The invention relates to a cylinder bore wall insulating member that is disposed to come in contact with the wall surface of a cylinder bore wall that forms a cylinder block of an internal combustion engine and defines a groove-like coolant passage, an internal combustion engine that includes the cylinder bore wall insulating member, and an automobile that includes the internal combustion engine.
An internal combustion engine is designed so that fuel explodes within the cylinder bore when the piston is positioned at top dead center, and the piston is moved downward due to the explosion. Therefore, an upper area of the cylinder bore wall increases in temperature as compared with a lower area of the cylinder bore wall. Accordingly, a difference in the amount of thermal deformation occurs between the upper area and the lower area of the cylinder bore wall (i.e., the upper area of the cylinder bore wall expands to a large extent as compared with the lower area of the cylinder bore wall).
As a result, the frictional resistance of the piston against the cylinder bore wall increases, so that the fuel consumption increases. Therefore, a reduction in difference in the amount of thermal deformation between the upper area and the lower area of the cylinder bore wall has been desired.
Attempts have been made to control the cooling efficiency in the upper area and the lower area of the cylinder bore wall due to the coolant by disposing a spacer in a groove-like coolant passage to adjust the flow of the coolant in the groove-like coolant passage so that the cylinder bore wall has a uniform temperature. For example, Patent Document 1 discloses an internal combustion engine heating medium passage partition member that is disposed in a groove-like heating medium passage formed in a cylinder block of an internal combustion engine to divide the groove-like heating medium passage into a plurality of passages, the heating medium passage partition member including a passage division member that is formed at a height above the bottom of the groove-like heating medium passage, and serves as a wall that divides the groove-like heating medium passage into a bore-side passage and a non-bore-side passage, and a flexible lip member that is formed from the passage division member in the opening direction of the groove-like heating medium passage, the edge area of the flexible lip member being formed of a flexible material to extend beyond the inner surface of one of the groove-like heating medium passages, the edge area of the flexible lip member coming in contact with the inner surface at a middle position of the groove-like heating medium passage in the depth direction due to the flexure restoring force after insertion into the groove-like heating medium passage to separate the bore-side passage and the non-bore-side passage.
Patent Document 1: JP-A-2008-31939 (claims)
According to the internal combustion engine heating medium passage partition member disclosed in Patent Document 1, since the temperature of the cylinder bore wall can be made uniform to a certain extent, the difference in the amount of thermal deformation between the upper area and the lower area of the cylinder bore wall can be reduced. However, a further reduction in the difference in the amount of thermal deformation between the upper area and the lower area of the cylinder bore wall has been desired.
An object of the invention is to provide an internal combustion engine in which the cylinder bore wall has a uniform temperature.
The inventors of the invention conducted extensive studies in order to solve the above technical problem, and found that the temperature of the cylinder bore wall can be made uniform by disposing a cylinder bore wall insulating member to come in contact with the cylinder bore wall that defines a groove-like coolant passage and prevent a situation in which a coolant comes in direct contact with the cylinder bore wall. This finding has led to the completion of the invention.
According to a first aspect of the invention, a cylinder bore wall insulating member has a contact surface that comes in contact with a wall surface of a cylinder bore wall that forms a cylinder block of an internal combustion engine and defines a groove-like coolant passage.
According to a second aspect of the invention, a internal combustion engine includes a cylinder bore wall insulating member that has a contact surface that comes in contact with a wall surface of a cylinder bore wall that forms a cylinder block of the internal combustion engine and defines a groove-like coolant passage, the cylinder bore wall insulating member being disposed so that the contact surface comes in contact with the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall that defines the groove-like coolant passage.
According to a third aspect of the invention, an automobile includes the internal combustion engine according to the second aspect of the invention.
The invention thus ensures that the cylinder bore wall of an internal combustion engine has a uniform temperature. This makes it possible to reduce the difference in the amount of thermal deformation between the upper area and the lower area of the cylinder bore wall.
A cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention and an internal combustion engine according to one embodiment of the invention are described below with reference to
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
The internal combustion engine according to one embodiment of the invention includes a piston, a cylinder head, a head gasket, and the like in addition to the cylinder block, the insulating member, and the securing member.
The cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention is characterized by having the contact surface that comes in contact with the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall that forms the cylinder block of the internal combustion engine and defines the groove-like coolant passage.
The cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention covers the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall that defines the groove-like coolant passage with the contact surface that comes in contact with the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall that defines the groove-like coolant passage. The cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention thus prevents a situation in which the coolant comes in direct contact with the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall that defines the groove-like coolant passage.
The shape of the contact surface of the cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention that comes in contact with the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall that defines the groove-like coolant passage is appropriately adjusted corresponding to each cylinder block so that the contact surface has a shape that coincides with the shape of the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall that defines the groove-like coolant passage.
The cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention may be formed of a nylon resin, an elastomer, a rubber material (e.g., ethylene-propylene-diene rubber (EPDM), or nitrile-butadiene rubber (NBR)), or the like taking account of long-life coolant resistance (LLC resistance) and heat resistance. It is preferable to use a rubber material such as EPDM or NBR as the material for forming the insulating member since such a rubber material exhibits excellent elasticity and adhesion as compared with a nylon resin, and exhibits excellent heat resistance as compared with an elastomer.
