The present invention relates to an internal combustion engine that promotes combustion of an air-fuel mixture using electromagnetic (EM) radiation.
An internal combustion engine that uses EM radiation to promote combustion of an air-fuel mixture is known. For example, JP 2007-113570A1 describes such an internal combustion engine.
The internal combustion engine described in JP 2007-113570A1 is equipped with an ignition device that generates plasma discharge by emitting microwaves in a combustion chamber before or after ignition of an air-fuel mixture. The ignition device generates local plasma using the discharge from an ignition plug such that plasma is generated in a high-pressure field, and develops this plasma using microwave radiation. The local plasma is generated in a discharge gap between the tip of an anode terminal and a ground terminal.
In a conventional internal combustion engine, plasma is generated near the ignition plug by microwave radiation emitted following the ignition of an air-fuel mixture. Thus, it was difficult to increase the propagation speed of a flame passing the center portion of the combustion chamber where the ignition plug is located. For example, the flame may not reach the wall face of the combustion chamber when the air-fuel mixture is lean and the propagation speed of the flame is slow, thereby emitting a substantial amount of unburned fuel.
The first invention relates to an internal combustion engine including an internal combustion engine body formed with a combustion chamber, and an ignition device to ignite the air-fuel mixture in the combustion chamber. Repetitive combustion cycles, including ignition of the air-fuel mixture by the ignition device and combustion of the air-fuel mixture, are executed. The internal combustion engine comprises: an EM-wave-emitting device that emits EM radiation to the combustion chamber; a plurality of receiving antennas, located at the outer circumference of the zoning material that defines the combustion chamber; an antenna that resonates at the frequency of the EM radiation emitted into the combustion chamber from the EM-wave-emitting device; and a control means which controls the EM-wave-emitting device such that the radiating antenna emits EM radiation into the combustion chamber while the flame caused by ignition of the air-fuel mixture propagates.
The embodiments of the present invention are detailed with reference to the accompanying drawings. The embodiments below are the preferred embodiments of the present invention but they are not intended to limit the scope of invention and application or usage thereof.
The present embodiment relates to internal combustion engine 10 of the present invention. Internal combustion engine 10 is a reciprocating internal combustion engine where piston 23 reciprocates. Internal combustion engine 10 has internal combustion engine body 11, ignition device 12, EM-wave-emitting device 13, and control device 35. In internal combustion engine 10, the combustion cycle is repetitively executed by ignition device 12 to ignite and burn the air-fuel mixture. Internal combustion engine body
As illustrated in
A single ignition plug 40, which is a part of ignition device 12, is provided for each cylinder 24 of cylinder head 22. In ignition plug 40, a front-tip part exposed to combustion chamber 20 is placed at the center part of the ceiling surface 51 of combustion chamber 20. Surface 51 is exposed to combustion chamber 20 of cylinder head 22. The circumference of the front-tip part is circular when it is viewed from the axial direction. Center electrode 40a and earth electrode 40b are formed on the tip of the ignition plug 40. A discharge gap is formed between the tip of center electrode 40a and the tip of earth electrode 40b.
Inlet port 25 and outlet port 26 are formed for each cylinder 24 in cylinder head 22. Inlet port 25 has inlet valve 27 for opening and closing an inlet port opening 25a of inlet port 25 and injector 29, which injects fuel. Outlet port 26 has outlet valve 28 for opening and closing an outlet port opening 26a of outlet port 26. Inlet port 25 is designed so that a strong tumble flow is formed in combustion chamber 20 in internal combustion engine 10.
Ignition device 12 is provided for each combustion chamber 20. As illustrated in
Ignition coil 14 is connected to a direct current (DC) power supply (not shown in the figure). Ignition coil 14 boosts the voltage applied from the DC power when an ignition signal is received from control device 35, and then outputs the amplified high-voltage pulse to center electrode 40a of ignition plug 40. In ignition plug 40, dielectric breakdown occurs at the discharge gap when a high-voltage pulse is applied to center electrode 40a. A spark discharge then occurs, and discharge plasma is generated in the discharge channel. A negative voltage is applied as the high-voltage pulse at center electrode 40a.
