This application is a national phase application of International Application No. PCT/JP2013/076986, filed Oct. 3, 2013, and claims the priority of Japanese Application No. 2012-226891, filed Oct. 12, 2012, the content of both of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a fuel injection valve.
In regard to an internal combustion engine, supercharged lean burn, a large amount of EGR, and homogeneous-charge self-ignition combustion have been actively studied in recent years for CO2 reduction and emission reduction. According to these studies, in order to maximize effects of the CO2 reduction and the emission reduction, it is necessary to realize a stable combustion state near a combustion limit. Also, while petroleum fuel is being depleted, robustness in stable combustion with various fuels such as biofuel is required. A most important factor for realizing the stable combustion is to reduce an ignition fluctuation of a fuel-air mixture, and to realize homogeneous and stable combustion without any unevenness. This requires easier vaporization by fine fuel spray and uniform atomized particle sizes.
Further, a fuel supply of the internal combustion engine adopts a cylinder injection system in which fuel is injected directly to a combustion chamber for the purpose of improving transient response, improving volume efficiency by evaporation latent heat, and carrying out greatly retarded combustion for catalyst activation at low temperatures. However, the adoption of the cylinder injection system may cause oil dilution caused when spray fuel hits a wall of the combustion chamber as the spray fuel is in a form of liquid droplets, PM (Particulate Matter), and generation of smoke.
In order to take measures against these phenomena, a swirl flow may be given to fuel injected from a fuel injection valve. As the fuel injection valve configured to give a swirl flow to fuel, Patent Document 1 and Patent Document 2 have been known, for example. Particularly, Patent Document 2 describes a fuel injection valve configured such that a swirling component is given to fuel so that fine air bubbles are taken in injected fuel, thereby achieving atomization of the injected fuel by bursting the fine air bubbles.
Patent Document 1: Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 11-117831 (JP 11-117831 A)
Patent Document 2: International Publication No. 2011/125201
However, in the fuel injection valves described in Patent Document 1 and Patent Document 2, fuel retained near that seat surface of a nozzle body on which a seat portion of a needle valve is placed at the time of closing the needle valve, i.e., so-called dead fuel, exists. At the time of closing the needle valve, a flow of the dead fuel is once stopped. Accordingly, such a situation is assumed that a swirling component is not given to the dead fuel at the beginning of opening of the needle valve, so that the dead fuel is introduced into an injection hole to be injected while the dead fuel keeps a form of droplets having a large particle diameter. That is, a swirling component is hard to given to the dead fuel, so that it is difficult for the dead fuel to take fine air bubbles therein. Accordingly, the atomization of the fuel by bursting of the fine air bubbles cannot be expected. Further, a flow speed of the dead fuel just after the needle valve is opened is slow, so the atomization by shearing of the air is also difficult.
In view of this, an object of a fuel injection valve described in the present specification is to atomize dead fuel.
In order to achieve the above object, a fuel injection valve described in the present specification includes: a needle valve including a seat portion on a tip side thereof; a nozzle body including a seat surface on which the seat portion is placed, and a swirl stabilization chamber on a downstream side of the seat surface, the nozzle body having an injection hole formed so as to have an inlet in the swirl stabilization chamber; a swirl flow generating portion having swirl grooves configured to give a swirling component to fuel to be introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber; and a fuel collision portion provided in a tip portion of the needle valve, the fuel collision portion being configured such that, in a state where the needle valve is opened, the fuel collision portion intersects with a virtual surface extended toward the injection hole from the seat surface included in the nozzle body.
When the needle valve is opened, dead fuel retained in an upstream side of the seat portion in a state where the needle valve is closed is introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber. The dead fuel has few swirling component at the beginning of the opening of the needle valve. When such dead fuel passes through the seat portion so as to be introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber, the dead fuel collides with the fuel collision portion. Hereby, it is possible to prevent such a situation that the dead fuel is retained in the swirl stabilization chamber and then introduced into the injection hole in a state where the dead fuel hardly swirls. When the fuel passing through the swirl grooves so that a swirling component is given thereto is introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber, the swirling component is also given to fuel corresponding to the dead fuel having been retained in the swirl stabilization chamber, due to a force of swirling of the fuel thus introduced. The fuel to which the swirling component is given is introduced into the injection hole, and generates an air column in a central portion of a swirl flow of the fuel. Subsequently, fine air bubbles are generated in a boundary between the air column and the fuel, and the fuel including the fine air bubbles is injected from the injection hole. After the fuel is injected from the injection hole, the fine air bubbles burst, thereby achieving atomization of the fuel. Thus, by providing the fuel collision portion, it is possible to achieve atomization of the dead fuel.
