Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6449940
-
Patent Number
6,449,940
-
Date Filed
Tuesday, December 26, 200024 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, September 17, 200222 years ago
-
Inventors
-
-
Examiners
- Denion; Thomas
- Trieu; T B
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 123 45 R
- 123 1974
- 123 1973
- 123 78 F
- 123 1971
- 074 55
- 060 3963
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
The internal combustion engine comprises at least one combustion chamber for burning a fuel in timed explosions accompanied by formation of a combustion gas, at least one expansion chamber which is connected with the combustion chamber and separate from the combustion chamber and which has a piston for converting energy of the combustion gas into mechanical energy or work, and a cam gear unit by which a drive shaft can be driven by the piston and which has a cam disk and associated thrust member, wherein the thrust member can be lifted from the cam disk for carrying out irregular engine cycles independent from a continuous rotation of the cam disk, including a pausing of the piston of the expansion chamber at its top dead center.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The invention is directed to an internal combustion engine with at least one combustion chamber for burning a fuel in timed explosions accompanied by formation of a combustion gas, wherein the combustion chamber is connected with at least one expansion chamber which is separate from the combustion chamber and which has a piston for converting energy of the combustion gas into mechanical energy or work. Further, the invention is directed to a method for operating an internal combustion engine of this type.
2. Description of the Related Art
An engine of the kind mentioned above is known from EP 957 250 A2. The advantage of an engine of this type with separate combustion chamber and expansion chamber is that the conditions for the combustion of the fuel and for the expansion of the combustion gas formed during combustion can be predetermined independently from one another, so that a high degree of efficiency can be achieved. A further improvement in efficiency compared with conventional two-stroke, four-stroke or diesel engines is achieved in this known engine in that, for each explosion stroke, the combustion chamber is filled with a constant, optimal charge of combustible mixture. To control the power output of the engine, the charging of the combustion chamber is not changed; rather, idle strokes are also inserted between working strokes in which the combustible mixture is ignited in the combustion chamber. There is no ignition of the mixture in these idle strokes; the mixture remains unburned in the combustion chamber. In order to make it possible to transmit the drive output of an engine controlled in this manner to a drive shaft, for example, of a wheel in a motor vehicle, relatively complicated steps are necessary in EP 957 250 A2. In an embodiment example, the piston of the expansion chamber is connected with a connecting rod which drives the drive shaft via an automatic transmission which is controlled in accordance with the required output and the required torque. In this regard, there is considerable expenditure on control and, moreover, lateral forces are exerted on the piston by the crankshaft, so that oil lubrication of the piston is required. In another embodiment example in EP 957 250 A2, the piston of the expansion chamber advantageously remains in an idle stroke at its top dead center. A hydraulic transmission device which, again, is relatively complicated is necessary for transmitting the drive output.
OBJECT AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is the primary object of the invention to enable simplified transmission of the output of the piston of the expansion chamber to a drive shaft in an internal combustion engine of the type mentioned in the beginning, wherein idle strokes or stroke pauses in which the piston of the expansion chamber remains in its top dead center can be inserted in addition to working strokes in order to control the engine (preferably with constant loading of the combustion chamber) such that efficiency is optimized. This highly complex problem is solved according to the invention in a surprisingly simple manner in that a drive shaft can be driven by the piston of the expansion chamber via a cam drive or cam gear unit having a cam disk and associated thrust member, wherein the thrust member can be lifted from the cam disk for implementing irregular engine cycles independent from a continuous rotation of the cam disk, including a pausing of the piston of the expansion chamber at its top dead center.
Cam gear units have a cam disk with a correspondingly shaped circumferential contour and (as driving or driven element) a thrust member contacting the cam disk. A cam gear unit of this kind enables a simple separation of the piston of the expansion chamber from the drive shaft during an idle stroke or stroke pause when a running face of a cam disk is provided for the thrust member only on one side and the thrust member remains raised from the cam disk during the idle stroke or stroke pause. The thrust member is advantageously formed by the free end of the piston rod which, for this purpose, is advantageously constructed as a roller tappet acting on a cam disk arranged at the drive shaft. The use of a cam disk also makes it possible to operate the internal combustion engine without oil lubrication for the piston (as will be explained in more detail).
For internal combustion engines which do not belong to the generic type because they do not have an expansion chamber that is separate from a combustion chamber but, rather, have a work piston that is arranged directly in the combustion chamber, the use of special cam gear units has already been suggested in particular, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,813,372. However, this cam gear unit is used for other purposes and not to make it possible to add idle strokes between two explosion strokes; idle strokes of this type cannot be carried out at all in this kind of engine. Further, in these internal combustion engines, the thrust members of the cam gear units are positively guided because of the cam disks acting on both sides of the thrust members and it is not possible to raise the thrust member from the cam disk. Since a separate compression stroke must be carried out in these engines, this positive guiding of the thrust rod is required.
