The present invention relates to fuel injection rate shaping (IRS) in an internal combustion engine, in particular of the type provided with a common rail fuel injection system.
As is known, in latest generation common rail fuel injection systems, the electroinjectors are controlled electronically by an electronic control unit appropriately programmed to supply the electroinjectors with electrical commands such as to provide fuel injection strategies specifically designed to achieve given targets in terms of fuel consumption or levels of emission of pollutant substances.
For example, EP 1,035,314 B1 in the name of the Applicant discloses a common rail fuel injection system in which the electronic control unit is programmed to cause the fuel injection system to carry out, in one and the same engine cylinder and in one and the same engine cycle, multiple temporally consecutive fuel injections comprising:
FR 2,761,113 B1 discloses, instead, a common rail fuel injection system in which the electronic control unit is programmed to cause the fuel injection system to operate in two distinct operating modes, in both of which a main fuel injection and a preceding pilot fuel injection are carried out in one and the same engine cylinder and in one and the same engine cycle. In the first operating mode, however, the pilot fuel injection is performed sufficiently far from the main fuel injection as to be hydraulically separated from the latter by a dwell time, whereas in the second operating mode the pilot fuel injection is performed sufficiently close to the main fuel injection as to partially overlap the latter. In addition, the common rail fuel injection system is caused to operate in the first operating mode when the engine is required to operate at medium-to-low speed and/or load, and in the second operating mode when the engine is required to operate at high speed and/or load.
EP 1,657,422 A1 and EP 1,795,738 A1 in the name of the Applicant disclose, instead, a common rail fuel injection system in which the electronic control unit is programmed to cause a particular fuel injection mode, generally referred to as “fuel injection rate shaping”, to be performed. In particular, the electronic control unit is programmed to supply an electroinjector with at least a first electrical command, with a pre-set time duration, to cause a pilot fuel injection to be performed, and a subsequent electrical command, with a duration depending upon the engine operating conditions, to cause a main fuel injection to be performed, wherein the two electrical commands are separated in time by an electrical dwell time such that the main fuel injection starts without any discontinuity in time with respect to the pilot fuel injection, thus giving rise to a so-called “two-hump” instantaneous fuel flow rate profile.
In order for the constraint relating to the main fuel injection starting without any discontinuity in time with respect to the pilot fuel injection to be met, in the aforementioned patent documents, various fuel injection rate shapings are proposed, in one of which, as in FR 2,761,113 B1, the pilot fuel injection is so close to the main fuel injection as to overlap the latter, whilst in another the main fuel injection starts exactly when the pilot fuel injection end.
The Applicant has carried out an in-depth experimental campaign aimed at quantifying, on the one hand, the benefits, in terms of reduction of fuel consumption and of levels of emission of pollutant substances, deriving from the implementation of fuel injection rate shaping strategies in which the main fuel injection starts without any discontinuity in time with respect to the pilot fuel injection and at identifying, on the other hand, specific modes of use of fuel injection rate shaping that would maximize said benefits.
In the first place, the experimental campaign has highlighted that, in general, the benefits, in terms of reduction of fuel consumption and of levels of emission of pollutant substances, are less appreciable the higher the degree of overlapping between the pilot fuel injection and the main fuel injection and that hence a main fuel injection that starts exactly when the pilot fuel injection terminates produces more significant benefits than a pilot fuel injection partially overlapping the main fuel injection.
In the second place, the experimental campaign has identified specific modes of use of fuel injection rate shaping, in which the main fuel injection starts exactly when the pilot fuel injection terminates, which increases the intrinsic benefits, in terms of reduction of fuel consumption and levels of emission of pollutant substances, of this type of fuel injection rate shaping.
