The following co-pending applications, all owned by the assignee of this application, contain subject matter related to the subject matter of this application:
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/865,707, filed Jun. 10, 2004 for “Two Cycle, Opposed Piston Internal Combustion Engine”, published as US/2005/0274332 on Dec. 29, 2005, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,156,056, issued Jan. 2, 2007;
PCT application US2005/020553, filed Jun. 10, 2005 for “Improved Two Cycle, Opposed Piston Internal Combustion Engine”, published as WO/2005/124124 on Dec. 15, 2005;
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/095,250, filed Mar. 31, 2005 for “Opposed Piston, Homogeneous Charge, Pilot Ignition Engine”, published as US/2006/0219213 on Oct. 5, 2006;
PCT application US2006/011886, filed Mar. 30, 2006 for “Opposed Piston, Homogeneous Charge, Pilot Ignition Engine”, published as WO/2006/105390 on Oct. 5, 2006;
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/097,909, filed Apr. 1, 2005 for “Common Rail Fuel Injection System With Accumulator Injectors”, published as US/2006/0219220 on Oct. 5, 2006;
PCT application US2006/012353, filed Mar. 30, 2006 “Common Rail Fuel Injection System With Accumulator. Injectors”, published as WO/2006/107892 on Oct. 12, 2006;
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/378,959, filed Mar. 17, 2006 for “Opposed Piston Engine”, published as US/2006/0157003 on Jul. 20, 2006;
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/512,942, filed Aug. 29, 2006, for “Two Stroke, Opposed Piston Internal Combustion Engine”, divisional of Ser. No. 10/865,707;
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/629,136, filed Dec. 8, 2006, for “Improved Two Cycle, Opposed Piston Internal Combustion Engine”, CIP of Ser. No. 10/865,707; and
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/642,140, filed Dec. 20, 2006, for “Two Cycle, Opposed Piston Internal Combustion Engine”, continuation of Ser. No. 10/865,707.
The field covers the combination of an opposed-piston engine with a hypocycloidal drive. In particular, the field covers the use of a piston coupled to a hypocycloidal drive to generate electrical power.
The opposed piston internal-combustion engine was invented by Hugo Junkers around the end of the nineteenth century. In Junkers' basic configuration, two pistons are disposed crown-to-crown in a common cylinder having inlet and exhaust ports near bottom dead center of each piston, with the pistons serving as the valves for the ports. The engine has two crankshafts, each disposed at a respective end of the cylinder. The crankshafts are linked by rods to respective pistons and are geared together to control phasing of the ports and to provide engine output. The advantages of Junkers' opposed piston engine over traditional two-cycle and four-cycle engines include superior scavenging, reduced parts count and increased reliability, high thermal efficiency and high power density.
Nevertheless, Junkers' basic design contains a number of deficiencies among which is excessive friction, between the pistons and cylinder bore caused by side forces exerted on the pistons. Each piston is coupled by an associated connecting rod to one of the crankshafts. Each connecting rod is connected at one end to a piston by a wristpin internal to the piston; at the other end, the connecting rod engages a crankpin on a crankshaft. The connecting rod pivots on the wristpin in order to accommodate circular motion of the crank pin. As the connecting rod pushes the piston inwardly in the cylinder, it exerts a compressive force on the piston at an angle to the axis of the piston, which produces a radially-directed force (a side force) between the piston and cylinder bore. This side force increases piston/cylinder friction, raising the piston temperature and thereby limiting the brake mean effective pressure (BMEP) achievable by the engine.
An engine coupling invented by Mathew Murray in 1802 converted the linear motion of a steam engine piston and rod into rotary motion to drive a crankshaft by a “hypocycloidal” gear train coupling the rod to the crankshaft. A hypocycloid is a special plane curve generated by the trace of a fixed point on a small circle that rolls within a larger circle. In Murray's gear train, the larger circle is the “pitch circle” of a ring gear with teeth on an inner annulus and the small circle is the pitch circle of a spur gear with teeth on an outer annulus. (See the definition of “pitch circle” in American National Standard publication ANSI/AGMA 1012-G05 at 4.5.3.1.1, page 10). The spur gear is disposed within the ring gear, with its teeth meshed with the teeth of the ring gear. As the spur gear rotates, it travels an orbit on the inner annulus of the ring gear. Murray's gear train represents a special hypocycloid in which the pitch diameter (D) of the ring gear's pitch circle is twice the pitch diameter (d) of the spur gear's pitch circle. When D=2d, a point on the spur gear pitch circle moves in a straight line along a corresponding pitch diameter of the ring gear as the spur gear orbits within the ring gear. Murray connected one such point to a piston rod; the linear motion of the piston rod caused the spur gear to revolve within the ring gear, and the gear train converted the piston's linear motion to rotary motion.
Cycloidal gear arrangements have been used in numerous internal combustion engine configurations, including opposed piston engines. See U.S. Pat. No. 2,199,625, for example. In the engine disclosed in the '625 patent, opposed pistons are coupled to cycloid crank drives by means of connecting rods. However, the '625 patent omits two critical insights in this regard.