The thickness (indicated by t in
The cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention is disposed in the groove-like coolant passage so that the coolant does not come in contact with a lower area of the cylinder bore wall that defines the groove-like coolant passage. The shape, the arrangement, the arrangement position, the number, and the like of the cylinder bore wall insulating member(s) according to one embodiment of the invention are appropriately selected so that the cylinder bore wall has the desired temperature distribution.
The cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention may be used within the temperature range of −40 to 200° C. It is preferable that the cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention can endure a temperature of 120° C. or more, and particularly preferably 150° C. or more. The cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention is also required to exhibit LLC resistance.
The cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention may include a reinforcing material that is provided inside the insulating member or on the back surface opposite to the contact surface so that the shape of the insulating member can be maintained.
The cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention is secured using the securing member so that the contact surface comes in contact with the cylinder bore wall. In the example illustrated in
The securing member used to secure the cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention is not limited to that illustrated in
Note that the securing member is not limited to the above examples as long as the insulating member can be secured on the cylinder bore wall so that the contact surface of the insulating member comes in contact with the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall.
The insulating member may be bonded to the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall using an adhesive that exhibits heat resistance and LLC resistance (preferably an adhesive that exhibits low adhesion at room temperature (e.g., about 25° C.) in the absence of moisture, but exhibits high adhesion at a high temperature (e.g., about 80 to 100° C.) or in the presence of moisture).
The overall shape of the cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention and the shape of the securing member are not particularly limited as long as the flow of the coolant in the groove-like coolant passage is not hindered.
The internal combustion engine according to one embodiment of the invention is characterized by including the cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention (i.e., a cylinder bore wall insulating member that has a contact surface that comes in contact with a wall surface of a cylinder bore wall that forms a cylinder block of the internal combustion engine and defines a groove-like coolant passage) that is disposed so that the contact surface comes in contact with the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall that defines the groove-like coolant passage.
In the internal combustion engine according to one embodiment of the invention, the entire cylinder bore wall in the circumferential direction may be covered with the cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention. Note that the entire cylinder bore wall in the circumferential direction need not necessarily be covered with the cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention (see
The cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention is disposed in the internal combustion engine according to one embodiment of the invention so that the upper end of the cylinder bore wall insulating member in the vertical direction is positioned lower than the position that is lower than the upper end of the groove-like coolant passage by ⅓rd of the length from the upper end to the lower end of the groove-like coolant passage. In
An internal combustion engine is normally configured so that a lower area of the cylinder bore wall has a low temperature, and is easily cooled with the coolant as compared with an upper area of the cylinder bore wall where the fuel explodes. Therefore, a large difference in temperature occurs between the upper area and the lower area of the cylinder bore wall.
Since the internal combustion engine according to one embodiment of the invention in which the cylinder bore wall insulating member according to one embodiment of the invention is disposed can prevent a situation in which the coolant comes in direct contact with the cylinder bore wall, it is possible to prevent a situation in which the temperature of the lower area of the cylinder bore wall becomes too low as compared with the temperature of the upper area of the cylinder bore wall.
The invention is further described below by way of examples. Note that the invention is not limited to the following examples.
A cylinder bore wall insulating member having the shape illustrated in
A coolant (temperature: 20 to 40° C.) was passed through the groove-like coolant passage.
The behavior of the insulating member was continuously observed through the observation window of the cylinder block to determine adhesion of the insulating member to the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall defining the groove-like coolant passage. It was confirmed that the insulating member adhered to (i.e., was not separated from) the wall surface of the cylinder bore wall defining the groove-like coolant passage.
Insulating Member
Material: ethylene-propylene-diene copolymer rubber
Thickness (t) of insulating member 1a: 6.4 mm
Height (h) of insulating member 1a: 50 mm
Experimental Internal Combustion Engine
Width of groove-like coolant passage: 8.4 mm
Height of groove-like coolant passage (height in vertical direction): 90 mm
Installation position of insulating member: The lower end of the insulating member was positioned higher than the lower end of the groove-like coolant passage by 5 mm.
Temperature of coolant supplied: 20 to 40° C.
Computational Fluid Dynamics Analysis Results
After confirming adhesion to the wall surface and the like, a known computational fluid dynamics analysis was performed in a state in which the flow of the coolant was stable. The results are shown in
Operations were performed in the same manner as in Example 1, except that the insulating member was not disposed. The computational fluid dynamics analysis results are shown in
Operations were performed in the same manner as in Example 1, except that the flexible lip member (spacer member) disclosed in JP-A-2008-31939 was used instead of the insulating member. The computational fluid dynamics analysis results are shown in
As is clear from the results shown in
According to the embodiments of the invention, since the difference in deformation between the upper area and the lower area of the cylinder bore wall of an internal combustion engine can be reduced (i.e., friction of a piston can be reduced), a fuel-efficient internal combustion engine can be provided.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-141285 | Jun 2010 | JP | national |
This application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/806,417 filed Mar. 11, 2013, which is a 371 of PCT/JP2011/063049 filed Jun. 7, 2011, and claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2010-141285 filed Jun. 22, 2010, the entire disclosures of which applications are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Child | 14710246 | US |