The present invention relates to apparatus and method for injecting fuel into internal combustion engines, particularly compression ignition engines.
Until recently, the known electronically controlled means of injecting fuel into modern diesel engines could be divided in two functionally different types: mechanically actuated systems and common rail systems.
Both of these systems have their inherent advantages and disadvantages that dictate the choice of the system for a particular application. For instance, high pressure common rail systems rarely appear on today's heavy-duty diesel engines due to durability constraints related to the presence of very high fuel pressure in the rail and in the complex network of hydraulic lines for most of the engine operating time.
An integrated diesel fuel injection system has been proposed which combines the two separate types of systems as above into a single injection apparatus, allowing the engine management system to select the functional mode according to engine operating conditions. Such a system makes use of the mechanical actuation principle of the well-known unit injection systems to create high pressure for fuel injection, thereby avoiding durability limitations of the high pressure common rail systems, and can provide common rail-type injections in such conditions where lower injection pressure is beneficial and where extreme flexibility of injection timing is required. The common rail functional mode is secured in this known integrated fuel injection system through the use of a rail that is common for a set of injectors and that is fed with fuel under pressure by a separate pump. This arrangement works well but the total cost of the integrated fuel injection system would typically exceed that of an ordinary unit injection or common rail systems because of the presence of two fuel pressurization modules-unit injection plunger and the common rail pump.
The subject of the present invention is a low-cost integrated electronically controlled mechanical unit injection system with common rail functionality. The primary purpose of the invention is to reduce the overall system cost through utilization of the mechanical injection actuation means for both direct injection under high pressure and for creating and maintaining pressure in the common rail, thereby eliminating the need of a separate fuel pump for common rail pressure.
A primary object of the invention is to provide a low-cost integrated fuel injection system (FIE) allowing the mechanical injection actuation and the common rail principles to be used selectively at such conditions that permit utilization of their respective advantages, and to be selectively de-activated at other conditions to avoid their respective disadvantages. The cost reduction, as compared to the known integrated FIE, is achieved by designing the system in such a way that allows the engine management system to control the mechanical actuation means of the unit injection part of the system to both directly inject fuel into the engine under high pressure, and to pressurize the common rail part of the system. This eliminates the need in a separate common rail pump thereby bringing a cost advantage and simplifying the overall system design.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a fuel injection system with a further reduced cost and an improved cylinder-to-cylinder, shot-to-shot uniformity and long-term stability of control of the nozzle opening pressure.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide a fuel injection system with an built-in (in-built), limp-home function that also allows for incorporation of advanced on-board diagnostic features in the overall control system.
Referring to the Drawing Figures in the present application, FIGS. 1 to 9 are diagrammatic views of various embodiments of the present invention in which:
In accordance with a first embodiment of the present invention illustrated in
An engine management system 21 controls valves 3 and 9 and receives feedback from the engine and the fuel system, specifically, common rail pressure feedback from a sensor 22.
Fuel injector 1 is designed to operate as a high pressure common rail injector of the type well known in the art. As is typical to such known injectors, injector 1 contains a spring 14 (biasing member) biasing a needle 15 to close the nozzle 2. A control piston 16 with a control chamber 17 is arranged so that higher pressure in the control chamber tends to urge the control piston to push onto the needle 15 to close the nozzle, an input throttle 18 and an outlet port 19. The input throttle 18 connects the control chamber 17 with the plunger chamber 7 and the outlet port 19 connects the control chamber with the NCV 3. The NCV can, upon receiving a command, open and connect the outlet port 19 to the return line 13. The flow areas of the input throttle, outlet port and the NCV are chosen such that an opening of the NCV can cause a pressure drop in the control chamber that is sufficient to allow the pressure acting on a differential area of the needle 15 to open the nozzle 2. Also typical to the known high pressure common rail injectors, the outlet port 19 and the control piston 16 are designed such that the control piston is able to restrict the outlet port at a position corresponding to an open nozzle, thereby limiting the leakage of pressurized fuel through the input throttle 18, output port 19 and open control valve 3 to the return line 13.
