The invention described and claimed hereinbelow is also described in PCT/DE 2003/03624, filed Oct. 31, 2003 and DE 102 52 660.5, filed Nov. 11, 2002. This German Patent Application, whose subject matter is incorporated here by reference, provides the basis for a claim of priority of invention under 35 U.S.C. 119 (a)–(d).
The invention is based on a fuel injection valve for internal combustion engines, of the kind known for instance from German Patent Disclosure DE 100 58 153 A1. The fuel injection valve shown there has a valve body in which a bore is embodied. On its end toward the combustion chamber, the bore is defined by a valve seat, in which a first row of injection openings and a second row of injection openings, the latter located on the combustion chamber side of the former, are embodied; the injection openings of both rows of injection openings discharge into the combustion chamber of the engine. an outer valve needle is located longitudinally displaceably in the bore and is guided in the bore in a portion facing away from the combustion chamber. Between the outer valve needle and the wall of the bore, a pressure chamber is embodied that can be filled with fuel at high pressure. On its end toward the combustion chamber, the outer valve needle has a valve sealing face, with which it cooperates with the valve seat for controlling the first row of injection openings. Centrally along its longitudinal axis, an inner bore extends in the outer valve needle, and an inner valve needle is located longitudinally displaceably in the inner bore. On its end toward the combustion chamber, the inner valve needle has a sealing face, with which is cooperates with the valve seat and thereby controls the opening of the second row of injection openings. The opening force on the inner valve needle is generated by exerting pressure on a pressure face, which after the outer valve needle has lifted is acted upon by the fuel pressure of the annular chamber.
If the outer valve needle and the inner valve needle are opened successively, then once the outer valve needle has lifted from the valve seat fuel pressure from the pressure chamber flows inward and there strikes the inner valve needle, which until then was separated from the pressure chamber. If suddenly the entire pressure face of the inner valve needle is now acted upon by the pressure in the pressure chamber, this force impact can cause an unwanted slight lifting of the inner valve needle before such lifting is wanted from the standpoint of the injection course. This causes an imprecise injection and an increase in pollutant emissions from the engine.
The fuel injection valve of the invention has the advantage over the prior art that the inner valve needle does not, uncontrolled, open the injection openings assigned to it before the intended time for doing so. The opening force on the inner valve needle does not build up, after the opening of the outer valve needle, until after a certain time lag. For this purpose, the pressure face of the inner valve needle can be made to communicate with the pressure chamber via a throttle connection, which leads to the aforementioned delay in building up the opening pressure.
In a first advantageous feature of the subject of the invention, the throttle connection is embodied as an annular gap between the wall of the inner bore and the inner valve needle, on the end of the outer valve needle toward the combustion chamber. This embodiment of the throttle connection is easy to embody and moreover means that the inner valve needle cannot become stuck in the inner bore of the outer valve needle on the end toward the combustion chamber.
In a further advantageous feature, by means of a radial enlargement of the inner bore, a pressure vessel is formed in the outer valve needle, in which the pressure face of the inner valve needle is disposed and which can be made to communicate with the pressure chamber through the throttle connection. As a result of the embodiment of the pressure vessel, the size of the pressure face of the inner valve needle can be adjusted within wider ranges to obtain the desired opening force. It is also advantageous in this embodiment to provide a counterpart pressure face in the pressure vessel on the outer valve needle that is subjected to the fuel pressure in the pressure vessel and is oriented counter to the valve sealing face of the outer valve needle. This has the advantage that in the opening stroke motion of the outer valve needle, the full fuel pressure of the pressure chamber contacts the valve sealing face of the outer valve needle, while a lesser pressure still prevails in the pressure vessel, so that no counterpressure on the counterpart pressure face is produced. Conversely, in the closing motion, the injection pressure of the pressure chamber has built up in the pressure vessel, so that the counterpart pressure face of the outer valve needle is acted upon, and the hydraulic force on the valve sealing face of the outer valve needle is partly compensated for. As a result, the force on the outer valve needle in the opening direction is reduced, which speeds up the closing motion of the outer valve needle and thus decisively shortens the switching time.
In a further advantageous feature of the subject of the invention, a return conduit is embodied between the wall of the inner bore and the inner valve needle and discharges into a leak fuel chamber, embodied in the fuel injection valve, in which a low fuel pressure prevails. Via this return conduit, the pressure vessel can be relieved in a simple way, so that once the injection has ended, the fuel pressure in the pressure vessel drops to the pressure of the leak fuel chamber.
Further advantages and advantageous features of the subject of the invention can be learned from the description and the drawings.
A fuel injection valve of the invention is shown in the drawings.
In
In
The inner valve needle 10 is located with a certain amount of play in the inner bore 11, so that between the inner valve needle 10 and the wall of the inner bore 11, a return conduit 28 is embodied, which has a circular-annular cross section and which discharges, at the end of the valve needles 8, 10 facing away from the combustion chamber, into a leak fuel chamber, not shown in the drawing, in which a low fuel pressure always prevails.
In the end region toward the combustion chamber, the inner valve needle 10 has a guide portion 25, which represents a radial enlargement of the inner valve needle 10 and assures guidance of the inner valve needle 10 in the inner bore 11. Toward the end of the inner valve needle 10 toward the combustion chamber, the guide portion 25 tapers, forming a pressure shoulder 30, and at the end toward the combustion chamber it changes into a conical sealing face 42. At the transition from the inner valve needle 10 to the sealing face 42, an encompassing sealing edge 44 is embodied, which comes to rest on the conical valve seat 18 when the inner valve needle is resting on that valve seat. As a result, the second row of injection openings 22 is closed off from the pressure chamber 14, so that no fuel can emerge from the second row of injection openings 22.
The inner bore 11 of the outer valve needle 8 tapers toward its end toward the combustion chamber, forming an annular shoulder 34 which is located such that it is diametrically opposite the pressure shoulder 30 of the inner valve needle 10. A pressure vessel 27 is defined by the pressure shoulder 30, the annular shoulder 34, the wall of the inner bore 11, and the valve needle 10 and communicates with the valve seat 18 via an annular gap 32; the annular gap 32 extends between the inner valve needle 10 and the inner bore 11. Via a residual gap 48 between the guide portion 25 and the wall of the inner bore 11, the pressure vessel 27 moreover communicates in throttled fashion with the return conduit 28.
The mode of operation of the fuel injection valve is as follows: In fuel injection systems that operate on what is known as the common rail principle, a high fuel pressure, which is equivalent to the injection pressure, always prevails in the pressure chamber 14. A closing force acts on both the outer valve needle 8 and the inner valve needle 10 that is great enough that both valve needles 8, 10 are kept in contact with the valve seat 18, and as a result the rows of injection openings 20, 22 are closed. In the fuel injection valve of the invention, first only some of the fuel injection openings are opened, and only in the further course of the injection are all the injection openings opened. To that end, the closing force on the outer valve needle 8 is reduced, so that the hydraulic force on the pressure shoulder 12 and on the conical face 24 of the outer valve needle 8 is greater than the closing force. As a result, the outer valve needle 8 moves away from the valve seat 18, so that fuel can now flow out of the pressure chamber 14 to the first row of injection openings 20, and from there the fuel is injected into the combustion chamber of the engine. The inner valve needle 10 is kept in its closing position by the closing force and by the absence of a suitable opening force. As a result of the lifting of the outer valve needle 8 from the valve seat 18, the fuel now also flows through the annular gap 32 into the pressure vessel 27; the annular gap 32 throttles to such an extent that the pressure increase in the pressure vessel 27 takes place only with a certain delay. As the fuel pressure in the pressure vessel 27 increases, a hydraulic force on the pressure shoulder 30 builds up that is oriented counter to the closing force on the inner valve needle 10. As soon as the hydraulic force on the pressure shoulder 30 exceeds the closing force on the inner valve needle 10, the inner valve needle 10 also opens and with its sealing edge 44 lifts from the valve seat 18, so that now fuel is also injected into the combustion chamber through the second row of injection openings 22. This opened state, which is shown in
The embodiment of the pressure vessel 27 has still another advantage beyond this. The opening speed of the outer valve needle 8 depends not only on the mass of the outer valve needle 8 but also on the forces engaging it; that is, given a closing force, it depends on the area of the surface of the outer valve needle 8 acted upon by the pressure. At the onset of the opening stroke motion, this means the pressure shoulder 12 and the conical face 24. If the outer valve needle 8 has lifted from the valve seat 18, then the hydraulic force on the sealing face 35 comes into play as well. The annular shoulder 34 counteracts this only very slightly, since at the onset of the opening stroke motion the fuel pressure in the pressure vessel 27 is only slight, making this force negligible. The outer valve needle 8 therefore opens very fast, which is indispensable for injections in rapid succession. Upon termination of the injection, a high fuel pressure prevails in the pressure vessel 27 and now also exerts a corresponding hydraulic force on the annular shoulder 34. This force partly compensates for the hydraulic force on the sealing face 35, so that the now further-increased closing force on the outer valve needle 8, because of the lesser contrary force, moves the outer valve needle 8 faster back into its closing position, thereby also speeding up the closing motion. Because of the faster opening and closing of the outer valve needle 8, injections in rapid succession can be achieved without problems. Because of the pressure shoulder 30 of the inner valve needle 10, which shoulder is spaced apart from the valve seat 18, it moreover becomes possible to reinforce the outer valve needle 8 in the region of the sealing face 35, thus reducing wear because of a larger area of contact between the outer valve needle 8 and the valve seat 18.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 52 660 | Nov 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE03/03624 | 10/31/2003 | WO | 00 | 12/12/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/044415 | 5/27/2004 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1834061 | Joachim | Dec 1931 | A |
4151958 | Hofmann | May 1979 | A |
4202500 | Keiczek | May 1980 | A |
5899389 | Pataki et al. | May 1999 | A |
6024297 | Greeves | Feb 2000 | A |
6616070 | Kunkulagunta | Sep 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
198 34 867 | Feb 1999 | DE |
19834867 | Feb 1999 | DE |
100 58 153 | Jun 2002 | DE |
0470348 | Feb 1992 | EP |
0520659 | Dec 1992 | EP |
1063417 | Dec 2000 | EP |
1136693 | Mar 2001 | EP |
2328855 | May 1977 | FR |
03040543 | May 2003 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060118660 A1 | Jun 2006 | US |