In a preferred embodiment example of the invention, a precompressor device which is separated from the combustion chamber is provided for precompression of air to be introduced into the combustion chamber. Using separate precompressor devices in this way in timed internal combustion engines is already known, for example, from DE 32 14 516 A1. In a particularly preferred embodiment example, the piston rod of the piston of the precompressor device is connected with the piston of the expansion chamber by a shared piston rod.
Further, at least one injection nozzle opening into the expansion chamber is advantageously provided for injecting a coolant liquid to introduce an implosion stroke following the explosion stroke. The energy inherent in the combustion gas can be better exploited by an implosion stroke of this kind so that a further increase in efficiency is achieved. The energy guided off in the implosion stroke is advantageously utilized for precompression by transmission to the precompressor device.
Further advantages and details of the invention are explained in the following with reference to an embodiment example of the invention shown in the drawing.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
shows a schematic top view of an internal combustion engine according to the invention;
FIG. 2
shows a section along line A—A of
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 3
shows a partial section along line B—B of
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 4
shows a partial section along line C—C of
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 5
shows a schematic view of a cam disk of the cam gear unit; and
FIG. 6
shows a schematic view of an embodiment form in which a plurality of units, each with an expansion chamber and a connecting rod, act on a shared cam disk.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The embodiment example of an internal combustion engine according to the invention which is shown schematically has combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ which are connected, via controllable internal combustion chamber outlet valves
2
,
2
′, with an expansion chamber
3
which is formed by the cylinder space of a piston-cylinder unit
5
having a piston
4
. An internal combustion engine according to the invention can also have a plurality of expansion chambers which are connected with one or more combustion chambers.
The combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ are surrounded by thermal insulation
6
in order to prevent heat radiation from the walls
7
of the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ as far as possible. Therefore, in continuous operation of the internal combustion engine the walls
7
of the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ are heated to very high temperatures above 700° C. The thermal insulation of the combustion chambers could also be carried out in that the combustion chambers themselves are made from a thermally insulating material of corresponding thickness, for example, a ceramic. The fuel is injected directly into the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′. For this purpose, double nozzles
8
,
8
′ are provided and are used not only to inject fuel but also serve to inject water. The spray characteristic of the double nozzles
8
,
8
′ is such that the fuel fans out so that the walls
7
of the combustion chambers
1
,
1
are wetted by fuel as well as possible and over the greatest possible area when fuel is injected. An electromagnetic switching valve
9
is provided for controlling the fuel injection, and a pressure accumulator
10
for fuel in the form of an air vessel which is acted upon by a fuel pump
11
which, in turn, conveys fuel from a tank
12
is connected to this electromagnetic switching valve
9
. The reference switching time for the electromagnetic switching valve
9
is in the range of one millisecond. Such electromagnetic switching valves are known in motor vehicles (for example, K-Jettronic or Common Rail).
Spark plugs
13
,
13
′ are provided for cold-starting the internal combustion engine. As soon as the walls
7
of the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ are sufficiently heated and autoignition of the injected fuel occurs (at temperatures over approximately 600° C.), the spark plugs
13
,
13
′ are no longer fired. Because of its autoignition, the fuel is finely atomized by the injection nozzles at high pressure and introduced into the combustion chamber only at the moment of ignition. When the individual fuel droplets impinge, they ignite at the burner walls with flame centers around each individual droplet.
Because of the flame center occurring around each individual droplet as a result of the multiple surface ignitions, there is a pronounced knock of the engine, i.e., the combustion proceeds with extreme turbulence and at high speed. In contrast to conventional internal combustion engines in which this effect is extremely undesirable (prevention through antiknock agent and limited compression ratios), this type of combustion is very advantageous in the engine according to the invention since, in particular, the turbulence of the combustion with supersonic gas eddies leads to an intensive mixing of the mixture during burnup. This already makes possible air factors of lambda 1.05 for approximately CO-free and HC-free burnup, wherein values far below the exhaust gas value of an Otto engine with catalytic converter can be achieved. Due to the fact that the gas transfer caused by pressure is faster than the flame speed during bumup, the combustion chamber outlet valve
2
remains closed until complete combustion of the mixture because otherwise unburned mixture reaches the work chamber
3
and no longer ignites therein.
In order to minimize thermal losses in the piston-cylinder unit
5
also as far as possible, the insulation
6
also extends over the cylinder head
14
. In addition, the piston
4
is provided with insulation
15
. Only the cylinder wall
16
is not thermally insulated in order to prevent excessive thermal loading of the piston seal
17
. This piston seal
17
is made of plastic, preferably graphite-Teflon, which is resistant to continuous temperatures up to approximately 250° C. This seal
17
is water-lubricated and one or more coolant water spray nozzles which are arranged in the piston rod
18
and whose function will be described more exactly in the following cause an additional cooling and a lubrication of the piston seal
17
.
