1. Field of the Invention
The invention is directed to an improved fuel injection system for internal combustion engines.
2. Description of the Prior Art
A fuel injection system of the type with which this invention is concerned is known, for example, from the document DE 197 01 879 A1 and includes a fuel tank from which fuel is delivered into a high-pressure accumulation chamber by a high-pressure pump. A control unit maintains a predetermined high fuel pressure in the high-pressure accumulation chamber. A number of high-pressure lines, which corresponds to the number of combustion chambers of the internal combustion engine, each lead from the high-pressure accumulation chamber to a respective fuel injection valve; the fuel injection valve can be connected to the high-pressure line by means of a control valve. The control valve and the fuel injection valve here are frequently disposed in a single housing to save space. The fuel injection valve here has a valve needle, which is guided in a bore and is encompassed by a pressure chamber in the region oriented toward the combustion chamber. A pressure surface is embodied on the valve needle, which is acted on by the fuel in the pressure chamber so that when a particular opening pressure is achieved in the pressure chamber, the valve needle executes a longitudinal movement counter to a closing force, thus unblocking at least one injection opening through which fuel travels from the pressure chamber into the combustion chamber of the engine. The control valve of the fuel injection system is embodied as a 3/2-port directional-control valve, which in one position, connects the high-pressure accumulation chamber to the pressure chamber of the fuel injection valve and in a second position, breaks the connection to high-pressure accumulation chamber and connects the pressure chamber to an overflow fuel chamber, which is provided in the valve body and which is connected to the fuel tank by means of a line, so that a low fuel pressure constantly prevails in the overflow fuel chamber. If the control valve switches from the closed position into the open position, then a pressure wave is produced, which travels through the supply conduit into the pressure chamber and produces an overpressure there, i.e. the injection of the fuel occurs at a pressure that is considerably higher than the pressure in the high-pressure accumulation chamber. As a result, high injection pressures are achieved with a moderately high pressure in the high-pressure accumulation chamber and in the high-pressure fuel-carrying parts of the fuel injection system. Since the fuel in the supply lines is in motion because of the open control valve during the injection, when the control valve is closed, the moving fuel is abruptly stopped so that the kinetic energy of the fuel is converted into compression work. This produces pressure oscillations, which complicate the precise metering and proportioning of the injection quantity in a second injection immediately following the first injection, since the state of the control valve is not precisely known due to the pressure oscillations.
The object of the current invention, therefore, is to design a fuel injection system, which permits a more precise metering of the injection quantity and more precise setting of main injections, preinjections, and secondary injections.
The fuel injection system according to the invention has the advantage over the prior art that the pressure oscillations that occur upon closing of the control valve, i.e. upon interruption of the connection to the high-pressure accumulation chamber, are damped through the connection of the first pressure chamber and the high-pressure line to a damping chamber by means of a throttle and therefore decay rapidly. As a result, after closing, the control valve returns very rapidly to a stationary state so that it is possible to execute a second injection very shortly after the preceding injection and to be able to control its injection quantity very precisely. The control valve is a 3/2-port directional-control valve in a control valve body and contains a control valve member, which is guided so that it can move longitudinally in a control bore. Through a radial enlargement of the control bore, two pressure chambers are produced in the control bore; the first pressure chamber is connected to the high-pressure accumulation chamber and the second pressure chamber is connected to the pressure chamber provided in the fuel injection valve. When the control valve member is in the closed position, i.e. the first position, the connection from the first pressure chamber to the second pressure chamber is closed and the second pressure chamber and therefore the pressure chamber of the control valve are connected to an overflow fuel chamber and are consequently unpressurized. In the open position of the control valve member, the connection from the first pressure chamber to the second pressure chamber is open and the connection of the second pressure chamber to the overflow fuel chamber is closed so that the high-pressure accumulation chamber is connected to the pressure chamber of the fuel injection valve.
The first pressure chamber is connected to a damping chamber by means of a throttle, thus damping pressure oscillations of the kind that occur in the first pressure chamber and also in the high-pressure accumulation chamber when the control valve opens and closes. Through a suitable embodiment of the throttle, the damping characteristic curve can be selected so that pressure oscillations in the pressure chamber decay completely after only a few oscillation periods.
In a first advantageous embodiment of the subject of the invention, the damping chamber is embodied as bore, which extends in the valve holding body, parallel to its longitudinal axis. As a result, the damping chamber can be produced in already known fuel injection valves, without having to rebuild them and without having to change the outer diameter of the fuel injection valve.
In another advantageous embodiment, the valve holding body is clamped axially against the control valve body, with the interposition of an intermediary disk. The bore that constitutes the damping chamber extends partially in the control valve body, through the intermediary disk, and for a greater distance in the valve holding body. The throttle is embodied in the intermediary disk so that by exchanging the intermediary disk for one that has a different throttle, the fuel injection valve can be adapted to the requirements at hand, without having to make other structural changes to the fuel injection valve.
In another advantageous embodiment of the subject of the invention, the damping chamber is comprised of two parallel bore sections, which each extend in the valve holding body. The two bore sections of the damping chamber are connected to each other by a lateral conduit so that a short valve holding body can be produced without changing the volume of the throttle bore.
