The present disclosure relates in one embodiment to a liquid or gaseous fluid conduit that is adapted to cleanse itself of deposits from the liquid or gaseous fluid as they accumulate in the conduit. This may be used as liquid or gaseous fuel injector nozzles such as those used in internal combustion engines. The device of the present disclosure may also be used in other liquid or gaseous fluid conduits that are subject to deposition from the conducted liquid or gas that are carried at or near hypersonic velocities.
Injector coking is a serious problem in direct injected internal combustion engines, because the injectors are in contact with the harsh environment of the combustion chamber. Because of the high temperatures, fuel decomposes in the injector nozzle and lays down a deposit which both restricts flow, and distorts the symmetry of the spray. As this deposit grows with operation, the internal dimensions of the nozzle change.
The buildup of deposits in the combustion chamber can alter engine performance by impairing fuel economy, regulated emissions, and driveability, and in the worst case scenario causing engine damage. A detailed account of such deposits, problems and some attempted solutions can be found in S.A.E. Technical Paper No. 902105 (1990) by G. T. Kalghatgi. Carbonaceous deposits are especially problematic for fuel injectors located within the engine combustion chamber. Direct injection spark ignition (DISI) engines include a fuel injector injecting fuel directly into the combustion chamber.
If the fuel injector could be made to resist the carbonaceous deposits, existing fuels and fuel injector designs could be utilized. In the past, components have been coated with amorphous hydrogenated carbon to increase hardness and durability, decrease friction and wear and protect against corrosion. As described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,249,554, 5,309,874, and 5,237,967 assigned to Ford Motor Company, and incorporated herein by reference, power train components have been coated with such carbon film coatings to reduce friction and wear related thereto. More recently, coatings have also been applied in an effort to reduce deposit formation. One example is U.S. Pat. No. 3,552,370, issued to Briggs et al, which describes a coating, and method of application, including the constituents of nickel, aluminum and copper for the purpose of reducing heat transfer from the combustion chamber to foster a more complete combustion.
Fuel additives alone typically are ineffective once fuel injectors have become fouled with substantial amounts of deposits such that the ability of the additive package to cleanse the injector is overcome.
Accordingly, there remains a need for fuel injectors that are capable of reducing and preventing the growth of carbonaceous deposits, especially so as to be able to keep deposits at a sufficiently low level that they may effectively be held at operable levels by fuel additives.
Accordingly, one embodiment herein provides a method to prevent the formation of carbonaceous deposits in fuel injectors. Another embodiment provides a self-cleaning injector nozzle or other fluid conduit that maintains deposits at a low level by sonic tuning the shock wave generated during fluid flow through that nozzle or conduit.
It has been presently found that the sonic shock wave frequency set up by the fluid flowing through the nozzle also changes as the nozzle cokes. Surprisingly, this change can lead to a frequency regime within which a deposit cleaning mechanism is initiated. The present disclosure makes use of this principle to design injector nozzles of appropriate internal dimensions that set up the appropriate sonic shock wave frequency for self cleaning as soon as the deposit begins to form.
Thus, in another embodiment, a method is disclosed for providing an injector that is designed to provide a precursor surface which, when coated with a deposit, forms a surface that cooperates with the flowing fluid to provide sufficient sonic shock to dislodge the deposit.
The present disclosure may be utilized in any hydraulic or pneumatic-driven liquid and gas injectors operating in conditions that promote decomposition in the nozzle of the fluid being injected, leading to a flow altering deposit build up. This includes injectors used in fuel direct injection (DI) compression-ignited (CI) and spark-ignited (SI) engines. The present disclosure provides fuel injectors that maintain optimal fuel economy and fuel optimization. Examples of such fuel injector nozzles include those described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,334,434 B1, incorporated herein by reference.
Although described in the context of fuel injector nozzles, the present disclosure may also be advantageously applied to other liquid and gaseous fluid conduits that are likewise subject to deposition at or near hypersonic speeds where cavitation and the attendant sonic shock may be used to remove deposits from the interior conduit surfaces subject to deposition.
In general terms, one embodiment herein includes an injector nozzle as part of a fuel injector device that in turn is a part of an engine.
Another embodiment includes an injector nozzle for an internal combustion engine having anti-deposit characteristics, the injector nozzle comprising: (a) an injector nozzle seat portion and needle adapted to fit against the seat and adapted to be moved between a closed position against the seat and an open position away from contact with the seat; (b) an injector nozzle pipe portion having an entrance, an inside diameter at the entrance, an interior surface, and a degree of taper; the injector nozzle having an injector nozzle seat portion and needle of such dimensions, an inside diameter at the entrance, and a degree of taper such that, when fuel is passed through the injector nozzle during operation of the internal combustion engine, a sonic shock wave is created within the injector nozzle pipe portion, and as deposits from the fuel begin to develop on the interior surface of the injector nozzle pipe portion during the operation, the frequency of the sonic shock wave frequency changes from a first frequency at which the sonic shock wave does not cause the deposits to be removed, to a second frequency at which the sonic shock wave causes the deposits to be removed and/or not deposited.
Preferably, the rate at which the deposits are removed upon the shock wave reaching the second frequency is at least equal to the rate at which the deposits are deposited.
The injector nozzle seat portion may be made so as to taper from a diameter greater than the inside diameter at the entrance of injector nozzle pipe to a diameter greater than or equal to the inside diameter at the entrance of injector nozzle pipe.
The injector nozzle seat portion may comprise a curved portion with the needle also comprising a sealing portion of even greater curvature, such that the curved portions adapted to engage one another intimately when the needle moves to the closed position. Alternatively, the injector nozzle seat portion may comprise a flat portion with the needle comprising a curved portion, such that the flat portion and the curved portion are adapted to engage one another when the needle moves to the closed position.
The injector nozzle may be made so as to have its interior surface of the injector nozzle pipe portion comprise furrows aligned orthogonal to the direction of flow of the fuel during the operation, and/or dimple-shaped protrusions, that are designed to prove a precursor surface of such geometry that the geometry of the surface with the initial deposits from the liquid or gaseous fluid from a surface that gives rise to sonic shock of such magnitude that the deposits are removed. The precursor shaping may be made by known milling techniques or through the use of laser etching. The shaping of the interior surface may be arrived at by using known mathematical techniques and computer modeling to design the precursor surface taking into account the velocity and temperature and density of the fluid being conducted.
It is preferred that the injector nozzle be made such that during operation the second frequency is reached substantially contemporaneously with the initial formation of the deposits. For most internal combustion engine injectors, it is preferred that as the injector cokes, the injector fluid reaches the second frequency within 4 hours of continuous operation, and most preferably within 1 hour of continuous operation. It is also preferred that the injector during operation results in less than ½% flow loss.
Another embodiment provided herein includes a method of producing an injector nozzle for an internal combustion engine having anti-deposit characteristics, the method comprising the steps: (a) obtaining an injector nozzle for an internal combustion engine, the injector nozzle comprising: (i) an injector nozzle seat portion and needle adapted to fit against the seat and adapted to be moved between a closed position against the seat and an open position away from contact with the seat; and (ii) an injector nozzle pipe portion having an entrance, an inside diameter at the entrance, an interior surface, and a degree of taper, the injector nozzle during operation of the internal combustion engine giving rise to a sonic shock wave of a frequency; and (b) altering any one or more of the following: (i) the dimensions of the injector nozzle seat portion and/or the needle, (ii) the inside diameter at the entrance, (iii) the degree of taper, and (iv) the interior surface of the injector nozzle pipe portion; and (c) determining the change in the sonic shock wave frequency brought about by step (b) to arrive at an altered sonic shock wave frequency such that, when fuel is passed through the injector nozzle during operation of the internal combustion engine, as or after deposits from the fuel begin to develop on the interior surface of the injector nozzle pipe portion during the operation, the sonic shock wave of the altered frequency causes the deposits to be removed.
The present disclosure also includes a method of removing deposits from fuel injector nozzles.
Some of the many advantages that may be achieved include maintaining deposit levels to regimes that can be more satisfactorily handled by fuel additives. This in turn reduces the costs of injector replacements under manufacturer's warranty.
Injector coking is a problem in both gasoline and diesel direct injected engines because of the harsh thermal and physical environment in which the injector nozzles have to operate; the troublesome deposit almost always grows from the outside in to the injector nozzle, and if not checked will extend all the way past the sealing band. Morphological studies of the nozzle deposit as it grows shows that it builds up in furrows orthogonal to the fluid flow direction. This would indicate temperature dependent deposit formation mechanism that follows the oscillating temperature gradients set up by the sonic shock wave created in the nozzle by the fluid being forced through it. As these deposit furrows grow with operational time, the dimensions of the nozzle are dynamically altered to an ever increasing tapering towards the exit hole. This tapering changes the tuning of the sonic wave until it enters that frequency regime where it begins to remove the deposit as shown in the
Also provided herein is a method of making deposit-free injector nozzles by means of sonic tuning the flow through it so that the flow enters the self cleaning frequency regime as soon as the deposit begins to layer down at the nozzle exit end. Knowing the flow rates expected and the pressure propelling the flow, one may design a nozzle orifice that is self cleaning by judiciously balancing: 1) the seat and needle dimensions, with 2) the l/d, and 3) the tapering of the nozzle pipe, such that the self cleaning sonic frequency regime is entered as soon as nozzle coking begins.
The decrease in slope in
In view of the present disclosure, it is apparent that it is possible to make many modifications to the above described embodiments without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure. Thus, the present disclosure is not limited by the foregoing description. Rather it is set forth by the claims appended hereto.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3552370 | Briggs | Jan 1971 | A |
4203393 | Giardini | May 1980 | A |
5237967 | Willermet et al. | Aug 1993 | A |
5249554 | Tamor et al. | Oct 1993 | A |
5309874 | Willermet et al. | May 1994 | A |
6334434 | Imoehl et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060091239 A1 | May 2006 | US |