In order to reduce NOx emission of the internal combustion engine, water is injected into the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ along with the fuel during the explosion stroke. This water injection is likewise carried out via double nozzles
8
,
8
′. For this purpose, each of the double nozzles
8
,
8
′ has a central inner nozzle for injecting the fuel and an outer nozzle which surrounds this inner nozzle annularly for injection of water. The nozzle opening of the inner fuel nozzle and the nozzle opening of the water nozzle are closed in pressureless state and only open when these nozzles are acted upon by a high pressure such as is known in conventional diesel nozzles. At its circumferential wall, the outer water nozzle has a water inlet and a water outlet located opposite to the latter, wherein coolant water flows through this water nozzle also in the closed state of its nozzle opening, so that the inner fuel nozzle is also cooled and no fuel can evaporate when the walls
7
of the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ are hot but no explosion stroke is carried out and the engine is at rest. The flow of water through the outer water nozzle of the double nozzle
8
,
8
′ is caused by the pump
19
which pumps water from a storage vessel
20
. An electromagnetic valve
21
is provided in the return of the outer water nozzle of the double nozzle
8
,
8
′. As soon as this is closed, a pressure builds up in the outer water nozzle of the double nozzle
8
,
8
′ and water is injected into the combustion chamber
1
,
1
′. When the valve
21
is open, the water flows back to the storage vessel
20
via the spray head
22
and the air intake head
23
whose function will be described in more detail in the following.
The piston
4
of the expansion chamber
3
is connected with a precompressor device which is formed by a piston-cylinder unit
25
. The piston
24
of this piston-cylinder unit and the piston
4
of the expansion chamber
3
have a shared piston rod
18
. During a downward movement of the piston
4
which is transmitted via the piston rod
18
to a downward movement of the piston
24
, air is sucked into the cylinder space of the piston-cylinder unit
25
via the check valve
26
. The quantity of air sucked in before reaching the bottom dead center of the piston
4
can be changed by means of the throttle
27
which is adjustable via the actuating motor
28
. In a subsequent upward movement of piston
4
and piston
24
of the precompressor unit, which piston
24
is connected to piston
4
, the sucked in air is pressed into the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ via the check valves and is precompressed therein.
The energy of the hot combustion gas which is formed in the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ and which drives the piston
4
in the expansion chamber
3
is converted into mechanical energy of the drive shaft
32
by means of a cam gear unit
31
which can be driven by the piston
4
. The thrust member
30
of the cam gear unit is formed by the free end of the piston rod
18
of the piston
4
which, in the present embodiment example, forms the shared piston rod of the piston
4
of the expansion chamber and of the piston
24
of the precompressor unit. The thrust member
30
is constructed as a roller tappet, wherein a wheel or a roller
33
is rotatably mounted via a ball bearing at the free end of the piston rod
18
. The thrust member
30
acts on a cam disk
31
arranged at the drive shaft
32
and the piston rod
18
is mounted outside the piston-cylinder unit
5
in a rolling bearing
34
which also receives the lateral forces exerted on the thrust member
30
. Accordingly, no important lateral forces are exerted on the upper part of the piston rod
18
and on the pistons
4
and
24
arranged at the latter, and simple O-shaped plastic seals
35
,
17
,
37
are sufficient for additional supporting and sealing of these parts. Oil lubrication of these parts is not required.
In the shown embodiment example, the cam disk
31
has two symmetrically formed cams
38
along its circumference. The part of the cam disk
31
contacting the roller
33
during the downward movement of the piston
4
forms a first running surface
39
of the cam disk
31
. Further, a second running surface
40
is preferably provided at the cam disk
31
from which the piston
4
can be restored to its top dead center. However, as will be described below, the force exerted on the piston
4
and piston
24
, respectively, via the second running surface
40
and thrust member
30
is reinforced in the present embodiment example of the invention by the force acting on the piston
4
in the implosion stroke and can even be replaced by it.