Here, when the needle valve is opened, the fuel collision portion may be configured to incline a flow of the fuel to be introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber, toward an inner peripheral wall of the swirl stabilization chamber. This makes it possible to retain the dead fuel in the swirl stabilization chamber.
More specifically, the fuel collision portion may include a curved portion formed on its outer peripheral wall so as to be recessed toward an axial center of the needle valve. By providing the curved portion, the dead fuel can be guided to the vicinity of the inner peripheral wall of the swirl stabilization chamber, so that the dead fuel can be effectively retained in the swirl stabilization chamber.
The fuel collision portion may include a spiral groove on its external wall, and a swirl direction of the spiral groove relative to the axial center of the needle valve may be the same direction as a swirl direction of the swirl grooves provided in the needle guide relative to the axial center of the needle valve. By providing the spiral groove, it is possible to retain the dead fuel in the swirl stabilization chamber while giving the swirling component to the dead fuel flowing toward the fuel collision portion. Further, when the swirl direction of the spiral groove relative to the axial center of the needle valve is the same direction as the swirl direction of the swirl grooves provided in the needle guide relative to the axial center of the needle valve, it is possible to restrain a decrease in the swirling component. That is, if the swirl directions are reverse to each other, the swirling component of the fuel passing through the swirl grooves is cancelled, which weakens the force of swirling. This problem can be prevented.
A tapered portion may be provided between the seat portion provided in the needle valve and the fuel collision portion. This makes it possible to restrain detachment of the fuel passing through the seat portion so as to be introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber, thereby making it possible to smoothly guide the dead fuel to the fuel collision portion. As a result, the dead fuel can be retained in the swirl stabilization chamber effectively. Further, when the detachment occurs at the time when the fuel is introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber, an unstable swirl flow is caused, so that unevenness in spray is easy to occur. However, the tapered portion can restrain this.
A bottom face of the swirl stabilization chamber may be a smooth surface perpendicular to the axial center of the needle valve, and a central axis of the injection hole may coincide with the axial center of the needle valve. This makes it possible to introduce the swirl flow into the injection hole homogeneously. As a result, it is possible to achieve cone-shaped fuel injection formed in a symmetrical manner along the central axis of the injection hole.
It is desirable that a distance between the inlet of the injection hole and the bottom face of the fuel collision portion when the needle valve is closed be set to not more than a quenching distance of flames to enter from the injection hole. This makes it possible to restrain the flames from entering into the fuel injection valve. As a result, it is possible to restrain carbonization of the fuel inside the fuel injection valve.
According to the fuel injection valve described herein, it is possible to atomize dead fuel.
Embodiments of the present invention are described below in detail with reference to the drawings. Note that a dimension, a scale, and the like of each portion in the drawings may not be illustrated so as to be completely the same as an actual portion. Further, details may be omitted in some drawings.
The fuel injection valve 1 of the first embodiment is provided in an internal combustion engine, and is drive-controlled by an ECU provided in the internal combustion engine. The ECU is a computer including a CPU (Central Processing Unit) configured to perform arithmetic processing, a ROM (Read Only Memory) in which to store a program and the like, and a RAM (Random Access Memory) or a NVRAM (Non Volatile RAM) in which to store data and the like. The fuel injection valve 1 can be provided in a lower part of an inlet port provided in the internal combustion engine, or at a given position in a combustion chamber. The internal combustion engine in which the fuel injection valve 1 is provided is any of a gasoline engine using gasoline as fuel, a diesel engine using light oil as fuel, and a flexible fuel engine using fuel obtained by mixing gasoline with alcohol at a given ratio. Also, the internal combustion engine may be an engine using any fuel that can be injected by a fuel injection valve.
Referring to
The nozzle body 2 is a tubular member, and includes an inner peripheral wall 2a. Further, the nozzle body 2 includes a pressure chamber 2b. A tip side of the pressure chamber 2b is provided with a seat surface 2c formed in a tapered shape. The after-mentioned seat portion 6a is placed on the seat surface 2c. Further, the nozzle body 2 includes a swirl stabilization chamber 3 on a downstream side of the seat surface 2c. The swirl stabilization chamber 3 is a cylindrical space having a bottom face 3a and an inner peripheral wall 3b. The bottom face 3a of the swirl stabilization chamber 3 is a smooth surface perpendicular to the axial center AX of the after-mentioned needle valve 6. An inlet 4a of the injection hole 4 is opened on the bottom face 3a. A central axis of the injection hole 4 coincides with the axial center AX of the needle valve 6. As will be described later, the fuel injection valve 1 in the first embodiment generates a strong swirl flow inside the injection hole 4 so as to generate fine air bubbles, and injects fuel including the fine air bubbles. In the fuel injection valve 1 that performs the fuel injection in this manner, the fuel flowing through the injection hole 4 forms a gas-liquid two-phase flow in which air bubbles are mixed, so that its flow speed is controlled at an extremely low sonic velocity prescribed by a void fraction. In such a state, an injection hole diameter is set to a diameter that secures a flow rate of the fuel. In the first embodiment, the injection hole diameter of the injection hole 4 is set to 0.7 mm, and an injection hole area thereof is set to 0.385 mm2. Note that these dimensions are just examples and not limited to the above.
