This invention relates generally to electrically operated fuel injectors of the type that inject volatile liquid fuel into an automotive vehicle internal combustion engine, and in particular the invention relates to a novel thin disc orifice member for such a fuel injector.
It is believed that contemporary fuel injectors must be designed to accommodate a particular engine, not vice versa. The ability to meet stringent tailpipe emission standards for mass-produced automotive vehicles is at least in part attributable to the ability to assure consistency in both shaping and aiming the injection spray or stream, e.g., toward intake valve(s) or into a combustion cylinder. Wall wetting should be avoided.
Because of the large number of different engine models that use multi-point fuel injectors, a large number of unique injectors are needed to provide the desired shaping and aiming of the injection spray or steam for each cylinder of an engine. To accommodate these demands, fuel injectors have heretofore been designed to produce straight streams, bent streams, split streams, and split/bent streams. In fuel injectors utilizing thin disc orifice members, such injection patterns can be created solely by the specific design of the thin disc orifice member. This capability offers the opportunity for meaningful manufacturing economies since other components of the fuel injector are not necessarily required to have a unique design for a particular application, i.e. many other components can be of common design.
Another concern in contemporary fuel injector design is minimizing the so-called “sac volume.” As it is used in this disclosure, sac volume is defined as a volume downstream of a needle/seat sealing perimeter and upstream of the orifice hole(s). The practical limit of dimpling a geometric shaped into an orifice disc pre-conditioned with straight orifice holes is the depth or altitude of the geometric shape required to obtain the desired spray angle(s). Obtaining the larger bend and split spray angles makes the manufacture more difficult and increases sac volume at the same time. At the same time, as the depth of the geometry increases, the amount of individual hole and dimple distortion also increases. In extreme instances, the disc material may shear between holes or at creases in the geometrical dimple.
The present invention provides a fuel injector for spray targeting fuel. The fuel injector includes a seat, a movable member cooperating with the seat, and an orifice plate. The seat includes a passage that extends along a longitudinal axis, and the movable member cooperates with the seat to permit and prevent a flow of fuel through the passage. The metering orifice disc includes a member having first and second generally parallel surfaces, and an orifice penetrating the member. The first surface generally confronts the seat, and the second surface faces opposite the first surface. The orifice is defined by a wall that couples the first and second surfaces. And the wall includes first and second portions. The first portion is spaced from the first surface and extends substantially perpendicular to the first and second generally planar surfaces. The second portion couples the first portion to the first surface and extends at a first oblique angle that varies with respect to the first surface.
The present invention also provides a metering orifice disc for a fuel injector. The fuel injector includes a passage that extends between an inlet and an outlet, a seat that is proximate the outlet, and a closure member that cooperates with the seat to permit and prevent a flow of fuel through the passage. The metering orifice disc includes a member and an orifice penetrating the member. The member includes first and second generally parallel surfaces. The first surface is adapted to generally confront the valve seat, and the second surface faces opposite the first surface. The orifice is defined by a wall that couples the first and second surfaces. The wall includes a first portion that is spaced from the first surface and a second portion that couples the first portion to the first surface. The first portion of the wall extends substantially perpendicular to the first and second generally planar surfaces. And the second portion of the wall extends at a first oblique angle with respect to the first surface. The first oblique angle vanes so as to define an asymmetrical chamfer.
The present invention also provides a method of forming a metering orifice disc for a fuel injector. The metering orifice disc includes a member that has first and second generally parallel surfaces. The method includes forming an orifice penetrating the member and deforming the orifice proximate the first surface. The orifice is defined by a wall that couples the first and second surfaces, and the orifice extends along an orifice axis that is generally perpendicular to the first and second generally parallel surfaces. The deforming includes forming an asymmetrical chamfer with respect to the orifice axis.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated herein and constitute part of this specification, illustrate presently preferred embodiments of the invention, and, together with the general description given above and the detailed description given below, serve to explain features of the invention.
Seat 138 can include a frustoconical seating surface 138a that leads from guide member 136 to a central passage 138b of the seat 138 that, in turn, leads to a central portion 140b of metering orifice disc 140. Guide member 136 includes a central guide opening 136a for guiding the axial reciprocation of a sealing end 122a of a closure member assembly 122 and several through-openings 136b distributed around opening 136a to provide for fuel to flow through sealing end 122a to the space around seat 138.
The metering orifice disc 140 can have a generally circular shape with a circular outer peripheral portion 140a that circumferentially bounds the central portion 140b that is located axially in the fuel injector. The central portion 140b of metering orifice disc 140 is imperforate except for the presence of one or more asymmetrical orifices 32 via which fuel passes through metering orifice disc 140. Any number of asymmetrical orifices 32 can be configured in a suitable array about the longitudinal axis A—A so that the metering orifice disc 140 can be used for its intended purpose in metering, atomizing, and targeting fuel spray of a fuel injector. The preferred embodiments include four such through-asymmetrical orifices 32 (although only two are shown in the Figures) arranged about the longitudinal axis A—A through the metering orifice disc 140.
