The invention generally refers to a glow plug known from WO 2005/090865 A1.
The present invention aims at showing a way how the combustion chamber pressure of a Diesel engine can be measured with increased accuracy by means of a pressure measuring device of a glow plug.
This problem is solved by a glow plug in accordance with the present invention.
In a glow plug according to the invention, a substance is filled into a sealed interior housing region, said substance having or achieving liquid to paste-like consistency at the temperatures occurring during operation and conducting heat generated by the heater rod to the housing. In this manner, the thermal coupling of the heater rod to the housing is improved. Surprisingly, this allows achieving a considerable improvement in measuring accuracy. That is to say that it has been detected within the scope of the invention that different thermal expansions of the housing and the heater rod may cause the development of pressure-independent axial movements of the heater rod, said movements falsifying the pressure measurement. A substance filled into a chamber in the housing can be used to dissipate temperature gradients between the heater rod and the housing, with the result that this error source is reduced.
The substance filled into the interior housing region must not prevent an axial movement of the heater rod. For this reason, it is essential that the substance used has or achieves liquid to paste-like consistency at the temperatures occurring during operation. The filled-in substance does not do any harm if it solidifies with idle engine because pressure measurements are, in any case, only taken while the engine is running. While the engine is running, the glow plug is heated, with the result that the substance used for heat dissipation becomes liquid or paste-like. Preferably, the substance used for heat dissipation is liquid or paste-like at 100° C., most preferably within the complete range of application from −40° C. to 400° C.
For example, organic or organosilicon substances having a wax-like or oily consistency are suitable. At the temperatures occurring in the interior region of a glow plug while the engine is running, oils—in particular mineral oils and silicone oils—have a viscosity that is advantageously low, with the result that axial movements of the heater rod are, at most, impaired within the relevant temperature range to an insignificant degree only. The oils used can be liquid or paste-like at room temperature, but this is not strictly necessary. The oils used do not do any harm if they have a wax-like consistency at room temperature and only liquefy or become paste-like at temperatures of 100° C. or higher.
While the engine is running, temperatures ranging from 100° C. to 400° C. may occur in a chamber of a forward housing section on the side of the combustion chamber. That is why, for heat dissipation purposes, the heater rod can, in a forward part of the housing, also be surrounded by a metal that liquefies at such temperatures, said metal, for example, being a soft solder alloy, an alkaline metal, in particular sodium, or their compounds. Soft solder alloys, for example tin/lead alloys and/or indium alloys, have a good thermal conductivity and are, therefore, able to dissipate heat from a backward region of the heater rod to the housing. Where ceramic and metallic heater rods are concerned, the outside of the heater rod is usually applied to ground, for which reason it is not necessary to electrically insulate the heater rod against the housing. That is why the electric conductance of a soft solder alloy surrounding the heater rod in the housing does not present any drawback.
Further details and advantages of the invention will be illustrated by means of exemplary embodiments with reference being made to the accompanying drawings. Therein, identical parts that are corresponding to each other will be identified by corresponding reference symbols. In the drawings,
The glow plug shown in
The higher the combustion chamber pressure exerted on the heater rod 3, the further will the heater rod 3 be pressed into the housing 1 against a restoring force. This movement of the heater rod 3 can be used for a pressure measurement. In the exemplary embodiment shown, an axial movement of the heater rod 3 causes a deformation of the measuring diaphragm 4, said deformation generating a restoring force. This deformation can be registered by means of one or more measuring elements 6 carried by the measuring diaphragm 4, said measuring elements 6, for example, being strain gauges. Preferably, the measuring elements 6 are arranged on that side of the measuring diaphragm 4 that faces the backward end of the housing 1. Before they are transmitted by means of signal lines (not shown) extending along the inner pole 5, the measurement signals generated by the measuring element or the measuring elements can be processed with an electronic module that is not shown here.
Different thermal expansions of the heater rod 3 and the surrounding housing 1 can also cause a deformation of the measuring diaphragm 4 and, therefore, falsify the pressure measurement. To counteract this, a chamber in the housing is filled with an organic or organosilicon substance 7 having a wax-like or oily consistency, said substance 7 dissipating heat from the heater rod 3 to the housing 1. In the exemplary embodiment shown in
The substance 9 filled into the forward part of the housing 1 and surrounding the heater rod 3 can, for example, be a mineral oil or a low-melting-point metal, for example, a soft solder alloy or an alkaline metal. The substance 9 surrounding the heater rod 3 has a liquid or paste-like, preferably liquid, consistency at least at the temperatures of more than 200° C. occurring in the forward housing part 1a during operation, preferably already at 100° C., and dissipates heat from the heater rod 3 to the surrounding housing 1, 1a, without preventing an axial movement of the heater rod 3. A great number of indium alloys, in particular indium/bismuth alloys, for example In51Bi32.5Sn16.5, have melting points of considerably less than 100° C.
In order to ensure that a thermal expansion of the substance 7, 9 used to dissipate heat into the interior housing region does not cause a falsification of the pressure measurement, the available region or partial region in the interior region of the housing 1 is only partially filled with the heat-conducting substance 7, 9, and it always contains some air as well. As can be seen from
The exemplary embodiments shown in
In the exemplary embodiment shown in
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110062136 A1 | Mar 2011 | US |