Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6796516
-
Patent Number
6,796,516
-
Date Filed
Monday, October 28, 200222 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, September 28, 200420 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 239 596
- 239 53312
- 239 53311
- 239 466
- 239 467
- 239 468
- 239 482
- 239 491
- 239 494
- 239 496
- 239 497
- 239 5852
- 239 5854
- 239 5855
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A fuel injector is described having a movable valve part, which for opening and closing of the valve cooperates with a stationary valve seat which is formed on a valve seat element. A swirl disk is arranged downstream from the valve seat and has a multilayer configuration. The fuel flowing through is imparted to a swirl component between at least one inlet area and at least one outlet area. In a first swirl-generating plane a swirl component is imparted to a first portion of the flow, while a second portion of the flow without swirl and independent of the first swirling portion of the flow is routed inside the swirl disk, and in a second swirl-generating plane a swirl component is imparted only to the second portion of the flow. The fuel injector may be suitable for direct injection of fuel into a combustion chamber of an internal combustion engine having compression of a fuel/air mixture with spark ignition.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a fuel injector.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
A fuel injector which may be electromagnetically actuated is described in German Published Patent Application No. 196 37 103, in which a swirl-generating arrangement is provided downstream from a valve seat. The swirl-generating arrangement is shaped in such a manner that at least two streams may be created from the fuel which run radially offset with respect to one another while mutually enveloping or enclosing one another and which have different directional orientations. The arrangement for creating the injection jet composed of an inner and an outer stream having different directional orientations may be quite complicated and relatively expensive to manufacture on account of the flow blades which serve as guide elements and the multilayer swirl mountings on a perforated disk. The swirl-generating arrangement may be configured in such a manner that either a swirling solid conical jet or a swirling hollow conical jet exits from the fuel injector.
The technique referred to as multilayer metal plating for the manufacture of perforated disks which may be particularly suited for use in fuel injectors has already been described in German Published Patent Application 196 07 288. This principle for manufacturing disks by multiple metal electrodeposition of various structures one on top of the other to produce a one-piece disk may be expressly included in the disclosure content of the present invention. Microelectrodeposition in multiple planes or layers may also be used to manufacture the swirl disks according to the present invention.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A fuel injector according to an example embodiment of the present invention may achieve a high-quality atomization of a fuel to be injected. Using a fuel injector according to an example embodiment of the present invention, a double swirl may be generated in a swirl disk which may be integrated into the fuel injector, the double swirl generation occurring in the same direction in the fluid so that a finely atomized, hollow conical spray jet composed of two hollow conical lamellae concentrically arranged one inside the other may be injected. As a result, among other things, the exhaust emissions from the internal combustion engine may be reduced and likewise the fuel consumption may be decreased in a fuel injector of an internal combustion engine.
The swirl-generating element may be configured in the shape of a multilayer swirl disk so that a double swirl may be created. The swirl disk may be manufactured using the technique referred to as multilayer metal plating. On account of their metallic construction, such swirl disks may be break-resistant and easy to install. Use of multilayer metal plating may allow high freedom in the configuration, since the contours of the opening areas (inlet area, swirl channels, swirl chambers, outlet openings) in the swirl disk may be freely selected. Compared to silicon discs in particular, whose crystal axes may strictly dictate the contours which may be achieved (truncated pyramids), this flexible shaping may be desirable.
In comparison to the manufacture of silicon disks in particular, metal deposition may provide a large variety of usable materials. Many varied types of metals having different magnetic properties and hardnesses may be used in microelectrodeposition for the manufacturing of swirl disks.
The swirl disks may be constructed using five layers by performing four or five, for example, electrodeposition steps for multilayer metal plating. The upstream layer represents a top layer which may completely cover the swirl chamber of a first middle swirl-generating layer. The swirl-generating layer is formed from a plurality of material areas which on account of their contouring and geometric position with respect to one another may determine the contours of the swirl chambers and swirl channels. This may also apply to a second middle swirl-generating layer which may be separated from the first swirl-generating layer by a middle forwarding layer, but which may be in hydraulic connection with the first swirl-generating layer via flow openings in the forwarding layer. A swirling portion of the flow as well as a portion of the flow without swirl and independent of the swirling portion of the flow enter the forwarding layer, the portion of the flow without swirl being transmitted into the second swirl-generating layer for imparting swirl. The individual layers may be successively applied to one another by electrodeposition, without separation areas or joint areas, in such a manner that they represent a material which may be homogeneous throughout. In this regard, the term “layers” is intended as a conceptual aid.