This experimental campaign has become necessary in so far as the results that the Applicant needed to obtain could not be obtained via computer simulations, since the mathematical models of fuel injection and combustion today available do not guarantee the necessary degree of reliability and accuracy. In fact, up to now it has not been possible to model numerically on the computer the fuel spray and combustion phenomena because the ratio between the minimum size of a fuel microdrop (diameter=1 μm) and the size of a combustion chamber (diameter=100 mm) is too small and would require an abnormal number of computation cells (1012). In particular, in order to model numerically these phenomena it would be necessary to introduce sub-models, the use of which would inevitably introduce computational errors, which are more significant the more the fuel drops are atomized, i.e., the higher the fuel injection pressure. In numerical terms, to obtain results that adhere to reality, it would be necessary to formulate a numerical model of the phenomena referred to above using a number of fuel microdrops of the order of 1,000,000, but the mathematical models currently available do not allow to exceed a number of fuel microdrops of the order of 1,000.
The aim of the present invention is hence to provide specific modes of use of fuel injection rate shaping in which the main fuel injection starts exactly when the pilot fuel injection terminates, that will enable the intrinsic benefits, in terms of reduction of fuel consumption and of levels of emission of pollutant substances, of this type of fuel injection rate shaping to be increased.
The above aim is achieved by the present invention, which relates to a common rail fuel injection system for an internal combustion engine, as defined in the appended claims.
The present invention will now be described in detail with reference to the attached figures for enabling a skilled person skilled to reproduce it and use it. Various modifications to the embodiments described will be immediately evident to the skilled person and the general principles described can be applied to other embodiments and applications without thereby departing from the sphere of protection of the present invention, as defined in the appended claims. Consequently, the present invention must not be considered as being limited to the embodiments described and illustrated, but it must be granted the widest sphere of protection in compliance with the principles and characteristics disclosed and claimed herein.
Fuel electroinjector 1 comprises a hollow injector body 3 extending along a longitudinal axis and having a side fuel inlet 4 designed to be fluidically connected, by means of a high pressure fuel supply duct, to the common rail, which is in turn fluidically connected to a high pressure pump (not shown) of the fuel injection system 2. The injector body 3 terminates with a fuel nebulizer 5, which basically comprises a fuel injection nozzle 6 fluidically communicating with the fuel inlet 4 through a duct, depicted with a dashed line, and having a conical tip provided with fuel injection holes, and an shutter needle 7, axially slidable within the fuel nebulizer 5 along opening and closing strokes and having a conical tip designed to engage the conical tip of the fuel injection nozzle 6 for opening and closing the holes of the fuel injection nozzle 6 under the action of a control rod 8 axially slidable in the bottom part of the injector body 3. In a different embodiment, the shutter needle 7 is made of a single piece with the control rod 8, which, hence, opens and closes directly the holes of the fuel injection nozzle 6.
A fuel metering servovalve 9 designed to control the motion of the control rod 8 is housed in the top part of the injector body 3. Fuel metering servovalve 9 comprises an electric actuator 10 controlled by an electronic control unit 11 programmed to supplying the electric actuator 10, during each fuel injection phase and corresponding fuel combustion cycle in an engine cylinder, with one or more electrical commands to cause corresponding fuel injections to be performed. In the present description and in the claims, the term “electrical command” is meant to indicate an electric current signal with a given time duration and evolution.
Fuel metering servovalve 9 further comprises a control chamber 12, which fluidically communicates permanently with the fuel inlet 4 through an inlet passage 13 and with a fuel discharge (not shown) through a fuel outlet passage 14, which is opened and closed by a shutter 15 that co-operates with a corresponding valve seat, where the outlet passage 14 is arranged, to fill or empty the control chamber 12 and thus cause the control rod 8 to perform axial opening and closing strokes in response to a reduction or an increase in the fuel pressure in the control chamber 12, thus causing opening and closing of the fuel nebulizer 5 and hence fuel injection or otherwise into the respective engine cylinder.