A work cycle of the embodiment example of an internal combustion engine according to the invention will be described more exactly in the following:
In continuous operation of the internal combustion engine, during which the walls
7
of the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ have a high temperature, as was described, the ignition of the fuel injected into the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ which are charged with fresh air is carried out by autoignition at the walls
7
. The spark plugs
13
,
13
′ are utilized for ignition only in the startup phase. The injection and ignition of the fuel is carried out at a point in time shortly before the first running surface
39
reaches the roller
33
. During the next millisecond, the combustion spreads in the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ and is essentially concluded when the tip of the cam
38
or the start of the running surface
39
reaches the roller
33
. The time period required for complete combustion depends, among other things, on the utilized fuel, the precompression of the fresh air in the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ and the burner shape and is, for example, about 3 milliseconds. Accordingly, in order to determine the correct injection and ignition times, the speed and the angular position of the shaft
32
must be determined by suitable sensors. Before the internal combustion engine is started, the cam disk
31
is brought into a position by the electric motor
41
so that the roller
33
contacts precisely the start of the first running surface
39
in order to ensure the correct rotating direction of the drive shaft
32
when starting. After the start of the internal combustion engine, the electric motor
41
acts as a generator for supplying energy to the electric components of the vehicle and for charging the vehicle battery.
In addition to injecting water into the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ during the explosion stroke together with the fuel for reducing NOx emissions, as was already mentioned, additional water is preferably sprayed into the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ after complete burnup of the water-fuel mixture at about 1500° C. for further reduction of the temperature of the combustion gas. Accordingly, the temperature of the hot combustion gas is additionally reduced to below 1000° C., preferably to below 900° C.; however, the required temperature of the walls
7
of the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ is retained for autoignition of the fuel. Therefore, no change in exergy occurs in the hot combustion gas. But after the expansion, described below, of the gas-vapor mixture in the expansion chamber
3
accompanied by performance of mechanical work, this gas-vapor mixture only has temperatures of less than 300° C. Accordingly, all seals can be formed of maintenance-free plastic and maintenance-intensive stop seals can be dispensed with.
When the roller
33
contacts the start of the running surface
39
and the combustion in the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ is essentially completely terminated, the combustion chamber outlet valves
2
,
2
′ are opened and the hot combustion gas which is under pressure flows into the expansion chamber
3
and propels the piston
4
downward. The piston performs work against the drive shaft
32
via the cam gear
30
,
31
. By suitable selection of the quantity of injected fuel and precompressed fresh air and with corresponding dimensioning of the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ in relation to the expansion chamber
3
, the combustion gas has expanded to roughly atmospheric pressure when the piston
4
has reached the bottom dead center UT. The volume of the expansion chamber
3
is essentially greater than, preferably more than twenty-times greater than, the total volume of combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ communicating with the expansion chamber
3
.
The hot combustion gas preferably flows out of the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ into the expansion chamber
3
so as to be throttled. For this purpose, the combustion chamber outlet valves
2
,
2
′ are opened gradually rather than suddenly with maximum speed. The line cross sections between the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ and the expansion chamber
3
can also be relatively small. The advantage in the hot combustion gases flowing out in a throttled manner is the reduced pressure peaks acting on the piston
4
and all parts connected therewith. Since the throttling constitutes a rubbing of the gas, this results in heating of the gas. This increase in the temperature of the expansion gas leads to an increase in its volume and pressure. However, this gas has not yet performed work in the internal combustion engine according to the invention when flowing out of the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′, so that the exergy of the gas is not changed by this throttling effect, i.e., no losses occur.
The explosion stroke is accordingly terminated and an implosion stroke is subsequently introduced in the present embodiment example of the invention, during which implosion stroke the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ are scavenged and refilled and precompression is carried out. For this purpose, the cooling water injection nozzles
42
(a plurality of injection nozzles arranged annularly along the circumference of the piston rod
18
or an individual annular injection nozzle) are triggered by the actuation of the electromagnetic valve
43
. The cooling water injection nozzles
42
are fed from a pressure accumulator
45
in the form of an air vessel which is acted upon by a pump
44
. The pump
44
draws its water from the storage vessel
20
which was already mentioned. The coolant water is sprayed in under high pressure, wherein the spray water jet is fanned out in the circumferential direction of the cylinder wall
16
and is oriented upward at an acute angle relative to the piston
4
. Excess coolant water encountering the cylinder wall
16
can accordingly exit in the circumferentially extending water collecting groove
47
. Due to the fact that coolant liquid is sprayed in, the temperature of the hot explosion gas is reduced suddenly and an underpressure or negative pressure is built up, wherein the pressure in the expansion chamber is approximately 0.2 bar at the start of the implosion stroke. Because of this negative pressure, the piston
4
is pulled upward in the direction of the top dead center OT. The force exerted on it is transmitted via the piston rod
35
to the piston
24
of the precompressor device. The piston
24
moving upward presses the fresh air stored in the cylinder space of the piston-cylinder unit
25
into the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ via the check valves
29
,
29
′, so that the combustion gas is initially purged from the latter and is replaced by fresh air. At the conclusion of the charge exchange, which is also assisted by the negative pressure in the expansion chamber
3
, the combustion chamber outlet valves
2
,
2
′ are closed and increased pressure is subsequently built up in the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′. This pressure preferably ranges between 5 bar and 15 bar and is particularly preferably between 7 bar and 11 bar.
The spraying in of coolant liquid via the injection nozzles
42
is carried out only in the first phase of the upward movement of the piston
4
and is stopped before the injected coolant liquid would impinge on the hot cylinder head
14
. The injected coolant liquid also serves to cool the cylinder wall
16
and to lubricate the piston seal
36
.
A spring
48
which pretensions the piston
24
in the direction of its top dead center and is tensioned during the explosion stroke can be provided to reinforce the force exerted on the piston
24
of the precompressor unit by the implosion of the hot combustion gas. The quantity of fresh air with which the piston-cylinder unit
25
is charged during the explosion stroke and which is subsequently pressed into the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ is controlled by the choke
27
. In this embodiment example, in which the piston
24
is pretensioned via the spring
48
, the thrust member
30
is normally lifted from the respective second running surface
40
at the cam disk
31
during the implosion stroke. Corresponding to the movement of the piston
4
from the top dead center to the bottom dead center which is faster in the explosion stroke than in the implosion stroke because of the negative pressure from the bottom dead center to the top dead center, the first running surface
39
of the cam disk
31
extends over about 40° to 70° of the circumference of the cam disk, while the second running surface
40
extends over about 110° to 140°. This second running surface
40
is provided here only as a safety device in case no cooling liquid is injected for triggering an implosion stroke due to a fault. The return speed of the piston
24
is measured electronically to regulate the throttle
27
. It must be ensured that piston
24
or piston
4
has been braked precisely to a speed of zero up to the top dead center and, on the other hand, that piston
24
or piston
4
has just reached the top dead center. If an air cushion remained in the cylinder space of the piston-cylinder unit
25
, this would exert a downwardly directed force on this piston
24
immediately at the conclusion of the upward movement of the piston
24
, i.e., in some cases before the opening of the combustion chamber outlet valves
2
,
2
′ in the subsequent explosion stroke.
In order to minimize the time for damaging heat losses due to convection, the first running surface
39
,
39
′ is constructed more steeply than the second running surface
40
,
40
′.
Alternatively, however, the spring
48
can also be dispensed with. In this case, the upward movement of the piston
24
is reinforced by the cam disk
31
according to the standard. A cam disk
31
′ constructed in a manner corresponding to
FIG. 5
is preferred for this purpose. In this case, two cams, each with a first and second running surface
39
′,
40
′, are provided. The first running surface
39
′ again has an angular range of approximately 40° to 70° of the circumference of the cam disk, while the angular range of the second running surface
40
′ is somewhere between 50° and 80°. The piston
4
or piston
24
is accordingly guided back in a positive or compulsory manner from the bottom dead center UT to the top dead center OT, wherein this process is still, as before, reinforced by the force exerted on the piston
4
by means of the implosion. In order to prevent the connecting rod
30
from lifting off the running surface
40
′ at low rotational speeds also (for example, at speeds below 30 km/h in motor vehicles), the injection of the coolant water is carried out in a throttled manner at these slow rotational speeds, so that the negative pressure forming in the implosion stroke is built up more gradually. The precompression pressure selected in this case is high enough to brake the return of the piston
24
also at the maximum speed of the engine to the top dead center to zero. Accordingly, there is no longer a need for electronic measurement of the return speed or the associated regulating element in the form of the choke
27
. In the cam disk in
FIG. 5
, there is a larger area
49
with constant radius between the successive running surfaces
40
′ and
39
′ in which the pistons
4
and
24
are at their top dead centers, so that the ignition time for the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ receives a certain tolerance period and, in particular, a sufficient period of time is provided for complete adiabatic burnup of the mixture in the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′. The pause at the top dead center OT can be adjusted over the length of the area
49
depending on the combustion velocity of the utilized fuel.
In principle, it would be conceivable and possible to omit entirely an injection of coolant water for triggering an implosion stroke, wherein pistons
4
and
24
are displaced from their bottom dead center to the top dead center exclusively by the force exerted on the thrust member
30
via the running surface
40
,
40
′ of the cam disk
31
,
31
′. Naturally, a certain reduction in efficiency of the internal combustion engine is accordingly taken into account.
On its path from the bottom dead center to the top dead center, the piston
4
of the expansion chamber
3
further compresses the combustion gas which is located in the expansion chamber
3
and which is initially under negative pressure in case coolant liquid is sprayed in. During the movement of the piston
4
from its bottom dead center to the top dead center, the ring
51
of the expansion chamber outlet valve is displaced upward. For this purpose, a plurality of restoring springs
52
acting upward on the ring
51
are provided at the top of the cylinder head
41
along the circumference of the ring
51
(see FIG.
4
). These restoring springs
52
pull the ring
51
into its upper position in which an annular outlet channel
53
is released when the tappets
55
arranged in the hydraulic cylinders
54
are not under pressure load by the hydraulic liquid. A plurality of hydraulic cylinders
54
are likewise arranged on the top side of the cylinder head
14
along the circumference of the ring
51
. O-rings
56
,
57
which run alongside the ring
51
are used to seal the ring
51
. The seal
67
is provided for sealing the outlet channel
53
in the bottom position of the ring
51
. The ring
51
has a wedge-shaped taper at its lower edge to increase the sealing pressure.
When the ring
51
is displaced into its upper position releasing the outlet channel
53
, the expansion chamber outlet valve
50
is still closed by the O-ring
58
which surrounds the outlet channel
53
on the outer side and forms a check valve. When the pressure in the expansion chamber
3
has increased above atmospheric pressure during the upward movement of the piston
4
in the direction of the top dead center, the O-ring
59
releases the outlet channel
53
and the cooled combustion gas, together with the coolant liquid contained therein, is pressed out in the exhaust pipe line
59
. The exhaust gas-steam mixture is pressed into the spray head
22
through which it is sprayed into the air intake funnel
23
. In so doing, the exhaust gas-steam mixture is mixed with surrounding air by a factor of 1:10 to 1:25 and is suddenly cooled to about 30° C. The cooled water precipitates in the precipitator
60
. The fresh air is sucked in by means of a suction fan
61
arranged downstream. The exhaust gas-cooling air mixture is separated via an exhaust
62
, while the precipitated coolant water is returned to the storage vessel
20
.
When the piston
4
has reached its top dead center, a working stroke of the internal combustion engine is concluded and the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ are filled with precompressed fresh air. Depending on the instantaneous output requirement, the next working stroke of the internal combustion engine can either be initiated (by injection of fuel into the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′) in that the combustion has concluded at a time at which the thrust member
30
has just reached the next first running surface
39
,
39
′ or a stroke pause of varying length can be inserted. During this stroke pause, the piston
4
of the expansion chamber remains at its top dead center and the thrust element
30
is lifted from the cam disk
31
, while the cams
38
of the cam disk move past the thrust element
30
freely below the latter. The next working stroke of the internal combustion engine is introduced by injecting fuel into the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ at a time when the thrust element
30
is located exactly at the start of a first running surface
39
,
39
′ of the cam disk
31
at the conclusion of combustion when the combustion chamber outlet valves
2
,
2
′ are opened.
After the internal combustion engine has been stationary for a longer period of time, the above-atmospheric pressure of the fresh air located in the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ has evaporated (due to persistent leakage in the valves). In this case, before starting the engine, a precompression of fresh air in the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′ is carried out by the pump
64
driven by the motor
63
via lines with check valves
66
,
66
′. Further, the motor
41
brings the cam disk
31
into the correct position in which the roller
33
is located at the start of a first running surface
39
,
39
′. Subsequently, fuel is injected into the combustion chambers and the mixture is ignited by the spark plugs
13
,
13
′.
Instead of an individual unit
65
comprising the combustion chambers
1
,
1
′, expansion chamber
3
with piston
4
, precompressor device and thrust element
30
, it is also possible to provide two or more units of this kind which are controlled in a corresponding relationship to one another and act on the same cam disk or on a plurality of cam disks
31
. For vibration-free running, units of this type are advantageously provided in pairs so as to work in opposite directions. Gas movements and mass movements accordingly cancel each other out.
FIG. 6
shows a schematic view of an embodiment example in which four such units
65
act on an individual cam disk.
In the embodiment example shown in the drawing, the cam disk
31
has two cams
38
. In principle, it would also be conceivable and possible to provide one cam
38
or more than two cams
38
of this kind.
In the shown embodiment example, the piston rod
18
is oriented at right angles to the drive shaft
32
, In principle, it would also be conceivable and possible to provide the piston rod
18
and drive shaft
32
with a parallel orientation and to provide the drive shaft
32
with a cam disk which is formed for a thrust element acting in axial direction of the drive shaft
32
.
While the foregoing description and drawings represent the present invention, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that various changes may be made without departing from the true spirit and scope of the present invention.