The swirl disc may be provided with at least two, or alternatively four, swirl channels for each swirl-generating layer for imparting a swirl component to the fuel. The material areas may have very different shapes, corresponding to the desired contouring.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
shows a partial section of a fuel injector.
FIG. 2
shows a partial section through a swirl disk which may be integrated into the fuel injector.
FIGS. 3 through 7
show conceptual top views of the individual plies or layers of the swirl disk according to FIG.
2
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The valve, which as an example is illustrated in
FIG. 1
as electromagnetically activatable, and in the form of an injector for fuel injection systems in internal combustion engines having compression of a fuel/air mixture with spark ignition, has a tubular, substantially hollow cylindrical core
2
which is at least partially enclosed by a solenoid
1
and which acts as an internal pole of a magnetic circuit. The fuel injector may be particularly suitable as a high-pressure injector for direct injection of fuel into a combustion chamber of an internal combustion engine.
A bobbin
3
made of plastic, which has a stepped configuration, for example, accommodates a winding of solenoid
1
and, in conjunction with core
2
and an annular, nonmagnetic intermediate part
4
which is partially enclosed by solenoid
1
, may allow a particularly compact and short configuration of the injector in the region of solenoid
1
.
A continuous longitudinal opening
7
is provided in core
2
which extends along a longitudinal valve axis
8
. Core
2
of the magnetic circuit also serves as a fuel inlet connector, longitudinal opening
7
representing a fuel supply duct. Above solenoid
1
, core
2
is firmly attached to outer metallic (ferritic, for example) housing part
14
, which as a stationary pole or external guide element closes the magnetic circuit and completely encloses solenoid
1
, at least in the circumferential direction. A fuel filter
15
is provided on the inflow side in longitudinal opening
7
of core
2
for filtering out fuel components which because of their size may cause blockage or damage in the injector.
A lower tubular housing part
18
is tightly and permanently joined to upper housing part
14
and encloses or accommodates an axially movable valve part having an armature
19
, a rod-shaped valve needle
20
, and an elongated valve seat support
21
. Both housing parts
14
and
18
may be permanently joined together by a circumferential weld, for example. The seal between housing part
18
and valve seat support
21
may be created by a sealing ring
22
, for example.
With its lower end, which at the same time represents the downstream end of the entire fuel injector, valve seat support
21
encloses a disk-shaped valve seat element
26
which is fitted into a through opening
24
and which has valve seat face
27
tapering in the downstream direction in the shape of a frustum, for example. Valve needle
20
is arranged in through opening
24
and has a valve closing section
28
on its downstream end. This valve closing section
28
, which tapers in a conical shape, for example, cooperates in a conventional manner with valve seat face
27
. Downstream from valve seat face
27
, following valve seat element
26
, there is a swirl-generating element in the form of a swirl disk
30
which is manufactured by multilayer metal plating, for example, and which has five metallic layers successively deposited on one another.
The injector is actuated in a conventional manner, for example by an electromagnetic arrangement. The electromagnetic circuit, which has solenoid
1
, core
2
, housing parts
14
, and
18
, and armature
19
, is used to axially move valve needle
20
and thus to open the injector against the elastic force of a restoring spring
33
arranged in longitudinal opening
7
of core
2
, and to close the injector. In order to guide valve needle
20
during its axial movement together with armature
19
along longitudinal valve axis
8
, a guide opening
34
provided in valve seat support
21
on the end facing toward armature
19
, and a disk-shaped guide element
35
, having a dimensionally accurate guide opening
36
is provided upstream from valve seat element
26
.
Instead of the electromagnetic circuit, another energizable actuator such as a piezoelectric stack may be used in a comparable fuel injector, or the axially movable valve part may be actuated by hydraulic pressure or servopressure.
An adjusting sleeve
38
which is inserted, pressed, or screwed into longitudinal opening
7
of core
2
is used for adjusting the spring pre-tension of restoring spring
33
, which on its upstream side rests on adjusting sleeve
38
via a centering element
39
, and which on its other side is supported by armature
19
. One or multiple borehole-like flow channels
40
are provided in armature
19
through which the fuel is able to travel from longitudinal opening
7
in core
2
, via connecting channels
41
arranged downstream from flow channels
40
near guide opening
34
in valve seat support
21
, to through opening
24
.
The lift of valve needle
20
is predetermined by the installation position of valve seat element
26
. When solenoid
1
is not energized, one end position of valve needle
20
is determined by the contact of valve closing section
28
with valve seat face
27
, and when solenoid
1
is energized, the other end position of valve needle
20
is determined by the contact of armature
19
with the downstream end face of core
2
.
Solenoid
1
is electrically contacted and thus energized via contact elements
43
which are provided with a plastic extrusion coating
44
on the outside of bobbin
3
and which in their continuation run as a connecting cable
45
. Plastic extrusion coating
44
may also extend over additional components (housing parts
14
and
18
, for example) of the fuel injector.
A first shoulder
49
in through opening
24
acts as a contact surface for a pressure spring
50
having a helical shape, for example. A second level
51
creates an enlarged space for the installation of three disk-shaped elements
35
,
26
, and
30
. Pressure spring
50
, which envelops valve needle
20
, pre-tensions guide element
35
in valve seat support
21
by pressing against guide element
35
with its side which is arranged opposite shoulder
49
. An outlet opening
53
is introduced in valve seat element
26
, downstream from valve seat face
27
, through which the fuel flowing along valve seat face
27
flows when the valve is open in order to subsequently enter swirl disk
30
. Swirl disk
30
is arranged, for example, in a recess
54
in a disk-shaped retaining element
55
which is firmly attached to valve seat support
21
by welding, gluing, or clamping, for example. A central outlet opening
56
is formed in retaining element
55
through which the swirling fuel leaves the fuel injector.
FIG. 2
shows a partial section through swirl disk
30
, while
FIGS. 3 through 7
show conceptual top views of the individual layers of the swirl disk according to FIG.
2
.
Swirl disk
30
is formed from five flat planes or layers, joined together by electrodeposition, which in the installed state are arranged successively in the axial direction. In the following description, the five layers of swirl disk
30
are designated, according to their function, as top layer
58
, first swirl-generating layer
59
, forwarding layer
60
, second swirl-generating layer
61
, and base layer
62
. For better fuel flow into swirl disk
30
, for example, upper top layer
58
has a smaller outer diameter than all the other layers
59
,
60
,
61
,
62
.
In this manner it may be ensured that the fuel is able to flow from the outside, past top layer
58
and, thus unhindered, to enter outer inlet areas
65
of four, for example, swirl channels
66
in first swirl-generating layer
59
. Upper top layer
58
represents a closed metallic layer which has no opening areas permitting flow-through. First swirl-generating layer
59
is provided with a complex opening contour which runs over the entire axial depth of this layer
59
. The opening contour of layer
59
is formed from an internal swirl chamber
68
and a plurality (two, four, six, or eight, for example) of swirl channels
66
opening into swirl chamber
68
. In the illustrated embodiment, swirl disk
30
has four swirl channels which open tangentially into swirl chamber
68
.
Whereas swirl chamber
68
is completely covered by top layer
58
, swirl channels
66
are only partially covered, since the outer ends facing away from swirl chamber
68
form inlet areas
65
which are open on top. In the region of a middle forwarding layer
60
arranged immediately downstream, the flow is divided into two parts, a first and a second portion of the flow, since in addition to a central through opening
70
there are additional outer through openings
71
provided in forwarding layer
60
which extend in the same number of swirl channels
66
, downstream from and directly below inlet area
65
. The second portion of the flow enters through these through openings
71
and may not take the path through swirl channels
66
in swirl-generating layer
59
arranged above. The first portion of the flow flows through swirl channels
66
into swirl chamber
68
, and from there into flow opening
70
, which has a rather small diameter, the angular momentum imparted to the fuel also being maintained in central flow opening
70
.
Adjoining forwarding layer
60
is a second swirl-generating layer
61
which has a configuration similar to that of first swirl-generating layer
59
. However, the orientation of inlet areas
75
and of swirl channels
76
may vary from first swirl-generating layer
59
. A special feature is that swirl chamber
78
of second swirl-generating layer
61
has a larger opening width than does swirl chamber
68
of first swirl-generating layer
59
. Second swirl-generating layer
61
is configured so that the entire second portion of the flow which flows through openings
71
enters swirl channels
76
. The entire flow leaves swirl disk
30
through a central outlet opening
79
in lower base layer
62
.
The second flow which flows through second swirl-generating layer
61
leaves as a wide hollow cone lamella through outlet opening
79
. An inner hollow cone lamella which flows into this outer hollow cone lamella is formed from the swirl flow which is created in first swirl-generating layer
59
and brought to a small diameter through narrow flow opening
70
. Using swirl disk
30
, two hollow conical lamellae may be created, concentrically arranged one inside the other, which because of the enlarged spray surface may achieve particularly fine atomization. A condition for optimal atomization may include that the diameter of flow opening
70
of forwarding layer
60
may be required to be smaller than the diameter of swirl chamber
78
, and may be required to be even smaller than the diameter of outlet opening
79
of base layer
62
. Ideally, the cross sections of swirl channels
66
of first swirl-generating layer
59
are larger than those of swirl channels
76
of second swirl-generating layer
61
, as the result of which the cone angle of the inner hollow cone lamella may be kept small in relation to the outer hollow cone lamella.
Swirl disk
30
may be constructed in a plurality of metallic layers by electrodeposition (multilayer metal plating), for example. Based on manufacturing using deep lithographic electroplating methods, there are particular features in the contouring, several of which are briefly summarized below:
Layers having constant thickness over the disk surface,
As a result of the deep lithographic structuring, substantially vertical indentations in the layers which form the respective cavities having flow-through (as dictated by the manufacturing process, deviations of approximately 3° in relation to optimally vertical walls may be present),
Desired undercuts and overlaps of the indentations due to the multilayer construction of individually structured metal layers,
Indentations having any cross-sectional shapes which are essentially parallel to the axis, and
One-piece configuration of the swirl disk, since the individual metal depositions directly follow one another in succession.
In the following sections, an example method of manufacturing swirl disks
30
is explained only briefly. All the process steps for multilayer metal plating in the manufacture of a perforated disk may have already been described in detail in German Published Patent Application No. 196 07 288. One characteristic of the example method of successive application of photolithographic steps (UV deep lithography) and subsequent microelectrodeposition is that high precision of structures may be ensured, even on a large-surface scale, so that it may be ideal for use in mass production involving a very large number of work pieces (high batchability). Numerous swirl disks
30
may be produced simultaneously on one panel or wafer.
The starting point for the example method is a flat, stable substrate which may be made of metal (titanium, steel), silicon, glass, or ceramic, for example. Optionally, at least one auxiliary layer is applied to the substrate first. For this purpose, an electrodeposition base layer (TiCuTi, CrCuCr, Ni, for example) may be used which may be required for electrical conductance for the subsequent microelectrodeposition. The auxiliary layer may be applied by sputtering or currentless metal deposition, for example. After this pretreatment of the substrate, a photoresist is applied to the entire surface of the auxiliary layer by lamination or spin-on deposition, for example.
The thickness of the photoresist may correspond to the thickness of the metal layer to be produced in the subsequent electrodeposition process, and thus to the thickness of lower base layer
62
of swirl disk
30
. The resist layer may be made of one or multiple plies of a photostructurable film or a liquid resist (polyimide, photoresist). If a sacrificial layer is to be optionally plated onto the subsequently produced coating structure, the thickness of the photoresist may be increased by the thickness of the sacrificial layer. The metal structure to be produced may be inversely transferred into the photoresist using a photolithographic mask. Optionally, the photoresist may be exposed (UV deep lithography) to UV radiation (printed board or semiconductor exposure system) directly over the mask and subsequently developed.
