This application is based on German Patent Application 10 2004 028 523.3 filed Jun. 11, 2004, upon which priority is claimed.
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to an improved fuel injector for internal combustion engines, and to a method of producing the fuel injector.
2. Description of the Prior Art
For supplying fuel to internal combustion engines, fuel injection valves are often used at present. For meeting emissions limits and reducing fuel consumption, the fuel quantity injected into the individual cylinders must be dimensioned precisely. This requires extremely short opening and closing times of the injection valve. Moreover, the valve needle must have the same stroke each time it opens, to assure that the same quantity of fuel will be injected into the cylinder each time. This is attained by means of a stroke limitation.
In the fuel injectors that are available on the market, the limitation of the stroke of the valve needle is done in various ways. For instance, the stroke limitation is realized by using a stop disk, which is struck by the valve needle. The stop disk rests on the magnet cup, so that a direct impact of the valve needle on the magnet cup is avoided. The stroke required for operation of the fuel injector and the remanent air gap are adjusted by grinding protrusions or steps into the valve needle.
Another possible way of attaining the stroke limitation is for the valve needle to strike a sleeve press-fitted into the magnet cup. In this variant, the stroke and the remanent air gap are adjusted by adjusting disks, whose thickness is adapted to the stroke into the remanent air gap.
Another possible way of attaining the stroke limitation is to use a holding-down device with a sleevelike stop that is surrounded by the magnet cup. One such sleevelike stop is known from German Patent Disclosure DE 102 49 161 B3. In it, the stroke is adjusted by an adjusting disk between the valve housing and the holding-down device, and the remanent air gap is adjusted by grinding the sleeve, embodied as a stop, down to the appropriate length.
To avoid eddy currents in the magnet cup, which slow down the switching of the fuel injector, the magnet cup is made from a metal-polymer composite material, as described in Bosch Research Info, 3/2001. To that end, fine iron particles are sheathed in plastic, compacted, and sintered to make a workpiece. However, this material is very brittle and therefore vulnerable to impacts. For this reason, the valve needle must be prevented from striking the magnet cup.
If the valve needle strikes the magnet cup, parts can break off, causing the magnetic properties of the magnet cup to change. The broken-off particles may also cause increased wear and thus lead to the failure of the fuel injector.
In the fuel injector embodied according to the invention, which is triggered via a control valve with an electromagnetically actuatable valve needle, and with a coil received in a magnet cup made of magnetizable material, to prevent the valve needle from striking the magnet cup a tubular clamping sleeve with a slot extending between the face ends is received in the magnet cup.
For assembly, the clamping sleeve is prestressed and inserted into a bore, which is located, preferably centered, in the magnet cup. The prestressing creates a spring force in the clamping sleeve, by which the clamping sleeve is pressed against the wall of the bore and is thus held in the magnet cup. The spring force is dimensioned such that the clamping sleeve is not released as a result of the jarring stress occurring during operation or of its own mass. The forces required to expel the clamping sleeve from the magnet cup are preferably in the range from 100 to 500 N. The term “expulsion force” is understood to mean the force required to release the clamping sleeve from the magnet cup.
In a preferred embodiment, the clamping sleeve is made from a nonmagnetizable material. A sleeve of magnetizable material has the disadvantage that even after the delivery of current to the coil ends, the magnetization is preserved, and the valve needle is thus initially kept in the open position by the clamping sleeve and does not close until after a delay. Moreover, the material from which the clamping sleeve is made is preferably not deformable by the impact of the valve needle. A plastic deformation of the clamping sleeve would cause the needle stroke to lengthen over the course of operation of the fuel injector. Lengthening of the needle stroke can for example lead to an increase in the injected fuel quantity and thus to increased fuel consumption. Carbon steel is an example of a suitable material for producing the clamping sleeve.
