The present disclosure relates generally to fuel systems of the type used in internal combustion engines, and more particularly to a valve seat plate for a fuel injector having an annular groove for preventing concentration of stress in a vicinity of a valve seat.
A variety of different fuel systems in internal combustion engines are well known and widely used. Aspirated fuel systems, common in older and some relatively small newer engines, suck a mixture of fuel and air into one or more engine cylinders for combustion, employing a carburetor or the like. Fuel injected systems employ a fuel injector to deliver an injection of fuel either directly into an engine cylinder where the fuel commences mixing with air, into a port fluidly connected with an engine cylinder, or upstream of the engine cylinder into an intake runner, an intake manifold, or in some instances upstream a compressor. Fuel systems of these and other forms have been used for well over a century.
In more recent years, engineers have discovered that relatively high fuel injection pressures, and rapid, yet highly precise movement and/or positioning of fuel injector components can offer various advantages relating to emissions composition, efficiency, and other engine operating and performance parameters. To operate optimally under relatively harsh conditions such as high temperatures, high and repetitive impact forces of moving parts, high-pressures, high-pressure differentials, and rapid changes in these and other variables, fuel injection system components are often machined to tight tolerances, constructed of high grade or specialized materials, or otherwise made highly robust.
It is common in certain fuel injector designs, for instance, to provide a number of precisely machined components assembled into a fuel injector body and clamped together under relatively high clamping forces to produce numerous seals and define flow paths for fuel or other actuating fluids within the fuel injector. U.S. Pat. No. 8,690,075 provides a valve seat apparently structured, among other things, for reduced force for sealing pressure with reduced valve seat to valve contact area. While the '075 patent and other designs have proven successful at least in certain environments, there is always room for improvement and/or alternative strategies.
In one aspect, a fuel injector includes an injector body defining a high-pressure passage and a low-pressure drain, and including a nozzle body defining a nozzle chamber and a plurality of nozzle outlets from the nozzle chamber. The fuel injector further includes a valve stack positioned within the injector body, and including a valve seat plate defining a nozzle supply passage fluidly connecting the high-pressure passage to the nozzle chamber, a pressure control passage, and a valve seat positioned fluidly between the pressure control passage and the low-pressure drain. The fuel injector further includes a nozzle outlet check having a closing hydraulic surface exposed to a fluid pressure of the pressure control passage. The fuel injector also includes an injection control valve assembly positioned within the injector body and including an electrical valve actuator, and an injection control valve. The injection control valve is in a closed position in contact with the valve seat, and movable from the closed position to an open position by varying an electrical energy state of the electrical valve actuator. The valve seat plate has a first side exposed to a fluid pressure of the low-pressure drain and a second side exposed to a fluid pressure of the nozzle chamber. The valve seat is formed on the first side of the valve seat plate. The valve seat plate further defines a center axis, and has formed therein an annular groove located radially inward of the nozzle supply passage, and extending circumferentially around the valve seat and axially inward from the first side of the valve seat plate.
In another aspect, a valve seat plate for a fuel injector in an internal combustion engine includes a disc-shaped body defining a center axis and having an outer peripheral surface extending between a first side of the disc-shaped body and a second side of the disc-shaped body. The disc-shaped body defines a nozzle supply passage structured to fluidly connect a high-pressure passage to a nozzle chamber in the fuel injector, a pressure control passage structured to fluidly connect the nozzle chamber to a low-pressure drain, and a valve seat. The valve seat is formed on the first side of the disc-shaped body and coaxially arranged with the pressure control passage to receive a valve for controlling the fluid connection between the nozzle chamber and the low-pressure drain. The disc-shaped body further has formed therein an annular groove positioned radially inward of a nozzle supply passage and extending circumferentially around the valve seat and axially inward from the first side of the disc-shaped body.
In still another aspect, a fuel system for an internal combustion engine includes a fuel supply conduit, and a fuel injector fluidly connected with the fuel supply conduit and including an injector body defining a fuel inlet, a low-pressure drain, a nozzle chamber, and a plurality of nozzle outlets from the nozzle chamber. The fuel system further includes a valve seat plate defining a pressure control passage, a nozzle supply passage, and a valve seat positioned fluidly between the pressure control passage and the low-pressure drain. The fuel injector further includes a nozzle outlet check having a closing hydraulic surface exposed to a fluid pressure of the pressure control passage, and an injection control valve assembly positioned within the injector body. The injection control valve assembly includes an electrical valve actuator, and an injection control valve movable from a closed position in contact with the valve seat to an open position by varying an electrical energy state of the electrical valve actuator. The valve seat is formed on a first side of the valve seat plate exposed to a fluid pressure of the low-pressure drain and located opposite a second side of the valve seat plate exposed to a fluid pressure of the nozzle chamber. The valve seat plate further defines a center axis, and has formed therein an annular groove extending circumferentially around the valve seat and axially inward from the first side of the valve seat plate.
Referring to
Referring also now to
Injector body 34 further includes a nozzle body 46 defining a nozzle chamber 48 and a plurality of nozzle outlets 50 from nozzle chamber 48, and structured to fluidly connect nozzle chamber 48 with a corresponding one of cylinders 14. Fuel injector 32 also includes a valve stack 52 (hereafter stack 52) positioned within injector body 34. Stack 52 can include components within nozzle body 46 and injector body 34 generally, including a tip piece 54, a spacer 56, another spacer 58, a control valve piece 60, and also valve seat plate 80 sandwiched between piece 60 and spacer 58.
Fuel injector 32 further includes an injection control valve assembly 62 positioned within injector body 34 and having an electrical valve actuator 64, such as a solenoid, and an injection control valve 66. Injection control valve 66 may be contacted by a rod 68 coupled with an armature 70. The design and operation of injection control valve assembly 62 can be generally of a known strategy. Referring also now to
Fuel injector 32 can further include a nozzle outlet check 72 having a closing hydraulic surface 74 exposed to a fluid pressure of pressure control passage 96. First side 88 is exposed at least in part to a fluid pressure of low-pressure drain 44, whereas second side 90 is exposed at least in part to a fluid pressure of nozzle chamber 48. It will therefore be appreciated that moving injection control valve 66 from a closed position blocking valve seat 98 to an open position can connect pressure control passage 96 to low-pressure, enabling high-pressure in nozzle chamber 48 to act on opening hydraulic surfaces (not labeled) of nozzle outlet check 72 to cause nozzle outlet check 72 to fluidly connect nozzle outlets 50 with nozzle chamber 48. Relieving the closing hydraulic pressure on closing hydraulic surface 74 in this manner can therefore initiate a fuel injection event. Closing fuel injection control valve 66 to block valve seat 98 can enable closing hydraulic pressure to be restored to closing hydraulic surface 74 and terminate a fuel injection event.
Valve seat plate 80 further has formed therein a stress-limiting annular groove 100 located radially inward of nozzle supply passage 92 and extending circumferentially around valve seat 98, and axially inward from first side 88 of valve seat plate 80. Referring now also to
Valve seat plate 80 also includes a raised sealing surface 120 that forms valve seat 98. In the illustrated embodiment, raised sealing surface 120 includes a plurality of evenly spaced radially outward extending arms 136. Arms 136 may be regularly spaced from one another, and extend radially outward to terminate at a radially outward edge (not numbered) of central island 108. Also identified in
As discussed above, a high fluid pressure may be resident at least some of the time in nozzle chamber 48, relative to a pressure of low-pressure drain 44, which could be at atmospheric pressure. The pressure in nozzle chamber 48 that can be communicated to second side 90 of valve seat plate 80 can be in the hundreds of megaPascals (mPa). The pressure difference across valve seat plate 80 can cause valve seat plate 80 to bulge by at least a few microns upwardly, potentially causing concentrations of stress that could lead to cracking, seal failure or leakage, or other problems. While one solution could perhaps be to make a valve seat plate in such circumstances thicker, for various reasons a valve seat plate is desirably lower profile to avoid injector packaging issues. It will be noted that valve seat plate 80 is several times wider than it is thick in an axial direction. Stress-limiting annular groove 100 enables valve seat plate 80 to flex in a manner that avoids stress concentrations in areas that could be problematic either because such areas would be considered sensitive to stress concentration or because the stress concentrations would be relatively extreme.
Referring now to
In the valve seat plate 80 according to the present disclosure, however, different stress properties are likely to be observed. The highest stress magnitude 210 is less than the highest stress magnitude 200 seen in the alternative design and is observed substantially lower down in pressure control passage 96 as compared to the highest stress magnitude 200 in the alternative design. A lesser stress magnitude level 220 might be observed radially outward, with lesser stress levels 230 and 240 also observed at generally progressively radially outward locations. It can also be noted that the overall stress magnitudes observed at least in the general vicinity of pressure control passage 96 are less in valve seat plate 80 than in the alternative design. In accordance with the present disclosure, where high stress magnitudes are observed, they are expected to occur in areas where problems are less likely to develop, at least in comparison to the locations of stress concentration and the stress magnitudes in the alternative design. In valve seat plate 80, to the extent stress concentrations are observed at all, they can be expected to occur axially lower than in valve seat plate 180, away from tightly radiused surfaces that are multi-dimensionally radiused or areas of less material thickness generally. Although the actual deformation or deflection may be relatively minute, stress-limiting annular groove 100 can thus provide sufficient relief that improved performance can be expected over the course of the thousands of hours of fuel injector service life.
The present description is for illustrative purposes only, and should not be construed to narrow the breadth of the present disclosure in any way. Thus, those skilled in the art will appreciate that various modifications might be made to the presently disclosed embodiments without departing from the full and fair scope and spirit of the present disclosure. Other aspects, features and advantages will be apparent upon an examination of the attached drawings and appended claims. As used herein, the articles “a” and “an” are intended to include one or more items, and may be used interchangeably with “one or more.” Where only one item is intended, the term “one” or similar language is used. Also, as used herein, the terms “has,” “have,” “having,” or the like are intended to be open-ended terms. Further, the phrase “based on” is intended to mean “based, at least in part, on” unless explicitly stated otherwise.