Referencing
The symmetrical through opening or orifice 30 is further penetrated by a suitable technique to form an asymmetrical through opening or orifice 32. Thereafter, the work piece can be processed into a metering orifice disc 140 by a suitable material finishing technique such as, for example, stamping the work piece into a desired configuration, grinding, deburring, skiving, or polishing.
In a preferred embodiment, the asymmetrical orifice 32 is formed by a punch tool 50 having an apex 52 with at least two leading edges disposed about the tool axis Y—Y such that the resulting cross-section of the punch tool 50 is asymmetric about the orifice axis 200 (
Although the asymmetrical orifice 32 can be formed of a suitable cross-sectional area such as for example, square, rectangular, oval or circular, the preferred embodiments include generally circular orifices having a diameter of about 100 microns, and more particularly, about 125 microns. Preferably, the first and second surfaces 20, 40 of the metering orifice disc 140 are spaced apart over a distance of between 100 to 300 microns or greater.
The asymmetrical orifice 32 can include a first entry chamfer 32a disposed at a first angular extension χ° about the longitudinal axis 200 (
The first entry chamfer 32a leads to a first wall surface 32c (FIG. 2C). The first wall surface 32c is disposed at about the first angular extension χ° about the longitudinal axis 200 and merges into a second wall surface 32d disposed at the second angular extension Φ° (
The first wall surface 32c can merge into a first exit chamfer 32e. Similarly, the second wall surface 32d can merge into a second exit chamfer 32f. The junctures of the first and second exit chamfers 32e and 32f with respect to the surface 20 can form a third perimeter having a geometric center coincident to or offset with respect to the axis 200. Preferably, the perimeter of the first and second exit chamfers 32e and 32f are symmetric to the axis 200.
Due to the asymmetrical geometry of the orifice 32, fuel 34 flowing through the orifice 32 of the metering disc 140 tends to flow through at an orifice angle α generally oblique to the longitudinal axis: Thus, even though the orifice 32 is formed by two tools moving in a perpendicular direction with respect to the first or second surfaces 20 or 40, the orifice formed is an asymmetrical orifice 32 rather than a symmetrical orifice. The asymmetrical orifice 32 essentially emulates an angled orifice (as referenced to the longitudinal axis 200) by inducing the fuel flow 34 to flow at the orifice angle approximating the angle α.
As provided by the preferred embodiments in
The preferred embodiments of the disc blank 12 can be formed by a method as follows. The method includes forming a first asymmetrical orifice 32 penetrating the first and second surfaces 22, 42 (FIG. 3A), respectively, and also includes forming a first facet 44 on which the first orifice 32 is disposed thereon such that the first facet 44 extends generally parallel to a first plane 125 oblique to the base plane 150 (FIG. 3B). Preferably, the first facet 44 can be formed by a suitable technique such as, for example, stamping or drawing such that the first surface 22 becomes a generally concave surface and the second surface 42 becomes a generally convex surface.
A plurality of asymmetrical orifices 32 and so on can be formed at the same time or within a short interval of time with the forming of the first asymmetrical orifice 32. Thereafter, a second facet 46 can be formed at the same time or within a short interval of time with the first facet 44. The second facet 46 can be generally parallel to a second plane 127 oblique to the base plane 150 such that the orifice 32 is oblique to the orifice axis 200. Furthermore, the second facet 46 can also be oblique with respect to the first facet 44. Thereafter, the blank 12 is finished by a suitable finishing technique and installed in a body 128 (FIG. 3C).
The benefits of the asymmetrical geometry of the orifice 32 are believed to be many. The orifice 32 can be formed by two tools moving in a direction perpendicular to the work piece to generate an orifice that emulates an angled orifice without requiring a tool to be oriented oblique to the perpendicular direction. Furthermore, the asymmetrical geometry of the orifice 32 tends to prevent the fuel flow 34 from attaching to the walls of the orifice 32, which feature is believed to permit more of the fuel to be atomized. Moreover, by appropriate configuration of the punch tool, the entry and exit chamfers of the orifice can be formed so that fuel flowing through the orifice can be induced to form a spiral, which may be desirable in certain configurations of the air intake manifold and engine.
While the present invention has been disclosed with reference to certain preferred embodiments, numerous modifications, alterations, and changes to the described embodiments are possible without departing from the sphere and scope of the present invention, as defined in the appended claims. Accordingly, it is intended that the present invention not be limited to the described embodiments, but that it have the full scope defined by the language of the following claims, and equivalents thereof.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040262430 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |