Fuel supply device for an internal combustion engine

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6253740
  • Patent Number
    6,253,740
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, April 26, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, July 3, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
A system for supplying an internal combustion engine with fuel present in a tank, in which a feed segment for the fuel extends from a feed pump through a fuel filter, is characterized in that the fuel filter includes a prefilter and a fine filter. It is especially suitable for supplying an internal combustion engine by direct injection.
Description




PRIOR ART




The invention is based on a system as generically defined by the preamble to the main claim. From German Patent Disclosure DE 42 42 242, a system for supplying an internal combustion engine with fuel present in a tank is known in which a feed pump and a fuel filter are disposed along a feed segment for the fuel. Fuel supply systems for direct injection into the cylinders of an internal combustion engine require finer filtration of the fuel than conventional systems with intake-tube injection. While in systems for intake-tube injection filter pore widths of 10 μm are adequate, for direct-injection pore widths of approximately 3 μm are required.




If in an existing fuel supply system for intake-tube injection only the pore width of the filter used is reduced, the consequence is that the filter becomes stopped up in a considerably shorter time and has to be changed. For the operator of the engine, this means increased maintenance costs and downtimes.




The need by operators for a fuel filter with a long service life could be met until now only by using filters whose dimensions were increased in accordance with the reduction in their pore size. The increased space required by these filters is another disadvantage, especially in internal combustion engines for motor vehicles, where particular emphasis is placed on a compact construction.




ADVANTAGES OF THE INVENTION




The fuel supply system of the invention having the characteristics of claim


1


has the advantage over the prior art of enabling finer filtration of the fuel than previous fuel supply systems for intake-tube injection, without substantially increasing the space needed by the system or shortening the service life of the filters.




By means of the provisions recited in the dependent claims, advantageous refinements of and improvements to the fuel supply system defined by the main claim are possible.











DRAWING




Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the ensuing description of exemplary embodiments in conjunction with the accompanying

FIGS. 1-4

, each of which schematically shows one exemplary embodiment.












FIG. 1

shows a first example of a system according to the invention for supplying an internal combustion engine with fuel present in a tank


1


. The system includes an electric fuel feed pump


2


, which is disposed in the interior of the tank


1


and aspirates fuel via an intake neck


3


disposed in the vicinity of the bottom of the tank. A screen is disposed in the outlet neck


3


and protects the fuel feed pump from coarse dirt particles entrained in the aspirated fuel. The screen must present no more than slight resistance to the flow of the fuel; it is therefore usually embodied as a thin, large-mesh membrane of plastic or as a wire-mesh structure. The mesh width of the screen is typically 0.3 mm, if the supply system is used for diesel fuel, and 0.06 mm for fuel for Otto engines. The fuel feed pump is the starting point of a feed segment in the course of which the fuel first flows through a prefilter


4


with a pore width of approximately 8 to 15 μm, preferably 10 μm. This filter traps the coarser suspended substances or contaminants in the fuel. Like the feed pump


2


, it is disposed inside the tank. The feed segment also includes a feed line


5


, which extends from the outlet of the prefilter


4


through a flange


6


to a fine filter disposed outside the tank. The pore width of the fine filter is expediently in the range from 1.5 to 8 μm and is markedly less, for instance by a factor of 2 to 4, then the pore width of the prefilter


4


. If the pore width of the prefilter is 10 μm, then a value of approximately 3 μm for the fine filter is expedient. Since only already prefiltered fuel flows through this fine filter, it does not stop as fast as a conventional single-stage filter and can therefore be kept small in its dimensions. From the outlet of the fine filter


7


, the feed segment leads on to the carburetor of the engine (not shown).




Since in contrast to the screen, the filters


4


and


7


are located downstream of the feed pump


2


, a considerably higher pressure difference can be allowed to occur at these filters in operation.




A line that branches off from the feed line leads to a pressure regulator


8


. The pressure regulator


8


includes a pressure chamber


9


, which communicates via the branching line directly with the supply line


5


and is bounded on one side by a diaphragm


10


. If the pressure in the pressure chamber exceeds a predetermined value, the diaphragm


10


is lifted from a ceiling seat (not shown), and fuel flows out of the pressure chamber


9


back into the tank. In this way, a constant pressure along the feed line


5


is assured, regardless of the pumping capacity of the fuel pump


2


.




