The invention relates to a fuel injection valve for internal combustion engines, in particular for internal combustion engines having direct injection.
With conventional fuel injectors for injection systems of internal combustion engines, the fuel injection is typically controlled by means of a valve needle which is disposed so as to form a movable seal within a guide in a valve body of an injection valve. At its tip the valve needle has a valve needle seat which, together with a valve body seat of the valve body, opens or closes at least one nozzle orifice to the combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine. The at least one nozzle orifice is typically disposed in the area of the valve body seat.
The purpose of the injection nozzle is to supply the combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine with fuel in a selective and metered manner. The type of fuel conditioning is significantly influenced by the injection nozzle and the progression of the injection operation. This, in turn, can have a major influence of the combustion of the internal combustion engine. With the injection nozzle closed, when the cone of the nozzle needle sits against the conical sealing surface of the nozzle body, the nozzle needle is centered in the nozzle body as a result of this seating contact. However, when the nozzle needle lifts off from the conical sealing surface, the nozzle needle, which then projects freely into the tip of the nozzle body, tends to deviate from the precisely centered position. The consequence of this is that the encircling injection orifices are not released uniformly, which can lead in turn to an asymmetrical jet formation which may have a negative impact on the combustion cycle and consequently also on the emission values.
In order to ensure a uniform jet pattern of the various injection orifices, it is proposed in DE 198 43 616 A1 that the nozzle body of the injection nozzle be provided with a cylinder-shaped recess in the interior of the tip in the area of the injection orifices. By means of the groove the flow is able to bypass the needle seat geometry with minimum flow losses. On the other hand, the introduction of the groove results in an additional so-called damage volume, i.e. a volume between nozzle body and nozzle needle which has a detrimental impact on the engine function with regard to exhaust gas emissions.
An object of the invention is to provide a fuel injection valve which enables as uniform a jet pattern as possible of the injection orifices with minimal damage volume.
In order to achieve this object of the invention, a fuel injection valve for injecting fuel into the combustion chamber of an internal combustion engine is proposed which comprises a valve body having a tip containing injection orifices and a valve needle which is disposed in an axially displaceable manner in the valve body. A cone at the tip of the valve needle selectively releases and blocks a fuel path to the injection orifices. According to the invention, the tip of the valve needle has a respective groove-shaped recess assigned to each injection orifice.
With this fuel injection valve according to the invention, the volume necessary for favorably directing the flow under the needle seat can be reduced to a minimum. This is achieved in that, instead of a circular groove around the needle tip, only narrow grooves are incorporated in the needle tip.
In one embodiment of the fuel injection valve according to the invention, each recess has a width at least corresponding to a diameter of an injection orifice. In this way the damage volume can be reduced to a minimum, while nonetheless at the same time an optimal redirection of the flow in the direction of the jet surface is still guaranteed.
In order to simplify manufacture, each of the recesses can be formed with a curvilinear or arched contour. A curvilinear or arched contour of this kind can be easily incorporated during the nozzle needle manufacturing process. Thus, for example, an embodiment can provide that the recesses each have a semicircular cross-section.
Preferably the nozzle needle has a longitudinal guide to prevent rotational movements, so that the alignment of the groove in relation to the respective inlet into the tip orifice is guaranteed at all times. A longitudinal guide of the nozzle needle of this kind can preferably be formed by means of a slot-and-key guide so that a rotation of the nozzle needle during operation is prevented at all times.
A further embodiment of the invention can provide that each injection orifice receives a specially adapted groove, by which means asymmetrical flow conditions caused by needle deflections can be compensated for.
The invention consists in the solution of two mutually opposing problems. In order to optimize the flow, an additional volume is created in front of the inlet edges of the injection orifices of an injection nozzle, thereby simultaneously minimizing the damage volume in the blind hole of the nozzle. Fixing the needle in relation to the nozzle body during assembly allows the advantages of both aspects to be realized.
The invention will now be explained on the basis of embodiments with reference to the accompanying figures.
The fuel is directed via a fuel feed 30 and an annular pressure chamber 26 disposed between the valve needle 6 and the valve body 4 to the seat edge 18 and, when the valve needle 6 is raised, continues along the annulus 32 between valve needle 6 and valve body via the blind hole 16 and the injection orifices 20 into the combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine.
A sealing gap 14 is disposed between a cylindrically shaped needle guide 10 in the upper area of the valve needle 6, which is larger in diameter relative to the needle shaft, and a guide surface 12 in the valve body 4, which has a cylindrical inner casing surface. As a result of this sealing gap 14 the high pressure prevailing in the pressure chamber 26 decreases constantly relative to a leakage area above the valve needle 6.
A rotation of the valve needle 6 is prevented at all times by means of a featherkey 34 in the upper area of the needle guide 10, which is guided in a corresponding guide groove 36 in the guide surface 12 of the valve body 4. In this way the recesses 38 in the needle tip remain assigned to their respective corresponding injection orifices.
The embodiment of the needle tip 8 including valve needle seat 22 and valve body seat 24 is explained in more detail with reference to
In the second tapered cone section 44, groove-shaped recesses 38 are provided, each of which is assigned to an injection orifice 20 and each of which has approximately the same width as an injection orifice 20. Each of the groove-shaped recesses 38 is triangular in cross-section, whereby a bottom edge of each recess 38 lies approximately at the same height as a bottom edge of an injection orifice 20. The top edge of each recess lies closer to the first tapered cone section 42, so that a fuel flow can proceed virtually swirl-free within the groove and is directed in the direction of the injection orifice 20.
Around the end surface 40 and the tip of the second tapered cone section 44 there is embodied a blind hole 16 in the valve body tip, said blind hole leaving only a very small space when the valve needle 6 is closed, with the result that only a small damage volume is formed in the fuel injection valve 2 according to the invention.
Finally,
In a further preferred variant of the invention, each of the recesses 38 has an individual contour. In this way asymmetrical jet patterns of the fuel injection valve 2 due, for example, to a non-centrically guided or laterally deflected valve needle 6 can be equalized. asymmetrical jet patterns of this kind can preferably be determined in experiments and taken into account accordingly in the implementation of the recesses 38.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101 49 277 | Oct 2001 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation of co-pending International Application No. PCT/DE02/03725 filed Oct. 1, 2002 which designates the United States, and claims priority to German application number DE10149277.4 filed Oct. 5, 2001.
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Number | Date | Country |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040195388 A1 | Oct 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/DE02/03725 | Oct 2002 | US |
Child | 10815378 | US |