Fuel metering servovalve 9 can be either of the type with a solenoid electric actuator 10 or of the type with a piezoelectric electric actuator 10, and may be either of the type with so-called “unbalanced” hydraulic architecture, in which the shutter element 15 is subject, when closed, to countering actions of fuel pressure on one side and of urging means, generally in the form of a spring, on the other, or of the type with so-called “balanced” hydraulic architecture, in which the shutter element 15 is subject, when closed, only to the action of the urging means in so far as the axial urge exerted by the fuel on the actuator is substantially zero.
From EP 1,106,816 B1 in the name of the Applicant a fuel metering servovalve is for example known with a solenoid electric actuator and unbalanced hydraulic architecture, in which the valve seat is a conical seat where a calibrated portion of the fuel outlet passage of the control chamber gives out, whilst the shutter element is a ball controlled by a stem that is slidable in a sleeve under the action of the electric actuator.
From EP 1,795,738 A1 and from EP 1,621,764 B1, both in the name of the Applicant, a fuel metering servovalve is instead known with a solenoid electric actuator and balanced hydraulic architecture, in which the shutter element is a sleeve axially slidable in a fluid-tight way on an axially fixed stem, where the outlet passage is arranged, while the valve seat is an annular shoulder defined by a radiusing area between the stem and a flange. The radiusing area is made of a single piece with the stem and the stem extends from the radiusing area in cantilever fashion. The radiusing area is housed in the injector body and is kept axially in contact, in a fluid-tight way, against a shoulder of the injector body by a threaded ring nut screwed on an internal thread.
A fuel metering servovalve with a solenoid actuator and balanced hydraulic architecture different from the one illustrated in the two previous patent documents is, for example, known from WO 2009/092507 A1 and WO 2009/092484 A1.
From EP 1,612,398 B1 in the name of the Applicant and from WO 2008/138800 A1, a fuel metering servovalve with piezoelectric electric actuator and unbalanced hydraulic architecture is instead known, wherein the shutter element is a stem axially slidable in a fluid-tight way on an axially fixed sleeve, while the valve seat is an annular shoulder of the sleeve.
With reference once again to
Consequently, for description convenience, in the following description, the term “injection rate shaping” will be used to indicate a specific fuel injection phase comprising a pilot fuel injection and a subsequent main fuel injection, which starts without any discontinuity in time with respect to the pilot fuel injection, substantially when the latter terminates, in such a way as to rule out the case of partial and, from an engine standpoint, significant overlapping of the pilot and main fuel injections, thus causing the two-fuel hump injection profile illustrated in
In addition, the adverb “substantially” used to define when the main fuel injection starts with respect to the pilot fuel injection is herein used to include both the ideal case, shown in
In order to obtain said fuel injection rate shaping, in each fuel injection phase in an engine cylinder, the electronic control unit 11 is programmed to generate at least one first electrical command S1 with a predetermined time duration for activating the electric actuator 10 and thus actuating the shutter 15 and causing the control rod 8 to perform a first opening stroke, followed by a corresponding first closing stroke, for performing the pilot fuel injection, and a second electrical command S2 with a time duration that is a function of the engine operating conditions for activating the electric actuator 10 and thus actuating the shutter 15 and causing the control rod 8 to perform a second opening stroke, followed by a corresponding second closing stroke, for performing the main fuel injection. The two electrical commands S1 and S2 are separated in time by an electrical dwell time, designated by DT, such that the main fuel injection starts exactly when the pilot injection terminates, i.e., from a hydraulic standpoint, such that the pilot and main fuel injections are separated by a zero hydraulic dwell time. In terms of motion of the control rod 8 and of the shutter needle 7, a zero hydraulic dwell time corresponds to the motion condition in which the control rod 8 and the shutter needle 7 start the opening stroke in response to the second electrical command S2 exactly when they reach the end of the closing stroke performed in response to the first electrical command S1, thus giving rise to a motion profile of the control rod 8 and of the shutter needle 7 that is without any discontinuity in time.
As may be noted in the bottom graph of
As may be noted in the top graph of
The second electrical command S2 is generated, and then supplied to the fuel electroinjector 1, starting from a time instant designated by T3 and such that the control rod 8 starts the corresponding opening stroke not after having reached the end of the closing stroke performed in response to the first electrical command S1, thus giving rise to a main fuel injection that starts without any discontinuity in time with respect to the pilot fuel injection. In particular, in order to obtain exactly the two-hump instantaneous fuel flow rate profile Qi shown in the bottom diagram of
The time interval T3-T2 defines, instead, the aforementioned electrical dwell time DT between the two electrical commands S1 and S2.
The second electrical command S2 has a time development very similar to that of the first electrical command S1, with the only difference that the second holding stretch is always present and has a time duration much longer than that of the corresponding holding stretch, when present, of the first electrical command S1 and can vary as a function of the engine operating conditions. The second electrical command S2 terminates at the time instant denoted in
The fuel amount VP injected during the pilot fuel injection is substantially independent of the fuel pressure and is proportional to the volume of the cylinder combustion chamber. In particular, in applications on engines for passenger motor vehicles, the fuel amount injected during the pilot fuel injection is in the region of 1-3 mm3, whereas in applications on engines for industrial motor vehicles said value increases up to 5-7 mm3.
The fuel amount VM injected during the main fuel injection depends, instead, not only upon the displacement of the individual engine cylinder, but also upon the engine operating point defined by engine speed. and load and increases starting from a minimum value of 4-5 mm3, at idling, up to a maximum value higher than 55 mm3 (for displacement of the individual cylinder by approximately 330 cc) or higher than 70 mm3 (for displacement of the individual cylinder by approximately 500 cc), which it assumes at maximum torque, i.e., between 1900 and 2300 r.p.m.
Since the fuel amount to be injected during the main fuel injection is higher than the fuel amount to be injected during the pilot fuel injection, during the main fuel injection the control rod 8 performs an opening stroke longer than the one that it performs during the pilot fuel injection. In other words, during the pilot and main fuel injections the motion of the control rod 8 occurs in so-called “ballistic” conditions, with the difference that during the main fuel injection the control rod 8 reaches the maximum lift possible so that the instantaneous fuel flow rate through the fuel nebulizer reaches the maximum value possible (see the diagram of
With reference again to
In greater detail, the electronic control unit 11 is programmed to shape the fuel injection rate in engine operating points comprised in an area of the engine operating plane that is located approximately at the centre of the area subtended by the engine power curve.
As may be appreciated in
In particular, the graphs in
In addition,
Moreover,
From an analysis of
Furthermore,
The experimental campaign conducted by the Applicant has moreover highlighted that for mean effective pressures ranging between 8 and 14 bar (corresponding to which are reduced ignition delays), there has been recorded a combustion noise reduction, which enables, if invested in fuel consumption and pollutant substance emission reduction, increase both in the fuel injection advance, which, as is known, brings about a fuel consumption reduction, and in the fuel injection pressure, which, as is known, brings about a reduction in the total amount of NOx and soot produced. In addition, given the same total amount of NOx and soot produced, by acting on the exhaust-gas recirculation (EGR) it is possible to vary, according to the requirements, the part of NOx produced, which, as is known, in the majority of diesel, motor vehicles are not currently treated by the exhaust-gas post-treatment systems, but rather controlled only by acting on the fuel combustion, with respect to the part of the soot that, as is known, is treated via a Diesel particulate filter arranged at the exhaust. In particular, an increase in the amount of exhaust gas recirculation brings about a reduction in the amount of NOx produced and an increase in the amount of soot produced, whereas a reduction in the amount of exhaust gas recirculation brings about an increase in the amount of NOx produced and a reduction in the amount of soot produced.