REFERENCE NUMBERS
1
,
1
′ combustion chamber
2
,
2
′ combustion chamber outlet valve
3
expansion chamber
4
piston
5
piston-cylinder unit
6
thermal insulation
7
wall
8
,
8
′ double nozzle
9
switching valve
10
pressure accumulator
11
fuel pump
12
tank
—
13
′ spark plug
14
cylinder head
15
insulation
16
cylinder wall
17
piston seal
18
piston rod
19
pump
20
storage vessel
21
valve
22
spray head
23
air intake funnel
24
piston
25
piston-cylinder unit
26
check valve
27
throttle
28
actuating motor
29
,
29
′ check valve
30
thrust member
31
cam disk
32
drive shaft
33
roller
34
rolling bearing
35
plastic seal
37
plastic seal
38
cam
39
,
39
′ first running surface
40
,
40
′ second running surface
41
electric motor
42
coolant water injection nozzle
43
valve
44
pump
45
pressure accumulator
47
water collecting groove
48
spring
49
area
50
expansion chamber outlet valve
51
ring
52
restoring spring
53
outlet channel
54
hydraulic cylinder
55
tappet
56
O-ring
57
O-ring
58
O-ring
59
exhaust line
60
precipitator
61
suction fan
62
exhaust
63
motor
64
pump
65
unit
66
,
66
′ check valve
67
seal
Claims
- 1. An internal combustion engine comprising:at least one combustion chamber for burning a fuel in timed explosions accompanied by formation of a combustion gas; at least one expansion chamber which is connected with the combustion chamber and separate from the combustion chamber and which has a piston for converting energy of the combustion gas into mechanical energy or work; and a cam gear unit by which a drive shaft is driven by the piston and which has a cam disk and associated thrust member, the thrust member being lifted from the cam disk; wherein when stroke pauses without ignition of fuel in the combustion chamber are inserted depending on the instantaneous output requirement, the piston of the expansion chamber remains at a top dead center and the thrust member of the cam gear unit remains lifted from the cam disk of the cam gear unit and the cam disk rotates past the thrust member in an unimpeded manner.
- 2. The internal combustion engine according to claim 1, wherein the thrust member of the cam gear unit which acts on a cam disk arranged at the drive shaft is formed by the free end of the piston rod of the piston of the expansion chamber or by a part attached thereto and is constructed as a roller tappet.
- 3. The internal combustion engine according to claim 1, wherein the cam disk of the cam gear unit has two cams along its circumference.
- 4. The internal combustion engine according to claim 1, wherein a precompressor device which is separated from the combustion chamber is provided for precompression of air to be introduced into the combustion chamber.
- 5. The internal combustion engine according to claim 4, wherein the precompressor device is formed by at least one piston-cylinder unit whose piston communicates mechanically with piston of the expansion chamber and can be driven by a force acting on the piston of the expansion chamber.
- 6. The internal combustion engine according to claim 5, wherein the piston of the precompressor device is pretensioned by a spring in the position of the top dead center.
- 7. The internal combustion engine according to claim 1, wherein at least one injection nozzle opening into the expansion chamber is provided for injecting a coolant liquid to introduce an implosion stroke following the explosion stroke, which injection nozzle is preferably arranged in the shared piston rod of the piston of the expansion chamber and of the piston of the precompressor device.
- 8. The internal combustion engine according to claim 1, wherein the piston rod of the piston of the expansion chamber is mounted via a rolling bearing.
- 9. The internal combustion engine according to claim 1, wherein the cam disk has a first running surface extending over 40° to 70° of the circumference of the cam disk for driving the cam disk by the thrust member.
- 10. The internal combustion engine according to claim 9, wherein the cam disk has a second running surface for restoring the piston of the expansion chamber to the top dead center, which second running surface extends over 50° to 140°.
- 11. The internal combustion engine according to claim 9, wherein the cam disk has a second running surface for restoring the piston of the expansion chamber to the top dead center, which second running surface extends over 50° to 80°.
- 12. The internal combustion engine according to claim 10, wherein the first running surface is constructed more steeply than the second running surface.
- 13. The internal combustion engine according to claim 1, wherein the cam disk has an area with a constant radius in which the piston is located at its top dead center, wherein the length of this area corresponds at least to the time required for the complete burnup of the mixture in the combustion chamber at maximum rotational speed of the engine.
- 14. The internal combustion engine according to claim 1, wherein a plurality of pistons are mounted in expansion chambers and act on the same cam disk or on different cam disks arranged at the same drive shaft.
- 15. The internal combustion engine according to claim 14, wherein pistons are provided in pairs so as to work in opposite directions.
- 16. A method for operating an internal combustion engine, including the steps of:burning a fuel in at least one combustion chamber in timed explosions accompanied by formation of a combustion gas; letting the combustion gas expand into an expansion chamber that is separate from the combustion chamber, the combustion gas driving a piston in the combustion chamber, the piston driving a drive shaft by a cam gear unit that includes a cam disk and associated thrust member, the thrust member being lifted from the cam disk; and inserting stroke pauses without ignition of fuel in the combustion chamber, wherein during the stroke pauses the piston of the expansion chamber remains at a top dead center and the thrust member of the cam gear unit remains lifted from the cam disk of the cam gear unit and the cam disk rotates past the thrust member in an unimpeded manner.
- 17. The method according to claim 16, wherein identical amounts of fuel are introduced into the combustion chamber for carrying out individual explosion strokes.
- 18. The method according to claim 16, wherein the fuel in the combustion chamber is ignited at a time such that, after the fuel in the combustion chamber is completely burned up, the cam disk is disposed at the precise angular position suitable for the driving of the cam disk by the thrust member, whereupon a combustion chamber outlet valve is opened.
- 19. The method according to claim 16, wherein the the combustion chamber outlet valve is opened in a delayed manner at the start of the expansion stroke of the piston, wherein the combustion gas flows out of the combustion chamber into the expansion chamber in throttled manner.
- 20. An internal combustion engine comprising:at least one combustion chamber for burning a fuel in timed explosions accompanied by formation of a combustion gas; at least one expansion chamber which is connected with the combustion chamber and separate from the combustion chamber and which has a piston for converting energy of the combustion gas into mechanical energy or work; and a cam gear unit by which a drive shaft is driven by the piston and which has a cam disk and associated thrust member; said thrust member being lifted from the cam disk for implementing irregular engine cycles independent from a continuous rotation of the cam disk, including a pausing of the piston of the expansion chamber at a top dead center; wherein a precompressor device which is separated from the combustion chamber is provided for precompression of air to be introduced into the combustion chamber.
- 21. The internal combustion engine according to claim 20, wherein the precompressor device is formed by at least one piston-cylinder unit whose piston communicates mechanically with piston of the expansion chamber and is driven by a force acting on the piston of the expansion chamber.
- 22. The internal combustion engine according to claim 21, wherein the piston of the precompressor device is pretensioned by a spring in the position of the top dead center.
- 23. An internal combustion engine comprising:at least one combustion chamber for burning a fuel in timed explosions accompanied by formation of a combustion gas; at least one expansion chamber which is connected with the combustion chamber and separate from the combustion chamber and which has a piston for converting energy of the combustion gas into mechanical energy or work; and a cam gear unit by which a drive shaft is driven by the piston and which has a cam disk and associated thrust member; said thrust member being lifted from the cam disk for implementing irregular engine cycles independent from a continuous rotation of the cam disk, including a pausing of the piston of the expansion chamber at a top dead center; wherein at least one injection nozzle opening into the expansion chamber is provided for injecting a coolant liquid to introduce an implosion stroke following the explosion stroke, which injection nozzle is preferably arranged in the shared piston rod of the piston of the expansion chamber and of the piston of the precompressor device.
- 24. An internal combustion engine comprising:at least one combustion chamber for burning a fuel in timed explosions accompanied by formation of a combustion gas; at least one expansion chamber which is connected with the combustion chamber and separate from the combustion chamber and which has a piston for converting energy of the combustion gas into mechanical energy or work; and a cam gear unit by which a drive shaft is driven by the piston and which has a cam disk and associated thrust member; said thrust member being lifted from the cam disk for implementing irregular engine cycles independent from a continuous rotation of the cam disk, including a pausing of the piston of the expansion chamber at a top dead center; wherein the piston rod of the piston of the expansion chamber is mounted via a rolling bearing.
- 25. An internal combustion engine comprising:at least one combustion chamber for burning a fuel in timed explosions accompanied by formation of a combustion gas; at least one expansion chamber which is connected with the combustion chamber and separate from the combustion chamber and which has a piston for converting energy of the combustion gas into mechanical energy or work; and a cam gear unit by which a drive shaft is driven by the piston and which has a cam disk and associated thrust member; said thrust member being lifted from the cam disk for implementing irregular engine cycles independent from a continuous rotation of the cam disk, including a pausing of the piston of the expansion chamber at a top dead center; wherein the cam disk has an area with a constant radius in which the piston is located at the top dead center, wherein the length of this area corresponds at least to the time required for the complete burnup of the mixture in the combustion chamber at maximum rotational speed of the engine.
- 26. A method for operating an in terminal combustion engine, including the steps of:igniting fuel in a combustion chamber; driving a drive shaft by a cam gear unit, the cam gear unit including a cam disk and a thrust member; inserting idle strokes or stroke pauses without ignition of fuel in the combustion chamber, in which a piston of an expansion chamber remains at a top dead center and the thrust member of the cam gear unit remains lifted from the cam disk of the cam gear unit, such that the cam disk rotates past the thrust member in an unimpeded manner; wherein the fuel in the combustion chamber is ignited at a time such that, after the fuel in the combustion chamber is completely burned up, the cam disk has the precise angular position suitable for the driving of the cam disk by the thrust member, whereupon a combustion chamber outlet valve is opened.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
2187/99 |
Dec 1999 |
AT |
|
US Referenced Citations (11)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
32 14 516 |
Oct 1983 |
DE |
0 957 250 |
Nov 1999 |
EP |
262429 |
Jul 1927 |
GB |