So that the valve needle will not strike the magnet cup when it opens, the diameter of the stop face of the valve needle is greater than the inner diameter of the tubular clamping sleeve and the outer diameter of the tubular clamping sleeve is preferably greater than or equal to the diameter of the stop face of the valve needle. Because the width of the slot extending between the face ends makes up at most 25% of the sleeve circumference, kinking of the valve needle upon impact is avoided, and precise opening is thus achieved. An annular stop face and hence a uniform impact of the valve needle can be attained by providing that in the magnet cup, at least two clamping sleeves are received, whose slots extending between the face ends are located at different radial positions.
In a further preferred embodiment, the length of the clamping sleeve is equivalent to the height of the magnet cup, so that the face ends of the clamping sleeve and the magnet cup form a smooth surface. This is attained by providing that first, the at least one clamping sleeve is press-fitted into the magnet cup, and then the face ends of the magnet cup, with the clamping sleeve press-fitted inside it, are ground flat. The remanent air gap required so that the armature of the valve needle will not adhere to the magnet cup is attained by providing that the stop face of the valve needle protrudes out of the armature of the valve needle by the height of the remanent air gap.
The invention will be better understood and further objects and advantages thereof will become more apparent from the ensuing detailed description of preferred embodiments, taken in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
For the sake of installing the injection valve, not shown in
On the side facing away from the stop plate 4, the valve needle widens into a valve needle head 11. The valve needle head 11 is adjoined by a guide peg 12. The guide peg 12 is surrounded by a closing element 13, preferably embodied as a spiral spring. The closing element 13 is braced by one end against one end face 14 of the valve needle head 11 and by the other end against one end face 16 of an upper housing part 15. The guide peg 12 prevents the closing element 13 from being able to slip on the end face 14 of the valve needle head 11. The guide peg 12 also prevents the closing element 13 from kinking upon a stroke motion of the valve needle 3 out of the flat seat 7.
The valve body 2 and the upper housing part 15 are joined together by a lock nut 17.
The opening and closing operation of the valve needle 3 is controlled electromagnetically. To that end, a magnet cup 18 is located in the valve body 2 and has an annularly embodied groove, in which a coil 19 is received. The coil 19 is supplied with current via an electrical terminal 20. As soon as a voltage is fed to the coil 19, a magnetic field develops around the coil 19. By means of this magnetic field, the material comprising the magnet cup 18 is magnetized. This causes an armature 21, which is made of magnetic material and surrounds the valve needle head 11, to be attracted by the magnet cup 18. In this way, the valve needle 3 moves in the direction of the magnet cup 18 and thus uncovers the flat seat 7. In the process, the closing element 13 embodied as a spiral spring is compressed. The closing element 13 is located inside a bore 22 in the magnet cup 18, so that the magnet cup 18 surrounds the closing element 13.
The material comprising the magnet cup 18 is preferably a sintered metal, or contains fine iron particles sheathed in plastic that are compacted to make a magnet cup 18. This prevents eddy currents, which slow down the switching operation, from being created in the magnet cup. This material is extremely brittle and thus vulnerable to impacts. The impact of the valve needle 3 can therefore cause individual particles to break off from the magnet cup 18. As a result, the magnetic properties change. Furthermore, the broken-off particles can cause increased wear and thus can lead to the failure of the control valve 1. To absorb the shock load from the impact of the valve needle 3, a clamping sleeve 23 is received in the bore 22 in the magnet cup 18. The clamping sleeve 23 has a slot 24 extending between the face ends. The slot 24 serves to enable the clamping sleeve 23 to be press-fitted into the bore 22 in the magnet cup 18 with a defined spring force. The slot 24 makes it possible to insert the clamping sleeve 23 into the bore 22 with a prestressing force. For this reason, in the assembly of the clamping sleeve 23, no pressing forces need to be exerted on the magnet cup 18 as would be the case with a closed sleeve. Because of the high requisite pressing forces with closed sleeves, such sleeves can burst the magnet cup 18. This is avoided by the use of the clamping sleeve 23 of the invention, having the slot 24.
