The present invention relates to a fuel injector.
In the following description, specific reference is made, purely by way of example, to an electromagnetic injector for a direct fuel injection system.
An electromagnetic fuel injector normally comprises a cylindrical tubular body having a central through hole, which acts as a fuel conduit and terminates with an injection nozzle regulated by an injection valve controlled by an electromagnetic actuator. More specifically, the injection valve has a pin connected rigidly to a movable armature of the electromagnetic actuator, and which is moved by the electromagnetic actuator between a closed position, and an open position opening the injection nozzle in opposition to a spring which keeps the pin in the closed position.
An electromagnetic fuel injector of the type described above is illustrated, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 6,027,050A1, which relates to a fuel injector having a movable assembly defined by a pin which, at one end, cooperates with a valve seat, and, at the opposite end, is integral with a movable armature of an electromagnetic actuator. The movable assembly is guided at the top by a guide cooperating with the armature, and is guided at the bottom by the end portion of the pin sliding inside a guide portion of the valve seat.
A drawback of known injectors of the type described above lies in rebound of the pin on impact with the valve seat of the injection valve, and which is not fully damped by the spring connected to the movable armature. On the contrary, it may even produce oscillation of the movable armature, thus resulting in successive, undesired opening/closing of the injection nozzle and, hence, undesired fuel injection into the combustion chamber, so that the amount of fuel actually injected into the combustion chamber involves a certain random element.
In an attempt to eliminate rebound of the pin against the valve seat of the injection valve, fuel injectors have been proposed with hydraulic and mechanical antirebound devices. Known antirebound devices, however, are complex and therefore expensive to produce, and normally fail to effectively eliminate rebound of the pin against the valve seat of the injection valve.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a fuel injector designed to eliminate the aforementioned drawbacks, and which, in particular, is cheap and easy to produce.
According to the present invention, there is provided a fuel injector as claimed in claim 1 and, preferably, in any one of the following claims depending directly or indirectly on claim 1.
A number of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
Electromagnetic actuator 5 comprises an electromagnet 9 housed in a fixed position inside actuator body 4, and which, when energized, moves an armature 10 of ferromagnetic material along axis 2 from a closed position (shown in the accompanying drawings) to an open position (not shown) opening injection valve 7 in opposition to a spring 11 which keeps armature 10 in the closed position closing injection valve 7. More specifically, electromagnet 9 comprises a coil 12 powered electrically by an electronic control unit (not shown); and a magnetic core 13 having a central hole to permit fuel flow to injection nozzle 3.
Armature 10 forms part of a movable assembly 14 also comprising a shutter or pin 15, which comprises a top portion integral with armature 10, and a bottom portion cooperating with a valve seat 16 of injection valve 7 to regulate fuel flow from injection nozzle 3 in known manner. Valve seat 16 is defined in a sealing member 17 which closes the bottom of channel 8 of valve body 6 hermetically; and injection nozzle 3 is defined in a bottom portion of sealing member 17.
Armature 10 is cylindrically annular in shape, and has a central hole 18 for substantially permitting fuel flow to injection nozzle 3. A top end of spring 11 rests on a stop member 19 inside the central hole of core 13, and a bottom end of spring 11 rests on movable assembly 14.
Movable assembly 14 comprises an antirebound device 20 interposed between armature 10 and pin 15 to connect armature 10 and pin 15 mechanically, and for damping rebound of pin 15 against valve seat 16 when movable assembly 14 moves from the open position to the closed position closing injection valve 7.
As shown in
Pin 15 terminates with a substantially spherical shutter head 27, which rests hermetically on a surface of cylindrical hole 24 extending about injection chamber 25, to prevent fuel flow to injection chamber 25 when pin 15 is in the closed position. Four flat faces 28 (only three shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In a different embodiment not shown, as opposed to welding lateral plates 35 and 36 to pin 15, two additional bushings may be welded to pin 15 on opposite sides of lateral plates 35 and 36 to grip lateral plates 35 and 36 together.
