in its plane without leading to increased friction in the bearing of the shaft.
According to another advantageous refinement of the invention, deformation of one of the sections as a result of a change in shape of the other section can be easily avoided if the expansion joint is arranged in the corner region at which the two sections adjoin one another.
According to another advantageous refinement of the invention, interference in the gap seal between the housing parts and the rotor can be easily prevented if the expansion joint is arranged on that side of the housing part facing toward the electric motor which faces away from the rotor.
According to another advantageous refinement of the invention, the housing part which faces toward the electric motor can be produced in a particularly cost-effective manner in an injection mold, from which the molding can be removed axially, if the expansion joint is embodied as a groove which runs all the way around the axial section.
The production costs of the fuel feed unit according to the invention can be further reduced if the axial section and the radial section are produced in one piece.
The invention permits a large number of embodiments. In order to further clarify its basic principle, one of them is described in the following and is illustrated in the drawing, in which:
When the rotor 6 is driven, the fuel pump 3 sucks in fuel via a suction duct 15 and feeds said fuel via an outlet duct 16 into the housing 1 of the feed unit. The fuel then flows through the electric motor 2 in a gap between the stator 10 and the rotor 9. For clarity, the fuel flows are indicated by arrows in the drawing. The fuel then flows via a non-return valve 17 to a connecting pipe 18. A fuel line (not illustrated) which is connected to an internal combustion engine of the motor vehicle can be connected to the connecting pipe 18.
During dry running, and thus when fuel is not being fed, heat generated by the electric motor 2 is introduced into the fuel pump 3 via that region of the axial section 20 which is embodied as a radial bearing 14. Only an insignificant amount of heat can be transmitted to the fuel pump 3 in the expansion joint 21 of the axial section 20, since the housing part 4 is at a distance from the shaft 7 here. For clarity, the flow of heat is indicated in the drawing by arrows. The heat can lead to expansion of the axial section 20 in the radial direction. During dry running, and thus when fuel is not being fed, friction heat generated by the fuel pump 3 leads to expansion of the radial section 19 in a direction toward the shaft 7. The radial section 19 can expand, by means of the two expansion joints 21, 22, a small amount in the direction of the shaft 7 without introducing forces into the radial bearing 14. For clarity, expansions of the housing part 4, which is arranged between the fuel pump 3 and the electric motor 2 from
The invention has been illustrated by way of example on a side-channel pump. The fuel pump 3 can of course also be a peripheral pump or a positive displacement pump such as a so-called G-rotor pump.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 41 840.7 | Sep 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/51637 | 7/28/2004 | WO | 11/15/2006 |