The feed pump


2


, prefilter


4


and pressure regulator


8


are expediently combined with the flange


6


by means of a carrier frame (not shown) to form a module, that when the flange


6


is loosened, can be taken as a unit out of the tank


1


and repaired.




The exemplary embodiment shown in

FIG. 2

substantially includes the same components as that of FIG.


1


. The substantial distinction between the two examples is that in

FIG. 2

the order of the fine filter


7


and pressure regulator


8


is transposed. The fine filter


7


thus directly follows the prefilter


4


; they can both be integrated in the same housing. By disposing the pressure regulator downstream of both filters, it is attained that the fuel pressure prevailing at the carburetor (not shown) is subject to lesser fluctuation than in the example of

FIG. 1

, since it does not depend on a throughput-dependent pressure drop in the fine filter


7


.




The pressure regulator


8


shown separately from the flange


6


in schematic

FIG. 2

is expediently mounted directly on the flange


6


.




In the exemplary embodiment shown in

FIG. 3

, a sensor


11


detects the pressure in the feed line


5


, and a regulating circuit


12


regulates the pumping capacity of the feed pump in such a way that the pressure detected by the sensor


11


remains substantially constant, at a set-point pressure in a range from about


3


to


5


bar. An overpressure valve


13


in a line that branches from the feed line


5


is adjusted such that it opens at a pressure that substantially exceeds the set-point pressure, for instance at a pressure of about


10


bar. In the event of a problem in pressure regulation, it serves to prevent the occurrence of overpressures in the feed line


5


that could otherwise possibly cause the feed line to leak. The fine filter


7


, which as in the example in

FIG. 1

is disposed outside the tank


1


, is easily accessible for maintenance purposes and can be replaced if it should become stopped up. The prefilter


4


inside the tank can be designed as a lifetime filter.




The disposition of the sensor


11


can differ from what is shown here for the sake of expediency; for instance, it can be disposed downstream of the fine filter


7


, or it can be disposed directly at the outlet of the feed pump


2


; in the latter case, the sensor


11


and regulating circuit


12


are expediently integrated with the housing of the feed pump


2


.





FIG. 2

differs from

FIG. 3

in that the fine filter


7


is disposed inside the tank


1


, and that the overpressure valve


13


branches off from the feed line


5


downstream from the fine filter


7


.




An overpressure valve which is conventionally integrated with the housing of conventional fuel feed pumps directly at the outlet thereof, in order to limit the output pressure of these pumps, can be omitted in the fuel feed pumps shown in

FIGS. 3 and 4

, because its function is taken over by the overpressure valve


13


. Alternatively, the overpressure valve


13


can be dispensed with, if an overpressure valve integrated with the housing of the feed pump


2


is provided.




In the examples, the prefilter


4


and the fine filter


7


are shown as spatially separate units. However, both filters can also be embodied as a one-piece filter body, whose pore width decreases either gradually or in stages from a coarse region that forms a prefilter to a fine-pore region forming a fine filter.



Claims
  • 1. A system for supplying an internal combustion engine with fuel, comprising a fuel tank; a feed pump feeding fuel from said tank; a fuel filter through which said feed pump feeds fuel from said tank, said fuel filter including a prefilter and a fine filter; and a pressure limiting element located between said prefilter and said fine filter.
  • 2. A system as defined in claim 1, wherein said fine filter has a pore width from 1.5 to 8 μm.
  • 3. A system as defined in claim 2, wherein said prefilter has a greater pore width than said fine filter, being in a range from 7 to 15 μm.
  • 4. A system as defined in claim 1, wherein at least said prefilter is built into said fuel tank.
  • 5. A system as defined in claim 1, wherein the system is reflux-free.
  • 6. A system as defined in claim 1, wherein said feed pump is formed so that it aspirates fuel from said fuel tank.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
198 28 931 Jun 1998 DE
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 102e Date 371c Date
PCT/DE99/01663 WO 00 4/26/2000 4/26/2000
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO00/00736 1/6/2000 WO A
US Referenced Citations (7)
Number Name Date Kind
5289810 Bauer et al. Mar 1994
5330475 Woodward et al. Jul 1994
5415146 Tuckey May 1995
5636616 Okane et al. Jun 1997
5762048 Yonekawa Jun 1998
5782223 Yamashita et al. Jul 1998
5785032 Yamashita et al. Jul 1998
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
42 42 242 A1 Jun 1994 DE