The plunger chamber 7 is connected to the inlet of the nozzle 2. The plunger chamber can be connected to, or disconnected from, the common rail 11, depending on the state of the valve 9. The common rail 111 is equipped with a means (either automatically or manually operated) for removing air from the volumes of the system (not shown).
The fuel injection system works as follows: at engine start-up, the means 12 (pressure supply 12), typically consisting of a low pressure gear pump and a pressure regulator, pressurizes the entire system, including the common rail 11 and the plunger chamber 7 with fuel under relatively low feed pressure. Fuel under feed pressure is supplied to the system via the non-return valve 10 and the open valve 9. During an initial part of the pumping stroke of the plunger 5, valve 9 remains open until the instant when pressure build-up should begin for an injection. During this initial part of the pumping stroke, fuel is displaced from the plunger chamber 7 to the common rail 11 and the pressure in the common rail increases. When fuel pressure should be built up to inject fuel, the valve 9 closes and plunger 5 pressurizes the chamber 7 and the control chamber 17 because, by then, the non-return valve 10 is closed. To begin injection, the NCV 3 opens thereby connecting the control chamber 17 to the feed line 13 via the output port 19 and the pressure in the control chamber 17 falls allowing the control piston 16 and the needle 15 to lift up and open the nozzle. Then, fuel is injected through the open nozzle under the pressure created by the plunger 5. To end the injection, the valve 9 opens and the NCV closes.
Following the closure of the NCV, the pressures in the control chamber 17 and the nozzle 2 equalize so that spring 14 is able to close the nozzle. During the remaining part of the pumping stroke of the plunger 5, the pressurized fuel escapes from the plunger chamber 7 via the open valve 9 to the common rail 11. This type of system operation resembles the functional principle of the unit injector and unit pump systems well known in the art and will be further referred to as EUI mode of operation.
To enable the system to further increase fuel pressure in the common rail in the next engine cycles, the valve 9 is closed for a period of time during the retraction of the plunger. This prevents the rail pressure from falling due to the volume increase by the retracting plunger 5. When the valve 9 closes, the plunger reduces the pressure in the plunger chamber 7 down to a level somewhat below the feed pressure. This opens the non-return valve 10 and fills up the plunger chamber with the fuel from the feed line 13. By means of adjusting the duration of closing of the valve 9 on the filling stroke of the plunger, the amount of extra fuel supplied from the feed line to the plunger chamber 7 and which is displaced to the common rail 11 can be controlled. Increasing the amount of extra fuel will raise the pressure in the common rail and vice versa. A precise control of engine cycle-average pressure in the common rail 11 can be easily achieved with an EMS 21 utilizing pressure feedback information from a sensor 22 (see
Once a pressure level in the common rail that exceeds the spring nozzle opening pressure has been reached, the system can operate in a common rail (CR) mode. The CR operational mode will typically be used when high injection pressure is not required for the injection; for example, with the engine at idle or relatively low load point, as well as for pilot injections and low-pressure late post injections. In this mode, the valve 9 remains open throughout the entire pumping stroke of the plunger 5. During the pumping stroke, the fuel is displaced through the valve 9 back to the common rail such that there is very little pressure build-up in the plunger chamber 7. To start an injection, the NCV 3 opens, the pressure in the control chamber 17 falls allowing the control piston 16 and the needle 15, driven by the pressure in the nozzle, to lift up and open the nozzle. Then, fuel is injected under the common rail pressure through the open nozzle until the NCV is closed again. Following the closure of the NCV, the pressure in the control chamber 17 rises back to the level of the common rail pressure and the control piston 16, assisted by the spring 14, closes the nozzle. It will be understood that for the CR operational mode to work, the difference between the pressures in the common rail 11 and the return line 13 should be bigger than the spring opening pressure of the nozzle 2, the spring opening pressure being defined by the pre-load of the spring 14 and the size of the differential area of the closed needle 15 as is well known in the art.
The common rail pressure control with the system in the CR mode will be performed in the same way as described above; that is, by pulsing the valve 9 closed during the filling strokes of the plunger 5.
The CR operational mode allows a reduction of mechanical noise from the injection system by eliminating the wind-up and rapid release of the wound-up transmission driving the mechanical actuation means that is characteristic to the mechanically actuated FIE and, particularly, unit injectors. The availability of the common rail pressure also allows for fuel injection at any point of the engine cycle. Maximum design limit on the working pressure in the common rail will be a compromise between the cost, reliability and other parameters limiting maximum pressure on one hand and, on the other hand, the benefits such as injection timing flexibility, noise reductions and other that improve engine characteristics.
When a higher injection pressure is required during normal engine operation, the fuel injection system configured according to the present invention will be used in the EUI mode. By means of utilizing the EUI mode of operation, very high injection pressures that are characteristic to the known unit injector and unit pump systems can be achieved. Nevertheless, the present invention is free from the drawbacks of the high pressure common rail systems associated with having very high pressure in the common rail and other volumes because the high pressure generated for direct injection into the engine is kept to relatively small volumes by the closed valve 9. In fact, the common rail pressure during the EUI operational mode can be reduced down to the feed pressure level by disabling the CR pressure control function of valve 9, such that it is always open between the EUI injection events.
In order to provide for improved safety of operation in the EUI mode, the input throttle 18 can be connected to the common rail 11 as shown in
The embodiment shown in
Additionally, the embodiment of
The other aspect in which the embodiment of
The NOP control will therefore no longer be individual for each injector but common for the set of injectors bringing the advantage of better sample-to-sample, shot-to-shot and long-term stability of this parameter.
The quality of the end of injection can be maintained by the use of the control piston 16 of an increased diameter.
In some cost-critical applications, it can be beneficial to utilize the present invention in another embodiment shown in
Another embodiment of the present invention shown in
The valve 9 can alternatively connect the plunger chamber 7 to the common rail or to the return line 13, or isolate the chamber from them both. The rest of the design is identical to that shown in
The CR mode of operation is achieved by opening the NCV 3 and thereby releasing the pressure from the control chamber 17, which in turn allows the nozzle 2 to open.
During a CR-mode injection, fuel is supplied to the nozzle from the common rail through the open control valve 9 as shown in
In the EUI mode of operation, the valve 9 is switched from the first to a second position during the pumping stroke of the plunger 5. In the second position, valve 9 isolates the plunger chamber 7 from both common rail 11 and return line 13. Pressure in the system then rises and, upon reaching a desired pressure level, the NCV is open allowing the needle 15 to open the nozzle as described above. Fuel injection occurs at a high pressure generated by the plunger. To end an injection, several options are available. Typically, the NCV will close re-pressurizing the control chamber 17. If a pressure-backed end of injection is desired, the control valve 9 can be either left closed in the second position for a period of time corresponding to the closing duration of the nozzle, or switched back to the first position. The nozzle will then be closed at a high pressure in the control chamber 17, which will be assisting the return spring 14 in closing the nozzle quicker. If a spill end of injection is desired, the valve 9 will be switched to a third position connecting the plunger chamber 7 to the return line 13 and isolating it from the common rail. By this means the nozzle will be closed with the return spring 14 while fuel pressure in the nozzle is low.
When utilizing spill end of injection, the duration of closing of the valve 9 during the filling strokes of the plunger 5 has to be increased to offset the amount of fuel returned to the feed line 13 during spill.
An alternative form of this embodiment, and which is illustrated in
In case a simultaneous use of the spill end and the pressure-backed end of injection is an advantage, the input throttle 18 can be connected directly to the common rail as shown in
Similarly to the embodiment shown in
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that in any of the embodiments described above, the two-way NCV valve 3 can be replaced by a three-way NCV valve as illustrated by
Yet another embodiment of the present invention shown in
While the present invention has been disclosed in connection with the preferred embodiments thereof, it should be understood that there might be other embodiments that fall within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the patent claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0201218-5 | Apr 2002 | SE | national |
The present application is a continuation patent application of International Application No. PCT/SE03/00506 filed 27 Mar. 2003 which was published in English pursuant to Article 21(2) of the Patent Cooperation Treaty, and which claims priority to Swedish Application No. 0201218-5 filed 23 Apr. 2002. Said applications are expressly incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/SE03/00506 | Mar 2003 | US |
Child | 10904115 | Oct 2004 | US |