Ignition device 12 may have a plasma-enlarging component, which enlarges the discharge plasma by supplying electrical energy to the discharge plasma. The plasma-enlarging component may, for example, enlarge the spark discharge by supplying energy of high-frequency wave, e.g. microwave radiation to the discharge plasma. The plasma-enlarging component allows for improvements in the stability of the ignition of a lean air-fuel mixture. EM-wave-emitting device 13 may be used as the plasma-enlarging component.
As illustrated in
EM-wave-generating device 31 iteratively outputs current pulses at a predetermined duty ratio when an EM-wave-driving signal is received from control device 35. The EM-wave-driving signal is a pulsed signal. EM-wave-generating device 31 iteratively outputs microwave pulses during the pulse-width time of the driving signal. In EM-wave-generating device 31, a semiconductor oscillator generates microwave pulses. Other oscillators, such as a magnetron, may also be used instead of a semiconductor oscillator.
EM-wave-switching device 32 has one input terminal and multiple output terminals provided for each radiation antenna 16. The input terminal is connected to EM-wave-generating device 31. Each of the output terminals is connected to the corresponding radiation antenna 16. EM-wave-switching device 32 is controlled by control device 35 so that the destination of the microwaves outputted from generating device 31 switches between the multiple radiation antennas 16.
Radiation antenna 16 is located on ceiling surface 51 of combustion chamber 20. Radiation antenna 16 is ring-shaped in form when it is viewed from the front side of ceiling 51 of combustion chamber 20, and it surrounds the tip of ignition plug 40. Radiation antenna 16 can also be C-shaped when it is viewed from the front side of ceiling 51.
Radiation antenna 16 is laminated on ring-shaped insulating layer 19 formed around an installation hole for ignition plug 40 on ceiling surface 51 of combustion chamber 20. Insulating layer 19 may, for example, be formed by the spraying of an insulating material. Radiation antenna 16 is electrically insulated from cylinder head 22 by insulating layer 19. The perimeter of radiation antenna 16, i.e., the perimeter of the centerline between the inner circumference and the outer circumference, is set to half the wavelength of the microwave radiation emitted from radiation antenna 16. Radiation antenna 16 is electrically connected to the output terminal of EM-wave-switching device 32 via microwave transmission line 33 located in cylinder head 22.
In internal combustion engine body 11, multiple receiving antennas 52a and 52b resonate with the microwave radiation emitted into combustion chamber 20 from EM-wave-emitting device 13, and are provided on a zoning material defining combustion chamber 20. In this embodiment, receiving antennas 52a and 52b are located close to the outer circumference. Here, “close to the outer circumference” refers to the area outside the mid-point of the center and outer circumference of the top of piston 23. The period of time when the flame propagates to this area is referred to as the “second half of the flame propagation”. The length L of antenna 52 satisfies Eq. 1, where the wavelength of the microwave radiation is A, and n is a natural number.
L=(n×λ)/2 (Eq. 1)
Receiving antennas 52a and 52b are located close to the outer circumference of the top of piston 23, as shown in
Receiving antennas 52a and 52b are annular in shape and are concentric with the center axis of piston 23. The diameters of the two receiving antennas 52a and 52b are different, and they are located such that a double ring is formed. Receiving antennas 52a and 52b are arranged in a co-axial fashion. The first receiving antenna 52a is located at the outer side and the second receiving antenna 52b is located at the inner side. The distance x between antennas 52a and 52b satisfies Eq. 2, where λ is the wavelength of the microwave radiation emitted from radiation antenna 16 to combustion chamber 20.
λ/16≦×≦2λ/3 (Eq. 2)
Receiving antennas 52a and 52b are located on insulating layer 56 formed on the top of piston 23, i.e., the combustion-chamber-side surface of the zoning material. Receiving antennas 52a and 52b are electrically insulated from piston 23 using insulating layer 56, and are provided in an electrically floating state.
The number of receiving antennas 52 provided on the top of piston 23 as shown in
Regardless of the number of receiving antennas 52 on piston 23, the center of antenna 52 may be shifted from the center axis of piston 23. For example, the center of receiving antenna 52 may be shifted to the exhaust side from the center of piston 23, as shown in
Annular receiving antennas 52a and 52b do not have to be allocated concentrically. For example, the center of antenna 52b located inner side may be shifted toward intake-side opening 25a. In this case, the distance between the antennas 52a and 52b becomes shorter as approaching the intake-side opening 25a. This increases the strength of the electric field at intake-side opening 25a.
Here, the operation of control device 35 will be described. Control device 35 executes a first operation directing ignition device 12 to ignite the air-fuel mixture, and a second operation directing EM-wave-emitting device 13 to emit microwaves following the ignition of the air-fuel mixture in one combustion cycle for each combustion chamber 20.
In other words, control device 35 executes the first operation immediately prior to piston 23 reaching top dead center (TDC). Controller 35 outputs an ignition signal as the first operation.
As described above, a spark discharge occurs in the discharge gap of ignition plug 40 in ignition device 12 when an ignition signal is received. The air-fuel mixture is ignited by the spark discharge. When the air-fuel mixture is ignited, a flame grows from the igniting position of the air-fuel mixture in the center part of combustion chamber 20 to the wall face of cylinder 24.
Control device 35 executes the second operation after the ignition of the air-fuel mixture, i.e., at the start of the second half of the flame propagation. Control device 35 outputs an EM-wave-driving signal as the second operation.
EM-wave-emitting device 13 repeatedly outputs microwave pulses from radiating antenna 16 when the EM-wave-driving signal is received. Microwave pulses are emitted repetitively throughout the second half of the flame propagation.
The microwave pulses resonate in each receiving antenna 52. In the area close to the outer circumference of combustion chamber 20, where the two receiving antennas 52 are located, an intense electric field is formed during the second half of the flame propagation. The propagation speed of the flame increases due to absorption of the microwave radiation when the flame passes the intense electric field.
In this embodiment, an intense electric field is formed close to the outer circumference of combustion chamber 20 during flame propagation. This allows for an increase in the propagation speed of the flame close to the outer circumference of combustion chamber 20.
In the first modification, EM-wave-emitting device 13 is provided such that plasma is generated by microwave radiation emitted from radiation antenna 16. The energy per unit time of the microwave radiation from EM-wave-generating device 31 is set such that microwave plasma is generated near each receiving antenna 52 via absorption of the microwave radiation emitted from radiation antenna 16.
EM-wave-emitting device 13 continuously emits microwave pulses throughout the second half of the flame propagation period. Plasma is generated near each receiving antenna 52 during the second half of the flame propagation period. In the area where the plasma is generated, active species, such as OH radicals, are produced. The propagation speed of the flame thereby increases in this area.
EM-wave-emitting device 13 may repeatedly emit microwave pulses during the first half of the flame propagation period. In such a case, the microwave plasma is generated by the microwave radiation during the first half of the flame propagation period. The flame propagation speed in the area close to the circumference of combustion chamber 20 increases due to the production of active species in the first half of the flame propagation period.
Internal combustion engine 10 may have a discharge device so that discharge occurs close to the circumference of combustion chamber 20 in order to reduce the power of the microwave radiation emitted from radiation antenna 16. For example, the discharge device may cause the discharge by applying a high-voltage pulse between a pair of electrodes. In this case, one electrode (referred to as the first electrode) is located on cylinder head 22 and a second electrode is located on the upper surface of piston 23. The second electrode is located in the top portion of the convex portion of the top side of piston 23 so that the distance between the first and second electrodes may be reduced.
In the second modification, multiple receiving antennas 52 are located concentrically on the top surface of piston 23, as shown in
In the second modification, inner-side insulation layer 56b is laminated with second receiving antenna 52b, and therefore is thicker than outer-side insulation layer 56a, which is laminated with first receiving antenna 52a.
In the third modification, receiving antenna 52 is grounded via a diode, as shown in
The third modification allows inducing an ion of polarity opposite to second receiving antenna 52b, that is in a flame, due to fact the signal in grounded antenna 52b may be a DC signal. The propagation speed of the flame is thereby increased.
In the fourth modification, annular receiving antenna 52 is located in the inner part of gasket 18, as shown in
In the fifth modification, receiving antenna 52 is located on the inner side of a constricted flow area. The microwave plasma generated near receiving antenna 52 thereby moves inside due to the constricted flow. Activated species produced in the plasma area are thereby diffused.
In the sixth modification, receiving antenna 52 is located in insulating layer 56, as shown in
In the cross-sectional surface of insulating layer 56, where receiving antenna 52 is installed, coating layer 56a is formed from an insulating material. Receiving antenna 52 and supporting layer 56b are also formed from an insulating material and are stacked in sequence from the side of combustion chamber 20. Supporting layer 56 is laminated on a zoning material, such as pistons 23.
In the sixth modification, coating layer 56a is thinner than supporting layer 56b. This prevents a decrease in the electric field at the side of combustion chamber 23 when receiving antenna 52 is protected using the insulating material.
In the seventh modification, two receiving antennas 52 are installed on the top of piston 23, as shown in
In the eighth modification, insulation layer 56 is located in trench 70 formed on piston 23 (the zoning material) along the circumference of combustion chamber 20. As shown in
In the eighth modification, the distance A between the outer circumference of receiving antenna 52 and outer wall 122 of trench 70 is shorter than the distance B between the inner circumference of receiving antenna 52 and inner wall 121 of trench 70. This allows for an increase in the propagation speed of the flame front near the wall of combustion chamber 20 because the electric field is stronger at the outer side than the inner side of receiving antenna 52.
In the ninth modification, two ring-shaped receiving antennas 52 are located in ring-shaped insulation layer 56, which is laminated on piston 23 (the zoning material) at intervals in the thickness direction of insulation layer 56, as shown in
In insulation layer 56, two receiving antennas 52 are connected to each other, at least at one location, using pressure equalizing conductor 80, whereby conductor 80 equalizes the pressure at the connection. In the ninth modification, conductor 80 is located between two receiving antennas 52, at intervals of the quarter wavelength of the microwave radiation in the circumferential direction of receiving antenna 52.
Ring-shaped receiving antennas 52 may be allocated in gasket 18 in a multilayer configuration. Receiving antennas 52 are provided in the thickness direction of gasket 18, which is formed of insulating materials at intervals. Pressure equalizing conductor 80 may be also used in such a case.
In the tenth modification, annular receiving antenna 52 has a different cross-sectional area in the conducting material that constitutes receiving antenna 52 in the circumferential direction. In this modification, convex portion 120 is provided in receiving antenna 52 such that portion 120 protrudes toward piston 23 at regular intervals. The cross-sectional surface area of the conductor varies in convex portion 120. In receiving antenna 52, the thickness of convex portion 120 is large compared to the separation between convex portions 120. The tenth modification allows for a particular electric field distribution to form on receiving antenna 52 when microwave radiation is emitted from radiation antenna 16.
The cross-sectional surface area of the conductor may be altered by varying the width of receiving antenna 52. For example, receiving antenna 52 may be formed in a gear-like fashion when viewed from above. The cross-sectional surface area of the conductor may be varied by allocating disc portion 140 having a diameter larger than the width of adjacent portion 141 in receiving antenna 52, as shown in
In the eleventh modification, multiple curved portions 85 are formed on the outer circumference of annular receiving antennas 52 to concentrate the electric field, as shown in
In this modification, curved portions 85 are provided only at the sides of inlet opening 25. However, curved portions 85 may also be provided at other locations. For example, curved portions 85 may be provided on the inner side of ring shaped receiving antenna 52.
In the twelfth modification, receiving antenna 52 is provided in ceramic insulation material 90 laminated on the top surface of piston 23, for example, as shown in
Cushioning layer 95, which is softer than piston 23, may be installed between piston 23 and insulation material 90, as shown in
The annular antenna may be divided into lengths of half the wavelength of the microwave radiation, as shown in
When the frequency of the EM radiation emitted from radiation antenna 16 is 2.45 GHz, the wavelength (in vacuum) is λ=12.2 cm since the wavelength is obtained by dividing the light speed (3×108) by the frequency. Thus, the length of receiving antenna 52 should be multiples of 6.1 cm. When receiving antenna 52 is designed as an annular antenna, as shown in
Thus, receiving antennas with high sensitivity may be arranged at arbitrary radial locations when receiving antenna 52 is a multiple of half wavelengths of the microwave radiation, as shown in
One end of each receiving antenna 52 may be electrically connected to ground via switch 55, as shown in
In this example, one end of receiving antenna 52 is connected to the outer wall of piston 23 when switch 55 is closed. Antenna 52 is thereby grounded. In this case, the grounded part becomes the fixed end, and the other side becomes the floating end. In such a configuration, the sensitivity is a maximum when the length of the antenna is an odd multiple of the quarter wavelength. The length of receiving antenna 52 is half the wavelength of the microwave radiation; therefore, the induced current from the microwave radiation emitted from radiating antenna 16 is small in receiving antenna 52. Receiving antenna 52 is thereby switched off.
When switch 55 is closed, receiving antenna 52 becomes floating (i.e., electrically insulated from piston 23). Both sides of receiving antenna 52 thereby become floating ends. In this case, the receiving sensitivity becomes a maximum when the length of the antenna is a multiple of the half wavelength. Receiving antenna 52 switches on since the length of receiving antenna 52 is the half wavelength of the microwaves.
Receiving antenna 52 can therefore be switched by opening or closing switch 55.
The microwave radiation from antenna 16 is concentrated close to receiving antenna 52, which is switched on. The electric field therefore increases near the antenna. This allows control over the intensity of the electric field at an arbitrary location in the combustion chamber, and may therefore result in an enlargement of the plasma at an arbitrary position in the combustion chamber.
As shown in
Other embodiments may be contemplated.
Center electrode 40a of ignition plug 40 may also function as a radiation antenna. Center electrode 40a of ignition plug 40 is connected electrically with an output terminal of a mixing circuit. The mixing circuit receives a high-voltage pulse from ignition coil 14 and microwaves from EM-wave switch 32 from separate input terminals, and outputs both the high-voltage pulse and the microwaves from the same output terminal.
An annular radiation antenna 16 may be provided in gasket 18. An annular receiving antenna 52 may be provided on top of piston 23.
Receiving antenna 52 may be provided on the inner-wall surface of cylinder 24.
In the above embodiment, the following steps may be executed in sequence to fix a heat-resistant dielectric substance, such as a ceramic material, on which receiving antenna 52 is provided. (i) Spraying an organic mask onto receiving antenna 52; (ii) thermal spraying of aluminum toward the dielectric substance; (iii) peeling this aluminum layer on receiving antenna 52 together with the organic mask; and (iv) fixing the dielectric substance to piston 23 via the aluminum layer. In this case, the planar form of receiving antenna 52 and the dielectric substance may be annular or such a shape whereby the antenna is curved with a small radius of curvature.
Radiation antenna 16 may be termed the “first antenna” and receiving antenna 52 can be termed the “second antenna”.
As described above, the present invention is useful for an internal combustion engine that promotes the combustion of an air-fuel mixture using EM radiation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2011-157285 | Jul 2011 | JP | national |
2011-175393 | Aug 2011 | JP | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2012/068009 | Jul 2012 | US |
Child | 14156061 | US |