In another advantageous embodiment, the two bore sections of the damping chamber are connected by a lateral bore, which is disposed in a shim, which is disposed between the valve holding body and the valve body. This embodiment eliminates a lateral connection of the bore sections inside the valve holding body, which can only be produced in a relatively costly manner, for example with the aid of an end-milling cutter. Embodying the lateral connection in the shim makes it possible to form the two bore sections of the damping chamber starting from one of the ends of the valve holding body.
In another advantageous embodiment of the subject of the invention, a shutoff valve is disposed between the damping chamber and the first pressure chamber, which only opens the connection from the first pressure chamber to the damping chamber when a damping is desired. The overpressure during the opening of the control valve, which is sought for injecting with the highest possible pressure, is reduced somewhat by the continuous connection of the first pressure chamber to the damping chamber. Therefore, the shutoff valve closes the connection between the first pressure chamber and the damping chamber during the opening phase of the control valve. After the end of the injection, the shutoff valve is opened so that the pressure waves in the first pressure chamber can be rapidly damped as before. This shutoff valve permits an optimal injection pressure to be achieved and simultaneously permits a damping of pressure oscillations, which permits an exact metering of the injections.
In another advantageous embodiment, the shutoff valve is controlled by the pressure in the second pressure chamber. When the control valve is open, the pressure that prevails in the second pressure chamber is at least approximately the same as that in the first pressure chamber and the shutoff valve is closed by this pressure. If the control valve closes the connection from the first pressure chamber to the second pressure chamber, then the pressure in the second pressure chamber falls and the shutoff valve therefore opens the connection from the first pressure chamber to the damping chamber. Then the pressure oscillation is damped in the manner outlined above. The control by means of the pressure in the second pressure chamber renders an additional electronic control of the shutoff valve superfluous.
In another advantageous embodiment of the subject of the invention, the control valve body is made of a hard steel, while the valve holding body in which the damping chamber is embodied is made of a relatively soft steel. The control valve body contains the control valve, which has sealing surfaces that are subjected to powerful stresses. Being made of a hard steel reduces the wear in the vicinity of the valve seat of the control valve. By contrast, it is advantageous to use a softer steel to make the valve holding body because it does not have any seat surfaces or sealing surfaces and consequently no powerful mechanical stress occurs. The cavity that constitutes the damping chamber can be inexpensively and rapidly produced in the soft steel.
Various exemplary embodiments of the fuel injection system according to the invention are shown in the drawings, in which:
In the valve shim 24, there is a central opening 83, which connects the bore 30 to a spring chamber 40 embodied in the valve holding body 22. The spring chamber 40 here is embodied as a bore and extends coaxial to the bore 30. The central opening 83 has a smaller diameter than the bore 30 that guides the valve needle 32 so that a stop shoulder 35 is formed at the transition from the valve body 25 into the valve shim 24. The opening stroke of the valve needle 32 is defined by the axial distance between the end of the valve needle 32 remote from the combustion chamber and a stop shoulder 35 of the valve shim 24 when the fuel injection valve is in its closed position.
At its end remote from the combustion chamber, the valve needle 32 transitions into a pressure pin 37, which is coaxial to the valve needle 32 and is disposed in the central opening 83 of the valve shim 24. The pressure pin 37 transitions into a spring plate 42 disposed in the spring chamber 40; a closing spring 44, which is embodied as a helical compression spring, is disposed under an initial compressive stress between the spring plate 42 and the end of the spring chamber 40 remote from the combustion chamber. In this connection, the initial compressive stress of the closing spring 44 can be adjusted by means of the thickness of a compensating disk 45, which is disposed between the closing spring 44 and the end of the spring chamber 40 remote from the combustion chamber. By means of the spring plate 42 and the pressure pin 37, the force of the closing spring 44 presses the valve needle 32 with the valve sealing surface 34 against the valve seat 36 and thus closes the injection openings 38. The spring chamber 40 is connected to the fuel tank 1 by means of an overflow fuel line 69 so that fuel, which penetrates into the spring chamber 40, is discharged into the fuel tank 1, as a result of which a low fuel pressure constantly prevails in the spring chamber 40. At its end remote from the combustion chamber, the spring chamber 40 transitions into a through bore 46, which is disposed coaxial to the bore 30 and the spring chamber 40 and extends into a shutoff chamber 76 embodied in the intermediary disk 19.
At the end oriented away from the valve holding body 22, the control valve member 54 transitions into a magnet armature 67, which is disposed in the overflow fuel chamber 66; the overflow fuel chamber 66 is connected to the fuel tank 1 by means of an overflow fuel line 73. In the closed position of the control valve member 54, the magnet armature 67 is spaced apart by an axial distance hg from an electromagnet 65 also disposed in the overflow fuel chamber 66. The electromagnet 65 encompasses a valve spring 68, which is disposed under an initial stress between a stationary stop, not shown in the drawing, and the magnet armature 67 and acts on the control valve member 54 in the closing direction. The electromagnet 65 is disposed in a stationary manner in the overflow fuel chamber 66 and through a suitable supply of current, can exert an attractive force on the magnet armature 67, pulling it in the opening direction of the control valve 54 until it comes into contact with the electromagnet 65. This opening stroke motion of the control valve member 54 takes place counter to the closing force of the valve spring 68 so that when the supply of current to the electromagnet 65 stops, the valve spring 68 pushes the control valve member 54 back into the closed position.
In addition to the supply conduit 13, the first pressure chamber 57 is also connected to a line that is embodied as a connecting conduit 71. The connecting conduit 71 extends inclined in relation to the longitudinal axis of the control valve member 54 until it reaches the intermediary disk 19. A throttle 72 is embodied in the intermediary disk 19 through which the connecting conduit 71 communicates with a damping chamber 70 embodied in the valve holding body 22. The damping chamber 70 here is embodied as a blind bore, which extends parallel to the longitudinal axis 23 of the valve holding body 22 and parallel to the through bore 46. The blind bore that constitutes the damping chamber 70 can be of various lengths, depending on the desired volume of the damping chamber 70. It is also possible to embody the blind bore that constitutes the damping chamber 70 with various diameters.
The fuel injection system shown in
The advantage of the shutoff valve 92 is that pressure oscillations in the first pressure chamber 57 are only damped when the control valve 50 is closed, i.e. when no injection is taking place. Namely, if the first pressure chamber 57 is continuously connected to the damping chamber 70 by means of the throttle 72, then even the desired pressure surge at the beginning of the injection is slightly damped so that the maximum achievable overpressure in the pressure chamber 31 is slightly lower than when the first pressure chamber 57 is closed, which has no damping otherwise. With the shutoff valve 92, therefore, a higher injection pressure is achieved with the same pressure in the high-pressure accumulation chamber 10. The shutoff valve 92 in this connection is advantageously also embodied in the control valve body 17 so that a compact design of the fuel injection system is once again possible and the switching of the shutoff valve 92 is not delayed by an unnecessarily long connecting line 96.
In addition to embodying the throttle 72 in the intermediary disk 19, it is also possible to embody the throttle location in the control valve body 17 or in the valve holding body 22. The intermediary disk 19 can be eliminated and one high-pressure sealing surface is therefore saved. In this instance, the shutoff chamber 76 is correspondingly disposed in the valve holding body 22. It is also possible to embody the damping chamber 70 by means of two bore sections 170, 270, but the connection of the bore sections 170, 270 is not embodied in the valve shim 24, but in the valve holding body 22. This produces a damping chamber that is at least approximately U-shaped in longitudinal section. A damping chamber of this kind can be produced, for example, with the aid of an end-milling cutter.
Furthermore, it is also possible to embody the damping chamber 70 not as a bore, but as an arbitrarily shaped cavity in the valve holding body 22 and to connect it to the first pressure chamber 57 by means of a throttled connection. A damping chamber of this kind can be optimally adapted to the spatial conditions in a valve holding body 22. Furthermore, it is also possible to embody the damping chamber 70 in the control valve body 17, which eliminates a corresponding high-pressure sealing surface of the kind that is formed between the intermediary disk 19 and the valve holding body 22 or between the control valve body 17 and the intermediary disk 19.
It is also possible not to control the control valve 50 directly with the aid of electromagnet, as shown in the exemplary embodiments. Alternatively, the control valve member 54 can be controlled by a device, which moves the control valve member 54 into the open or closed position with the aid of hydraulic forces.
The control valve seat 56 of the control valve 50 is subjected to a high mechanical stress when contacted by the control valve sealing surface 55 during the longitudinal motion of the control valve member 52. It is therefore necessary to manufacture the control valve body 17 out of a hard, wear resisting steel. By contrast, producing the damping chamber 70 as a blind bore in a valve holding body 22 made of a hard steel can only be achieved with considerable difficulty. Since there are no surfaces in the valve holding body 22 that are subjected to high mechanical stresses, the valve holding body 22 can be made of a relatively soft steel in which bores can be easily produced.
The foregoing relates to preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention, it being understood that other variants and embodiments thereof are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, the latter being defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10060811 | Dec 2000 | DE | national |
This application is a 35 USC 371 of PCT/DE 01/04531 filed on Dec. 5, 2001.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE01/04531 | 12/5/2001 | WO | 00 | 12/4/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/46602 | 6/13/2002 | WO | A |
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4161161 | Bastenhof | Jul 1979 | A |
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5012786 | Voss | May 1991 | A |
5156132 | Iwanaga | Oct 1992 | A |
5497750 | Mueller et al. | Mar 1996 | A |
5524826 | Mueller et al. | Jun 1996 | A |
6209525 | Konishi et al. | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6328017 | Heinz et al. | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6431148 | Guggenbichler et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6561165 | Hlousek | May 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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199 57 591 | Oct 2000 | DE |
199 58 249 | Nov 2000 | DE |
0 995 902 | Apr 2000 | EP |
1 036 932 | Sep 2000 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030136382 A1 | Jul 2003 | US |