The invention is based on a high-pressure pump for a fuel injection system of an internal combustion engine as generically defined by the preamble to claim 1.
One such high-pressure pump is known from German Patent Disclosure DE 198 48 035 A1. This high-pressure pump has at least one pump element, with a pump piston which is driven in a reciprocating motion and is guided displaceably in a cylinder bore and in that bore defines a pump work chamber. The pump work chamber can be filled with fuel via a suction valve. The suction valve has a valve member, opening into the pump work chamber, that cooperates with a valve seat. The pump piston, in its end region toward the suction valve, has a blind bore into which the valve member of the suction valve plunges, and in which a closing spring acting on the valve member is disposed that is braced on one end on the pump piston and on the other on the valve member. The valve member has a shaft, which is surrounded by the closing spring and with which the valve member is guided displaceably in the closing spring. The outside diameter of the closing spring is only slightly smaller than the diameter of the blind bore in the pump piston, so that the closing spring is guided in the blind bore of the pump piston. In this embodiment, there is accordingly only an imprecise guidance of the valve member, which is disadvantageous for the function of the suction valve. This can in turn impair the filling of the pump work chamber and can thus impair the overall function of the high-pressure pump.
The high-pressure pump of the invention having the characteristics of claim 1 has the advantage over the prior art that the valve member of the suction valve is guided precisely in the pump piston, and as a result the function of the suction valve and hence of the high-pressure pump is improved.
In the dependent claims, advantageous features and refinements of the high-pressure pump of the invention are recited. The version shown in claim 3 makes a long guidance length of the valve member in the blind bore possible, while at the same time enabling a space-saving disposition of the closing spring. The version according to claim 4 makes it possible to fill and evacuate the spring chamber during the motion of the valve member, and by suitable dimensioning of the at least one opening in the valve member, its opening and/or closing motion can be varied in a purposeful way. The embodiment according to claim 5 makes very precise guidance of the valve member relative to the valve seat possible, since the cylinder bore for the pump piston and the valve seat can both be produced in the same piece of manufacturing equipment and can therefore be aligned very precisely to one another.
One exemplary embodiment of the invention is shown in the drawing and described in further detail in the ensuing description.
In
The pump piston 20 is guided tightly displaceably in a cylinder bore 22 that is embodied in the pump housing 10, and with its face end remote from the drive shaft 12, the pump piston defines a pump work chamber 24 in the cylinder bore 22. Via a fuel delivery conduit 26 extending in the pump housing 10, the pump work chamber 24 has a communication with a fuel delivery means, such as a feed pump 14. At the mouth of the fuel delivery conduit 26 into the pump work chamber 24, there is a suction valve 28 which opens into the pump work chamber 24. Via a fuel outflow conduit 30 extending in the pump housing 10, the pump work chamber 24 also has a communication with an outlet, which for instance communicates with a high-pressure reservoir 110. One or preferably more injectors 120 disposed at the cylinders of the engine communicate with the high-pressure reservoir 110, and through them fuel is injected into the cylinders of the engine. At the mouth of the fuel outflow conduit 30 into the pump work chamber 24, there is an outlet valve 32 that opens out of the pump work chamber 24.
Between the pump piston 20 and the eccentric portion or cam 16 of the drive shaft 12, a support element may be disposed, in the form of a tappet 34, by way of which the pump piston 20 is braced at least indirectly on the cam 16. The pump piston 20 is coupled to the tappet 34 in a manner not shown in detail in the direction of its longitudinal axis 21. The tappet 34 may be braced directly on the eccentric portion or cam 16. The tappet 34 is displaceably supported in the pump housing 10 in a bore 36 and absorbs transverse forces that occur upon the conversion of the rotary motion of the drive shaft 12 into the reciprocating motion of the pump piston 20, so that these forces do not act on the pump piston 20. The tappet 34 is engaged by a prestressed restoring spring 38, by which the tappet 34 and the pump piston 20 connected to it are pressed toward the cam 16.
The suction valve 28 will now be described in further detail, referring to
The pump piston 20, in its end region oriented toward the valve seat 42, has a blind bore 46, which extends at least approximately coaxially with the longitudinal axis 21 of the pump piston and into which the valve member 44 of the suction valve 28 plunges with its open end. The valve member 44, over a large portion of its length, is guided displaceably, with slight radial play, in the blind bore 46 in the pump piston 20. By means of the pump piston 20 and the valve member 44, a spring chamber 48 is defined in the blind bore 46; a closing spring 50 of the suction valve 28 is disposed in this spring chamber, braced on one end on the bottom of the blind bore 46 on the pump piston 20 and on the other on the valve member 44. The closing spring 50 is embodied as a helical compression spring and protrudes into the valve member 44 and is braced in it on an annular shoulder formed by a reduction of the inside cross section of the valve member 44. By means of the closing spring 50, the valve member 44 is pressed toward the valve seat 42.
In the valve member 44, at least one opening 52 is provided, through which the spring chamber 48 communicates with the pump work chamber 24. The at least one opening 52 makes it possible to fill and evacuate the spring chamber 48 upon a motion of the valve member 44 relative to the pump piston 20, and by the dimensioning of the at least one opening 52, the flow rate in the filling and evacuation of the spring chamber 48 can be varied.
In the intake stroke of the pump piston 20, in which the pump piston together with the tappet 34 is moved radially inward by the restoring spring 38, a low pressure prevails in the pump work chamber 24, and thus the suction valve 28 opens in that its valve member 44, with its sealing face 45, lifts from the valve seat 42, since because of the pressure prevailing in the fuel delivery conduit 26, a greater force is generated in the opening direction than the total of the force of the closing spring 50 and of the force generated by the pressure prevailing in the pump work chamber 24. In
At low pressure in the pump work chamber 30 during its filling, the outlet valve 38 is closed. In the pumping stroke of the pump piston 20, in which the pump piston together with the tappet 34 moves radially outward, fuel in the pump work chamber 24 is compressed by the pump piston 20, so that because of the increased pressure in the pump work chamber 24, the suction valve 28 closes, while fuel at high pressure is pumped through the fuel outflow conduit 30, with the outlet valve 32 open, to the high-pressure reservoir 110. In
As an alternative to the version described above, it may also be provided that the valve seat 42 is embodied on some other part of the pump housing 10 than the cylinder bore 22 in which the pump piston 20 is guided. In that case, however, it must be assured that the part of the pump housing 10 on which the valve seat 42 is embodied is aligned very precisely relative to the part of the pump housing 10 in which the cylinder bore 22 is embodied, so as to achieve the requisite coaxial alignment of the valve seat 42 with the cylinder bore 22.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 028 999.9 | Jun 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/51738 | 4/20/2005 | WO | 11/29/2006 |