The function of antirebound device 20 is to damp rebound of pin 15 against valve seat 16 when movable assembly 14 moves from the open position to the closed position closing injection valve 7, and is substantially achieved hydraulically, i.e. by a sort of pumping effect of the fuel accumulating alternatively in two minute chambers formed on opposite sides of central plate 32 by deformation of lateral plates 35 and 36 and central plate 32 itself. More specifically, when opening injector 1 (i.e. when movable assembly 14 moves upwards in the direction of arrow F2 in
It is important to note that, in addition to the above hydraulic effect, the antirebound function of antirebound device 20 is also achieved to a small extent mechanically by deformation of lateral plates 35 and 36 and central plate 32 inducing further energy dissipation on movable assembly 14.
An annular elastic plate 45 is welded to pin 15, and is preloaded slightly by being pushed against edge 44; an annular fuel pumping chamber 46 is thus defined inside recess 43 by the bottom surface of armature 10, plate 45, edge 44 of recess 43, and pin 15; and pin 15 has at least two openings 47 connecting cavity 41 hydraulically to channel 8 of valve body 6, so that, when movable assembly 14 moves upwards in the direction of arrow F2 (to open injection valve 7), fuel flows through cavity 41 of pin 15 in the direction of arrows V1 and V2.
When movable assembly 14 moves in the direction of arrow F1 (to close injection valve 7), and once injection valve 7 is closed by the relative movement of armature 10 and pin 15, fuel is not only expelled from the gap between edge 44 and deformable annular plate 45, but also seeps inside the narrow gap between pin 15 and hole 18 of armature 10.
As shown in
Each plate 53 has four lateral through slots 54, and a central through hole 55. Central hole 18 of armature 10, central hole 49 of plate 48, and central holes 55 of plates 53 are aligned with one another and coaxial with longitudinal axis 2 to receive pin 15; and slots 50 of plate 48, and lateral slots 54 of plates 53 are at least partly superimposed to define a fuel passage to injection nozzle 3.
In actual use, when closing injector 1, movable assembly 14 moves downwards in the direction of arrow F1 in
As will be clear from the above description, the antirebound function of antirebound device 20 is substantially achieved mechanically, by deformation of plate 48 inducing energy dissipation on movable assembly 14; and the above mechanical effect is also accompanied to a much lesser degree by a hydraulic effect which dissipates energy on movable assembly 14 in exactly the same way as described with reference to the
In a preferred embodiment shown in
The accelerated pretravel function of annular body 56 is to assist initial acceleration of armature 10, during which armature 10 must overcome a small amount of inertia (pin 15 does not move). This improves the dynamic performance of injector 1 when it is opened, in that one of the problems of electromagnetic fuel injectors is the sluggish opening response caused by poor initial acceleration of the magnetic armature.
As shown in
It is important to note the innovative “male/male” design of adapter 59, in that both feed pipe 57 and head 58 of injector 1 have “female” ends, as shown in
As will be clear from the foregoing description, armature 10 also acts as a top guide for pin 15, i.e. assists in keeping pin 15 aligned with respect to valve seat 16, and allows pin 15 to move along axis 2 under the control of electromagnetic actuator 5.
The particular design of shutter head 27 permits a sliding connection of head 27 and cylindrical hole 24, so that pin 15, and consequently movable assembly 14, is guided at the bottom by the connection between head 27 and sealing member 17, and is guided at the top by the connection between armature 10 and the inner walls of channel 8 of valve body 6. Converting the bottom guide of movable assembly 14 from a cylindrical to a spherical-cylindrical connection, together with the particular connection of armature 10 and pin 15 by antirebound device 20, provides for correcting any misalignment (due to manufacturing and/or assembly tolerances), thus enabling use of a one-piece drawn valve body 6 requiring no further grinding inside.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2003A0090 | Feb 2003 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2004/050174 | 2/20/2004 | WO | 00 | 12/13/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/074673 | 9/2/2004 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4360161 | Claxton et al. | Nov 1982 | A |
6367769 | Reiter | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6520434 | Reiter | Feb 2003 | B1 |
6578778 | Koizumi et al. | Jun 2003 | B2 |
6616071 | Kitamura et al. | Sep 2003 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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199 50 761 | Apr 2001 | DE |
1 199 465 | Apr 2002 | EP |
08177689 | Jul 1996 | JP |
WO 0212709 | Feb 2002 | WO |
WO 03072928 | Sep 2003 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060192035 A1 | Aug 2006 | US |