An adjusting ring 25 is located between the upper housing part 15 and the magnet cup 18, and the stroke of the valve needle 3 is adjusted by way of the thickness of this adjusting ring.
The clamping sleeve 23 is braced by one face end against the adjusting ring 25. In this way, the impact forces that act on the clamping sleeve 23 when the valve needle 3 hits it in the opening operation, are transmitted to the adjusting ring 25.
To prevent the clamping sleeve 23 from being magnetized by the coil 19 and thus being capable of affecting the switching operation of the valve needle 3, the clamping sleeve 23 is preferably made from a nonmagnetizable material. The material of the clamping sleeve 23 must also transmit the shock forces, which act on the clamping sleeve 23 when the valve needle 3 strikes it, to the adjusting ring 25, and it must not be damaged by these shock forces. For this reason, a carbon steel is preferably selected as the material for the clamping sleeve 23. Other suitable materials for the clamping sleeve are stainless steels, for example.
A second electrical terminal in the control valve 1 is identified by reference numeral 26. Via the second electrical terminal 26, a further valve in the fuel injector may for instance be supplied with current. The supply of current to the fuel injector is effected via the contacts 27.
Upon opening of the valve needle 3, the stroke is limited by the striking of the end face 14 of the valve needle head 11 against the clamping sleeve 23. Upon closing, the stroke of the valve needle 3 is limited by the fact that the valve needle 3 is put into the flat seat 7, not shown in
To prevent the armature 21 from adhering to the magnet cup 18 when the valve is open, a remanent air gap 31 is provided. The adherence of the armature 21 to the magnet cup 18 results from the fact that, because of the small component size of the fuel injector, all the surfaces have only very slight roughness. For this reason, a thin fuel film between two surfaces has an adhesive effect.
The adjustment of the remanent air gap 31 is effected, in the fuel injector embodied according to the invention, in such a way that the valve needle head 11 protrudes out of the armature 21 by the height of the remanent air gap 31.
The plan view on the magnet cup 18 shows that in it, at least one bore 32 is received, which discharges into an annular groove 33 for receiving the coil 19. In the embodiment shown in
In
In
A further embodiment of the slot 24 is shown in
Besides the forms shown in
To prevent the valve needle 3 from becoming tilted upon striking the clamping sleeve 23, the width of the slot 24, in a preferred embodiment, amounts to a maximum of 25% of the circumference of the clamping sleeve 23.
A further possible way of preventing tilting of the valve needle 3 upon striking the clamping sleeve 23 is shown in
It is also possible for more than two clamping sleeves 23, 38 to be used. In a preferred embodiment, the slots 24, 39 of the clamping sleeves 23, 38, when more than two clamping sleeves are used, are offset from one another in such a way that the slot of each clamping sleeve is located at a different position along the circumference.
The foregoing relates to preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention, it being understood that other variants and embodiments thereof are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, the latter being defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2004 028 523 | Jun 2004 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5301874 | Vogt et al. | Apr 1994 | A |
5360197 | Reiter et al. | Nov 1994 | A |
5848613 | Sakaguchi et al. | Dec 1998 | A |
6119966 | Wagner et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6170767 | Herold et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6390067 | Haltiner, Jr. et al. | May 2002 | B1 |
6421913 | Bonnah, II et al. | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6702207 | Seelbach et al. | Mar 2004 | B2 |
6834667 | Sumiya et al. | Dec 2004 | B2 |
20030042456 | Makino | Mar 2003 | A1 |
20030102391 | Rodriguez-Amaya et al. | Jun 2003 | A1 |
20030127614 | Haeberer et al. | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20040149838 | Potschin et al. | Aug 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
101 09 411 | Sep 2002 | DE |
102 49 161 | Jan 2004 | DE |
1 219 816 | Jul 2002 | EP |
WO 03058052 | Jul 2003 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050274829 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |