The present invention is directed to an internal combustion engine.
In one known fuel injection device for an internal combustion engine (JP-10196440 A), the first injector and second injector each inject into the intake port of the internal combustion engine, the first injector injecting upstream from a throttle valve inserted into the intake port for air flow regulation, and the second injector injecting downstream from the throttle valve, the injection by the second injector occurring prior to the injection by the first injector.
The internal combustion engine according to an example embodiment of the present invention having the features described herein has the advantage that fuel may be supplied in the direction of the intake valve in different ways, using the two differently configured injectors which inject into the intake port of the at least one combustion cylinder, resulting in greatly improved mixture preparation and combustion in various operating ranges of the internal combustion engine. Thus, for a warm internal combustion engine under high load, it is advantageous to inject the fuel with a high degree of penetration, with the intake valve open, directly into the combustion chamber, while for a cold internal combustion engine a high degree of wetting of the wall region of the intake port immediately upstream from the intake valve results in improved combustion, since the wall film only arrives in the combustion chamber in a time-delayed manner. Using the differing configurations for the two injectors, this operating point-dependent optimization of the combustion may be easily achieved in various operating ranges of the internal combustion engine by controlling the two injectors in different manners. Thus, by using the two injectors in different manners, the lambda distribution in the combustion chamber may be optimized in various operating ranges, a localized overly rich air-fuel ratio associated with high hydrocarbon (HC) concentrations as well as a localized overly lean air-fuel ratio which promotes “knocking” of the internal combustion engine may be avoided, and fuel consumption may be reduced. Thus, in cold start mode, for example, the mixture preparation may be improved and the HC emissions reduced by using the first injector, on account of the smaller fuel droplets in its spray cone. Under full load, as the result of increased use of the second injector, together with the greater penetration all the way to the combustion chamber and minimized wall film generation in the intake port, the heat of evaporation of the fuel is removed more intensely from the cylinder charge than from the wall of the intake port, thus providing greater cooling of the cylinder charge and reducing the sensitivity to knocking.
For supercharged internal combustion engines it is possible to make use of so-called scavenging without an injector which injects directly into the combustion chamber, since with regard to the small cone angle of its spray cone the second injector generates little or no wall film in the intake port. Thus, little or no fuel passes into the combustion chamber in the direction of the catalytic converter when the combustion chamber is purged with air (scavenging). Scavenging may be achieved with a tolerable load for the catalytic converter, and in conjunction with turbocharging results in a considerable torque gain at low rotational speeds.
When the engine is coasting, the wall film in the intake port may be minimized by using the second injector, so that pollution emissions are reduced when the internal combustion engine is restarted, in particular during stop-and-go driving.
Using the various features described herein of the injectors and/or the intake valves for a combustion chamber having two intake valves, each of which closes off an inlet, and as a result of the particular association of intake valve and injector in conjunction with separate control of the injectors, the above-described effects of reducing the tendency toward knocking, optimizing the combustion mixture while avoiding a localized overly rich air-fuel ratio and a localized overly lean air-fuel ratio, and reduced fuel consumption may be incrementally improved.
According to example embodiments of the present invention, the injectors are electrically controllable solenoid valves. Such solenoid valves are much less expensive than frequently used piezoelectric injectors.
Example embodiments of the present invention are explained in greater detail below with reference to the Figures.
Of a typically multicylinder internal combustion engine for motor vehicles, for example, only one combustion cylinder 11, shown in a detail in a longitudinal section, is schematically illustrated in
In a first exemplary embodiment illustrated in
For supplying fuel to combustion chamber 15 of the at least one combustion cylinder 11, a fuel injection device 27 is provided which has two electromagnetic injectors 28, 29 for each combustion cylinder 11, i.e., each combustion chamber 15. The two injectors 28, 29 are supplied with fuel by a fuel pump 31 which conveys fuel from a fuel tank 30, and are controlled by an electronic control unit 32 which is provided with a plurality of parameters which specifies the operating points of the internal combustion engine. Upstream from throttle valve 36, the two injectors 28, 29 are inserted into insertion openings 33, 37 (
In another exemplary embodiment of combustion cylinder 12 of an internal combustion engine according to
In another modification of the exemplary embodiment according to
In another example embodiment, one of intake valves 17, 17′ is provided with a valve mask, and first injector 28 injects into the intake port which leads to the intake valve having the valve mask.
In the same manner as illustrated in the exemplary embodiment according to
In all of the described exemplary embodiments, the two injectors 28, 29 for each combustion cylinder 11 are controlled differently by electronic control unit 32 as a function of the operating points of the internal combustion engine. For this purpose a diagram is stored in control unit 32, as schematically illustrated in
To improve the mixture preparation and tumble motion in the various operating points, the two intake valves 17, 17′ for each combustion chamber 15 have time-delayed opening phases. Injectors 28, 29 are then associated with intake valves 17, 17′ such that first intake valve 28 is situated in intake port 21, leading to intake valve 17 which opens earlier, and second injector 29 is situated in intake valve 17′ which opens later. In a certain operating mode of the internal combustion engine, first injector 17 may then be activated by control electronics system 32 such that the first injector injects fuel only at a point in time at which second intake valve 17′ opens, thus reliably preventing overlap of open inlet 13, 13′ and outlet 20 of combustion chamber 15.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 044 244 | Dec 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/065708 | 11/24/2009 | WO | 00 | 8/10/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/063615 | 6/10/2010 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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International Search Report for PCT/EP2009/065708, dated Mar. 1, 2010. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110283974 A1 | Nov 2011 | US |