First, the plane curve traced by the spur gear is not linear in any embodiment taught in the '625 patent: thus, connecting rod motion is not linear. In fact, each connecting rod conventionally engages a wristpin internal to a piston, which allows the connecting rod to pivot with respect to the axis of the piston in order to accommodate the non-linear plane curves traced by the spur gear. Consequently, as the connecting rod pivots on a return stroke while moving a piston into a cylinder, it imposes side forces on the piston, which causes friction between the piston and cylinder bore.
Thus, an unrealized advantage of coupling the pistons of an opposed piston engine to hypocycloidal drives in which the ratio between the pitch diameters of the ring and spur gears is 2:1 is that the pistons, and their connecting rods, undergo purely linear movement along a common axis, thereby eliminating radially-directed side forces that cause friction between the pistons and the bore of the cylinder in which they are disposed.
The '625 patent does indicate that grafting a hypocycloidal output to an opposed piston engine construction can add a dimension of flexibility to engine design and operation. For example, the ratio between the pitch diameters is varied to accommodate piston strokes of varying length, which, according to the patent, can be tailored to improve scavenging and piston cooling. However, the '625 patent omits the case where D=2d, in which the linear motion of the spur gear is sinusoidal. The '625 patent therefore lacks a second critical insight: the sinusoidal characteristic of the resulting linear motion can support useful adaptations of a hypocycloidally-coupled engine to produce a desirable sinusoidal output. For example, an internal-combustion engine may be adapted to generate AC electrical power by mounting a coil to the skirt of a piston and coupling the piston to a hypocycloidal drive in which D=2d. The action of the hypocycloidal drive imposes a sinusoidal period on the straight linear motion of the piston. As the piston transports the coil though a magnetic field, a sinusoidal voltage is induced in the windings of the coil.
A hypocycloidal drive includes a pair of spaced-apart ring gears with equal pitch diameters D, a pair of pinions with equal pitch diameters d, wherein D=2d, each pinion engaging a respective ring gear, a journal mounted between the pinions such that the journal axis coincides with the pitch diameters of the pinions, and a respective journal rotatably mounted to an outside of each pinion.
An opposed piston, internal-combustion engine is provided with a hypocycloidal drive to convert the linear motion of the pistons and associated connecting rods to rotary output motion. More specifically, in an engine including a cylinder with a bore and opposed pistons disposed within the bore, each connecting rod is coupled to a journal of the hypocycloidal drive.
An electrical generator includes an internal-combustion engine with a coil mounted to the skirt of a piston and a hypocycloidal drive connected by a connecting rod to the piston. The action of the hypocycloidal drive imposes a sinusoidal period on the straight linear motion of the piston. As the piston transports the coil though a magnetic field, a sinusoidal voltage is induced in the windings of the coil.
The below-described figures are meant to illustrate principles and examples discussed in the following detailed description. They are not necessarily to scale.
A hypocycloidal drive illustrated in
Conventional means (not shown) are used to maintain each pinion 120 for rotation on the inside annulus of a ring gear 110 so that, as the pinion rotates, it is constrained to travel a circular path along the inside annulus. Such means may comprise a frame holding a ring gear 110 and retaining a first disc concentrically with the ring gear in a bearing that permits the disc to rotate in a plane parallel to a plane in which the ring gear 110 is supported. A pinion 120 is mounted to a second disc, smaller than the first disc that is, in turn, rotationally supported by a bearing in an aperture of the first disc. The pinion 120 orbits along the gear teeth 112, rotating freely on the bearing supporting the second disc. The first disc rotates in response to movement of the pinion 120, and retains the pinion 120 against the gear teeth 112.
Each of the ring gears and pinions has a respective pitch diameter. Preferably, the pitch diameters (D) of the ring gears are equal; the pitch diameters (d) of the pinions are equal; and, D=2d. Thus, any point on a pinion's pitch circle will follow a straight line of motion as the pinion 120 rotates around the inside annulus of a ring gear 110. As in
Per
With further reference to
A module of an opposed piston internal-combustion engine 200 with hypocycloidal drives is shown in
As best seen in
With further reference to
In
As can further be seen in
As best seen in
As the piston 216 reciprocates within the cylinder 214 of the opposed piston engine 200, the skirt 217 moves through a magnetic field created by the permanent magnet 421. During this reciprocating action of the skirt 217, the coil 425 continuously traverses the magnetic field, which induces a voltage in the windings of the coil 425. The voltage (“E”) created by the coil 425 is a function of the strength of the magnetic field (“B”) times the length of the wire wound on the coil 425 (“l”) actually in the magnetic field times the velocity of the coil passing through the magnetic field (“v”) and is expressed as E=Blv. Conventional wire forming processes can yield a large value for “l” in a relatively short coil.
Referring again to both
As can further be seen in
As per
Although novel principles have been set forth with reference to specific embodiments described hereinabove, it should be understood that modifications can be made without departing from the spirit of these principles. For example, the opposed pistons described above may be coupled to a hypocycloidal drive constituted of a single ring gear engaged by a single pinion, with D=2d, like Murray's gear train. Thus, the scope of patent protection for an opposed piston internal-combustion engine with a hypocycloidal drive, or for a generator apparatus incorporating such an engine, is limited only by the following claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/725,014, filed Mar. 16, 2007, which claims benefit of priority under 35 USC §119 to U.S. provisional application for patent 60/783,372, filed Mar. 16, 2006.
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Child | 12655538 | US |