The fuel injection valve 1 includes the needle guide 5 of which a tip portion is placed inside the nozzle body 2. The needle guide 5 is placed inside the nozzle body 2 so that an outer peripheral surface of the needle guide 5 makes contact with an inner peripheral wall 2a of the nozzle body 2 in a supported manner. The needle guide 5 is a tubular member, and the needle valve 6 is accommodated in an inner peripheral portion in a reciprocating manner along a direction of the axial center AX. Referring to
Here, while referring to
The fuel injection valve 1 includes the needle valve 6 having the seat portion 6a on a tip side. As described above, the needle valve 6 is supported by an inner side of the needle guide 5 in a reciprocating manner. The needle valve 6 performs an opening operation by a driving device operating in response to an instruction of the ECU. As illustrated in
Referring now to
In contrast, the fuel retained in the swirl stabilization chamber 3 collides with the fuel collision portion 7, so that the fuel is inclined toward the inner peripheral wall 3b of the swirl stabilization chamber 3. Then, a swirling component is given to the fuel from the fuel having the swirling component and introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber 3 subsequently to the dead fuel, and then, the fuel is introduced into the injection hole 4. That is, fuel placed in an upstream side relative to the dead fuel at the time when the fuel injection valve 1 is closed, and introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber 3 after passing through the swirl grooves 5b with a sufficient distance has a fast speed and obtains the swirling component. The fuel that passes through the swirl grooves 5b with a long inlet length and has the swirling component is introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber 3 along the inner peripheral wall 3b of the swirl stabilization chamber 3 due to a centrifugal force of the fuel. The fuel having the swirling component keeps the swirling component and is introduced into the injection hole 4 together with the fuel retained in the swirl stabilization chamber 3.
As such, the fuel having the swirling component and introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber 3 subsequently to the dead fuel swirls along the inner peripheral wall 3b of the swirl stabilization chamber 3. Further, in order to retain the dead fuel in the swirl stabilization chamber 3, it is convenient to incline the dead fuel toward the inner peripheral wall 3b. In view of this, when the needle valve 6 is opened, the fuel collision portion 7 is configured to incline a flow of fuel to be introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber 3, toward the inner peripheral wall 3b of the swirl stabilization chamber 3. More specifically, as illustrated in
As described above, the bottom face 3a of the swirl stabilization chamber 3 of the fuel injection valve 1 is a smooth surface perpendicular to the axial center AX of the needle valve 6. The inlet 4a of the injection hole 4 is opened on the bottom face 3a, and the central axis of the injection hole 4 coincides with the axial center AX of the needle valve 6. This allows the fuel swirling in the swirl stabilization chamber 3 to be introduced into the injection hole 4 homogeneously. As a result, it is possible to achieve cone-shaped fuel injection formed in a symmetrical manner along the central axis of the injection hole 4.
Here, the following describes a state of the fuel injection by the fuel injection valve 1. When the needle valve 6 is lifted up and the seat portion 6a is removed from the seat surface 2c, the fuel passing through the fuel communication path 5a is once introduced into the pressure chamber 2b, and then flows into the swirl grooves 5b. Hereby, the fuel forms a swirl flow. Then, the swirl flow is introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber 3 along the seat surface 2c. In such a procedure, the fuel swirling in the swirl stabilization chamber 3 is introduced into the injection hole 4. At this time, the fuel is introduced into the injection hole 4 having a diameter smaller than that of the swirl stabilization chamber 3, so that a whirl speed of the swirl flow accelerates and speeds up. As a result, as illustrated in
A principle of atomization of the fuel is described in detail as follows. When a swirl flow with a fast whirl speed is formed in the fuel injection valve 1 and the swirl flow is introduced into the injection hole, a negative pressure is caused in a swirl center of such a strong swirl flow. When the negative pressure is caused, air outside the fuel injection valve 1 is absorbed into the injection hole 4. Hereby, an air column AP is generated within the injection hole 4. Thus, air bubbles are generated in an interface between the air column AP thus generated and the fuel. The air bubbles thus generated are mixed into the fuel flowing around the air column AP, so as to be injected with an air-bubble mixed flow, that is, a fuel flow that flows on an outer peripheral side as a two-phase flow. A shape of the injection is a hollow cone shape. Accordingly, as the injection is separated from the injection hole 4, an outside diameter of spray becomes larger, so that a liquid membrane forming the air bubble is stretched to be thinner. Then, when the liquid membrane cannot be maintained, the air bubble is divided. After that, a diameter of the fine air bubble is decreased due to a self-pressurizing effect, thereby causing collapse (crushing), so that ultrafine fuel particles are formed. Thus, atomization of the fuel is attained.
This is the principle of the fuel atomization of the fuel injection valve 1. In order to use this principle effectively, the injection hole diameter of the injection hole 4 of the fuel injection valve 1 is set to 0.7 mm. This diameter corresponds to a distance that allows flames from the combustion chamber to enter the fuel injection valve 1. When flames enter the fuel injection valve 1 from the injection hole 4, the fuel in the fuel injection valve 1 might be carbonized. When the fuel is carbonized and accumulated as a deposit, poor oil-tight and aggravation of spray in the fuel injection valve 1 may be caused. In view of this, in the fuel injection valve 1, a distance between the inlet 4a of the injection hole 4 and the bottom face 7b of the fuel collision portion 7 when the needle valve 6 is closed is set to a quenching distance or less for the flames entering from the injection hole 4. More specifically, a distance S shown in
As described above, according to the fuel injection valve 1 of the first embodiment, it is possible to atomize the dead fuel.
With reference to
As apparent in
The fuel collision portion 17 is provided at a position similar to that in the fuel injection valve 1 of the first embodiment. Accordingly, dead fuel introduced into a swirl stabilization chamber 3 at the beginning of opening of the fuel injection valve 11 collides with the fuel collision portion 17. The dead fuel that has collided with the fuel collision portion 17 moves along the spiral groove 17a so that the dead fuel can obtain a swirling component by itself.
Here, referring to
According to the fuel injection valve 11 of the second embodiment, the dead fuel can obtain a swirling component by itself by passing through the swirl groove 5b before a swirling component is given thereto by a fuel flow having the swirling component. This makes it possible to effectively swirl the fuel even under an environment of a low fuel pressure, for example, thereby making it possible to achieve atomization of the fuel.
With reference to
The fuel injection valve 21 includes a needle valve 26. The needle valve 26 includes a tapered portion 27b between a seat portion 26a and a fuel collision portion 27. By including the tapered portion 27b, it is possible to restrain detachment of fuel introduced into a swirl stabilization chamber 23. This makes it possible to smoothly guide dead fuel to the fuel collision portion 27, so that the dead fuel can be retained in the swirl stabilization chamber 23 effectively. Further, when the detachment occurs at the time when the fuel is introduced into the swirl stabilization chamber 23, an unstable swirl flow is caused, so that unevenness in spray is easy to occur. However, the tapered portion 27b can restrain this. Note that the fuel collision portion 27 includes a spiral groove 27a similarly to the fuel injection valve 11 of the second embodiment, but the spiral groove 27a is common to the spiral groove 17a, so a detailed description thereof is omitted.
An angle φ2 of the tapered portion 27b relative to an axial center AX smoothly guides the fuel to the fuel collision portion 27, so that the angle φ2 is set to be larger than an angle φ1 of a seat surface 22c relative to the axial center AX. When φ2 is an angle of about half of φ1, it is possible to effectively restrain detachment of the fuel.
The injection hole 24 is provided so as to be offset from the axial center AX. Since the fuel injection valve 21 of the third embodiment can obtain a stable swirl flow in the swirl stabilization chamber 23, it is possible to stably guide the swirl flow of the fuel to the injection hole 24 provided in an offset manner. Note that the first embodiment and the second embodiment can employ an injection hole provided in an offset manner.
As described above, the shape of the fuel collision portion can be modified in various ways. For example, as illustrated in
The above embodiments are only examples to perform the present invention. Accordingly, the present invention is not limited to these embodiments, and various modifications and alternations can be made within a gist of Claims.
1, 11, 21 fuel injection valve
2, 22 nozzle body
2
a, 22a inner peripheral wall
2
b, 22b pressure chamber
2
c, 22c seat surface
3, 23 swirl stabilization chamber
3
a bottom face
3
b inner peripheral wall
4, 24 injection hole
4
a inlet
5 needle guide
5
a fuel communication path
5
b swirl groove
6, 16, 26, 36, 46, 56 needle valve
6
a, 16a, 26a, 36a, 46a, 56a seat portion
7, 17, 27, 37, 47, 57 fuel collision portion
7
a curved portion
7
b bottom face
8 dead fuel retention portion
17
a, 27a spiral groove
27
b tapered portion
AP air column
AX axial center
F virtual surface
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012-226891 | Oct 2012 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2013/076986 | 10/3/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2014/057866 | 4/17/2014 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20150292460 A1 | Oct 2015 | US |