The present invention is based on a hydraulic coupling, in particular for fuel injectors.
One known fuel injector, described in German Application No. DE 10 2004 002 134, has a hydraulic coupling mounted between a valve needle and a piezoelectric actuator, which has a housing pot having a pot bottom and a lateral pot surface, and a piston that is axially displaceable in the housing pot. Between the piston and the pot bottom there is a coupler gap filled with fluid. On the outer side of the pot bottom, facing away from the piston, there is a first diaphragm made of steel, which, together with the pot bottom, encompasses a fluid-filled compensation space. In this context, the first diaphragm covers the pot bottom and is fastened at its edges to the pot bottom by welding. The compensation space is flow-connected to the coupling gap via a throttle element situated in the pot bottom. A second diaphragm made of steel covers an annular gap present between the lateral pot surface and the piston, at the end face of the housing pot facing away from the pot bottom. The annular diaphragm is fastened with its outer diaphragm edge to the lateral pot surface and with its inner diaphragm edge to the piston, by welding. To generate an overpressure in the compensation space, there is a helical compression spring which is supported in the valve housing, having axially directed spring force onto the first diaphragm, a pressure distribution disk being inserted between helical compression spring and the first diaphragm, which lies against the central region of the first diaphragm using a centrical elevation.
The hydraulic coupling according to the present invention has an advantage that the wall thickness of the diaphragm is able to be kept small and, with that, a slight stiffness is able to be obtained, because of the additional axial spring force when maintaining the coupling force required in the valve installation state of the coupling. By the development of the spring element as a spring bracket, the spring element also has an only slight spring stiffness, so that the stiffness reduction of the coupling obtained by the wall thickness reduction is not offset. All in all, the total stiffness of the coupling is advantageously kept low, so that the coupling clearly fulfills to a tighter tolerance its task of compensation temperature-conditioned, different length changes of two components having different thermal expansion coefficients, between which it is axially mounted. In addition to this, a substantial mounting advantage is achieved by contrast to a spring element developed as a helical compression spring, since the coupling now forms a complete component and is, for instance, able to be inserted into a fuel injector without any special assembly of the spring element. Moreover, the spring force acting upon the diaphragm is able to be set before the insertion of the coupling.
According to one advantageous exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the spring bracket has spring legs reaching over the lateral pot surface and a spring bridge connecting the spring legs to one another, which lies against the diaphragm using its central region. The fixing of the spring bracket is performed using the spring legs, which are connected as a continuous material to the lateral pot surface at its leg ends facing away from the spring bridge. The spring bridge is arched in a concave manner, so that the central contact region is implemented in a simple manner. Because of this constructive design of the spring bracket, the desired axial force acting upon the diaphragm is able to be set very accurately before the continuous-material fixing of the spring legs onto the lateral pot surface, by more or less far axial displacing of the spring legs onto the housing pot.
According to one advantageous exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the spring bracket has two spring legs diametrical to the spring bridge, and the spring legs and the spring bridge are produced in one piece from a spring band by stamping or bending, so that the spring bracket is a component that is cost-effective to manufacture.
According to one advantageous exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the spring band in the region of the spring bridge runs in windings, the windings advantageously being formed so that the spring bridge forms an S-shape with a straight middle leg, and two bent outer legs that continue at each end of the middle leg, and the longitudinal axis of the middle leg and the longitudinal axis of the two spring legs lie in a plane extending at right angles to the spring bridge. Because of this constructive design of the spring bridge, the axial spring force acting by the spring bracket upon the diaphragm is able to be adjusted very accurately using low tolerances.
According to another advantageous exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the spring band is made of high-tensile spring steel, as is also used for the diaphragm, for example.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are explained in greater detail in the following description with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The fuel injector, shown in longitudinal section in
A connecting piece 22 is fixedly set into the end of valve housing 11 facing away from valve body 12. Connecting piece 22 is equipped with a fluid connection 23 and an electrical connecting plug 24. From contact plug 24, using a contact member 25 on the actuator side and a housing side contact member 26 an electrical connection is produced to piezomodule 20 of actuator 16. Electrically conducting parts of the two contact members 25, 26 contact each other and are welded to each other at the contact locations. Alternatively, the parts contacting each other of the two contact members 25, 26 may also be made as one piece. Valve body 12 and connecting piece 22 are fixedly connected to each other via a tube 27, restoring spring 15, actuator 16 and a hydraulic coupling 30 being accommodated in tube 27. Actuator 16 is supported via hydraulic coupling 30 on valve housing 11, or more accurately, on connecting piece 22 that is fixedly connected to valve housing 11.
Hydraulic coupling 30 shown enlarged in longitudinal section in
A thin second diaphragm 41 situated at the end face of housing pot 31 that is facing away from pot bottom 311, seals an annular gap 42 that is present between piston 33 and lateral pot surface 312 of housing pot 31 in a fluid-tight manner. Second diaphragm 41, that is also made of steel, is developed in an annular manner for this, and is connected at its outer diaphragm edge to lateral pot surface 312, and at its inner diaphragm edge it is connected to piston 33, in each case as a continuous material. Alternatively, the continuous material at the inner diaphragm edge may also be produced to form centering bolt 34 that is press-fit into piston 33. The continuous material connections are indicated in
Spring element 40, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 084 512.7 | Oct 2011 | DE | national |
The present application is the national stage entry of International Patent Application No. PCT/EP2012/068832, filed on Sep. 25, 2012, which claims priority to Application No. DE 10 2011 084 512.7, filed in the Federal Republic of Germany on Oct. 14, 2011.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2012/068832 | 9/25/2012 | WO | 00 |