The negative structure which may ultimately result in the photoresist for subsequent layer
62
of swirl disk
30
is filled by electroplating with metal (Ni, NiCo, NiFe, NiW, Cu, for example). As the result of electrodeposition, the metal conforms closely to the contour of the negative structure so that the shape of the predetermined contour may be faithfully reproduced in the negative structure. To produce the structure of swirl disk
30
, the steps following the optional application of the auxiliary layer may be required to be repeated corresponding to the number of layers desired, so that for a five-layer swirl disk
30
, four (one-time lateral overgrowth) or five electrodeposition steps are performed. Various other metals may be used for the layers of a swirl disk
30
, provided that their use requires only one new electrodeposition step per layer.
After deposition of upper top layer
58
, the remaining photoresist may be leached from the metal structures by wet chemical stripping. For smooth, passivated substrates, swirl disks
30
may be detached from the substrate and isolated. For substrates having considerable adhesion of swirl disks
30
, the sacrificial layer may be etched away selectively with regard to the substrate and swirl disk
30
, and swirl disks
30
may be lifted off the substrate and cut up.
Claims
- 1. A fuel injector for a fuel injector system of an internal combustion engine, comprising:an actuator; a valve seat element; a stationary valve seat formed on the valve seat element; a movable valve part arranged to cooperate with the stationary valve seat for opening and closing a valve; a swirl disk arranged downstream from the stationary valve seat and including a multilayer configuration, the swirl disk including at least one inlet area and at least one outlet area for applying a swirl component to a fluid to be spray-discharged between the at least one inlet area and the at least one outlet area, the swirl disk further including a first swirl-generating plane in which the swirl component is imparted to a first portion of a flow and in which a second portion of the flow is routed without swirl and independently of the first portion, and a second swirl-generating plane in which the swirl component is imparted only to the second portion of the flow.
- 2. The fuel injector according to claim 1, wherein the fuel injector is used for a direct injection of fuel into a combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine.
- 3. The fuel injector according to claim 1, wherein the swirl disk is manufacturable by electrodeposition of a metal.
- 4. The fuel injector according to claim 1, wherein the first and second swirl-generating planes are formed from a plurality of swirl channels and respective swirl chambers.
- 5. The fuel injector according to claim 4, wherein the swirl chamber of the first swirl-generating plane has an opening width that is smaller than that of the swirl chamber of the second swirl-generating plane.
- 6. A fuel injector for a fuel injector system of an internal combustion engine, comprising:an actuator; a valve seat element; a stationary valve seat formed on the valve seat element; a movable valve part arranged to cooperate with the stationary valve seat for opening and closing a valve; and a swirl disk arranged downstream from the stationary valve seat and including a multilayer configuration, the swirl disk including at least one inlet area and at least one outlet area for applying a swirl component to a fluid to be spray-discharged between the at least one inlet area and the at least one outlet area, the swirl disk including a first swirl-generating plane in which the swirl component is imparted to a first portion of a flow and in which a second portion of the flow is routed without swirl and independently of the first portion, the swirl disk including a second swirl-generating plane in which the swirl component is imparted only to the second portion of the flow; wherein the swirl disk includes five layers.
- 7. A fuel injector for a fuel injector system of an internal combustion engine, comprising:an actuator; a valve seat element; a stationary valve seat formed on the valve seat element; a movable valve part arranged to cooperate with the stationary valve seat for opening and closing a valve; and a swirl disk arranged downstream from the stationary valve seat and including a multilayer configuration, the swirl disk including at least one inlet area and at least one outlet area for applying a swirl component to a fluid to be spray-discharged between the at least one inlet area and the at least one outlet area, the swirl disk including a first swirl-generating plane in which the swirl component is imparted to a first portion of a flow and in which a second portion of the flow is routed without swirl and independently of the first portion, the swirl disk including a second swirl-generating plane in which the swirl component is imparted only to the second portion of the flow; wherein the first and second swirl-generating planes are configured so that the flow leaves a central outlet opening as two hollow conical lamellae concentrically arranged one inside another.
- 8. The fuel injector according to claim 7, wherein portions of the flow which form the two hollow conical lamellae swirl in a same direction.
- 9. The fuel injector according to claim 7, wherein the fuel injector is used for a direct injection of fuel into a combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine.
- 10. The fuel injector according to claim 7, wherein the swirl disk is manufacturable by electrodeposition of a metal.
- 11. The fuel injector according to claim 7, wherein the first and second swirl-generating planes are formed from a plurality of swirl channels and respective swirl chambers.
- 12. The fuel injector according to claim 11, wherein the swirl chamber of the first swirl-generating plane has an opening width that is smaller than that of the swirl chamber of the second swirl-generating plane.
- 13. A fuel injector for a fuel injector system of an internal combustion engine, comprising:an actuator; a valve seat element; a stationary valve seat formed on the valve seat element; a movable valve part arranged to cooperate with the stationary valve seat for opening and closing a valve; and a swirl disk arranged downstream from the stationary valve seat and including a multilayer configuration, the swirl disk including at least one inlet area and at least one outlet area for applying a swirl component to a fluid to be spray-discharged between the at least one inlet area and the at least one outlet area, the swirl disk including a first swirl-generating plane in which the swirl component is imparted to a first portion of a flow and in which a second portion of the flow is routed without swirl and independently of the first portion, the swirl disk including a second swirl-generating plane in which the swirl component is imparted only to the second portion of the flow; wherein the first and second swirl-generating planes are formed from a plurality of swirl channels and respective swirl chambers; wherein the swirl channels of the first swirl-generating plane have a cross section that is larger than that of the swirl channels of the second swirl-generating plane.
- 14. The fuel injector according to claim 13, wherein the fuel injector is used for a direct injection of fuel into a combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine.
- 15. The fuel injector according to claim 13, wherein the swirl disk is manufacturable by electrodeposition of a metal.
- 16. The fuel injector according to claim 13, wherein the first and second swirl-generating planes are formed from a plurality of swirl channels and respective swirl chambers.
- 17. The fuel injector according to claim 16, wherein the swirl chamber of the first swirl-generating plane has an opening width that is smaller than that of the swirl chamber of the second swirl-generating plane.
- 18. A fuel injector for a fuel injector system of an internal combustion engine, comprising:an actuator; a valve seat element; a stationary valve seat formed on the valve seat element; a movable valve part arranged to cooperate with the stationary valve seat for opening and closing a valve; a swirl disk arranged downstream from the stationary valve seat and including a multilayer configuration, the swirl disk including at least one inlet area and at least one outlet area for applying a swirl component to a fluid to be spray-discharged between the at least one inlet area and the at least one outlet area, the swirl disk including a first swirl-generating plane in which the swirl component is imparted to a first portion of a flow and in which a second portion of the flow is routed without swirl and independently of the first portion, the swirl disk including a second swirl-generating plane in which the swirl component is imparted only to the second portion of the flow; and a forwarding layer arranged between the first and the second swirl-generating planes and into which a flow opening for the first portion of the flow and at least one through opening for the second portion of the flow without the swirl are introduced.
- 19. The fuel injector according to claim 18, further comprising:a base layer into which the at least one outlet area is introduced, wherein the at least one outlet area has a diameter that is larger than the flow opening.
- 20. The fuel injector according to claim 18, wherein the fuel injector is used for a direct injection of fuel into a combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine.
- 21. The fuel injector according to claim 18, wherein the swirl disk is manufacturable by electrodeposition of a metal.
- 22. The fuel injector according to claim 18, wherein the first and second swirl-generating planes are formed from a plurality of swirl channels and respective swirl chambers.
- 23. The fuel injector according to claim 22, wherein the swirl chamber of the first swirl-generating plane has an opening width that is smaller than that of the swirl chamber of the second swirl-generating plane.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
100 56 006 |
Nov 2000 |
DE |
|
PCT Information
Filing Document |
Filing Date |
Country |
Kind |
PCT/DE01/04209 |
|
WO |
00 |
Publishing Document |
Publishing Date |
Country |
Kind |
WO02/38949 |
5/16/2002 |
WO |
A |
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DE |
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DE |
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DE |
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DE |
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