The experimental campaign conducted by the Applicant has moreover highlighted that, for mean effective pressures of between 4 and 8 bar (to which there correspond longer ignition delays), there has instead been recorded an increase in the combustion noise and a decrease in the amount of soot produced by the fuel combustion by the same amount that would be obtained in the case where the main fuel injection is not preceded by the pilot fuel injection. Consequently, in said engine operating conditions, in order to reduce the ignition delay, it becomes necessary to envisage also a further pilot fuel injection prior to the pilot and main fuel injections that is arranged sufficiently far from the subsequent pilot fuel injection as to give rise to a distinct fuel combustion. The provision of this further pilot fuel injection again enables improvement of the trade-off between the amount of NOx and of soot generated by the fuel combustion at the same combustion noise, once again thanks to an increase in the advance and pressure of fuel injection. In quantitative terms, the provision of this further pilot fuel injection has enabled the fuel injection rate shaping in which the hydraulic dwell time between the pilot fuel injection and the main fuel injection is zero to achieve an NVH (acronym standing for Noise, Vibration, and Harshness) behaviour similar to that of a fuel injection strategy in which the main fuel injection is preceded by two pilot fuel injections arranged sufficiently far from the main fuel injection as to give rise to fuel combustions distinct from, that of the main fuel injection, maintaining the advantage of fuel consumption reduction. As regards the NVH behaviour, this is, as is known, an evaluation that is very widely used in the automotive field for measuring the comfort of a motor vehicle and is the result of the combination of three parameters: the noise level in the motor vehicle during travelling, the vibrations perceived by the driver, and the harshness of the motor vehicle as it advances during sudden motion transitions (for example pot-holes).
Finally, the experimental campaign conducted by the Applicant has highlighted that the fuel injection rate shaping in which the hydraulic dwell time between the pilot fuel injection and the main fuel injection is zero has proven to be far from advantageous, if indeed not even slightly disadvantageous, when the engine is cold or warming up, on account of the longer ignition delays, as compared to a fuel injection strategy in which the fuel injection rate shaping is not implemented and the main fuel injection is preceded by two pilot fuel injections arranged sufficiently far from the main fuel injection as to give rise to fuel combustions distinct from that of the main fuel injection. This has led the Applicant to note that the fuel injection rate shaping in which the hydraulic dwell time between the pilot fuel injection and the main fuel injection is zero proves to be advantageous only for engine coolant temperatures higher than 40-45° C., preferably comprised between 65° C. and 80° C.
It is evident that the fuel injection system described above may undergo other modifications and improvements, without thereby departing from the scope of the invention defined by the appended claims.
For example, the fuel injection system could have an architecture different from the common rail one described previously, in particular, of the type described in EP 1,612,401 B1, EP 1,612,405 B1 and EP 1,612,406 B1 in the name of the Applicant, in which the pressurized fuel accumulation volume, instead of being defined by a single concentrated common rail, is split into distinct and distributed accumulation volumes, or else of the type used prior to marketing of the common rail, in which the fuel injectors were supplied directly by a high-pressure fuel pump operated in such a way as to carry out delivery of fuel under pressure in synchronism with actuation of the fuel injectors, said delivery being, that is, discontinuous in time, phased with the engine, and cyclically constant.
Furthermore, to the pilot and main fuel injections with zero hydraulic dwell time and possibly to the further pilot fuel injections mentioned above, it is possible to combine one or more of the fuel injections described in the aforementioned patent No. EP 1,035,314 B1 filed in the name of the present applicant, regarding execution of multiple fuel injections.
In addition, all what has been said previously with reference to a pilot fuel injection and to a main fuel injection that starts without any discontinuity with respect to the pilot fuel injection, must not be considered limited to this single pair of fuel injections, but is valid, and hence applicable, to any pair of temporally consecutive fuel injections provided by a fuel injection system.
Finally, all what has been said previously with reference to a fuel injection rate shaping in which the main fuel injection starts without any discontinuity in time with respect to the pilot fuel injection, substantially when the latter terminates, is valid, and can hence be applied, also to fuel injection rate shapings in which the pilot fuel injection overlaps the main fuel injection, albeit with benefits progressively less appreciable as the overlapping degree increases.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10425139.2 | Apr 2010 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2011/000910 | 4/27/2011 | WO | 00 | 12/12/2012 |