The present invention is directed to a lightweight valve as recited in the definition of the species in claim 1, as known for example from DE 198 04 053 A1. In addition, the present invention relates to a method for producing such a lightweight valve as recited in the definition of the species in claim 5.
The use of weight-optimized valves in combustion engines renders it possible to significantly reduce the power losses to friction in valve operation. This is especially significant for combustion engines with high rotational speeds, but also plays an important role for alternative valve operating systems that are not based on a conventional camshaft control. Besides the use of light materials (such as silicon nitride ceramic, titanium or aluminum alloys or titanium aluminides), the valve weight may be reduced in particular by incorporating cavities into the valve stem and/or the valve cone.
Known from the species-forming German Patent Document DE 198 04 053 A1 is a hollow lightweight valve having a stem, a valve cone, and a valve disk, the valve cone and valve disk together forming a cavity. The valve cone and valve disk are thin-walled individual parts which are joined to each other and to the valve stem by soldering or welding. To achieve high strength and rigidity of the valve—in particular in the area of the valve cone—despite the minimal wall thickness, the cavity of the valve is provided with a support structure which braces the valve disk cover against the stem. This support structure is intended to minimize the deformation of the valve head under load and to inhibit the formation of cracks in the area of the valve head.
In the embodiments of the lightweight valve shown in DE 198 04 053 A1, the valve cone and valve disk are joined via fillet welds; possible welding methods for this are in particular the common fusion welding methods such as TIG, laser or electron beam welding. However, these welding methods are only conditionally usable due to the comparatively high heat development when used in the case of thin-walled valve geometries, in particular when the cavity of the valve is filled with a metal cooling medium: Because of the spatially tightly proximate arrangement of cooling metal and welding surface, there is a danger in these cases that the cooling metal will hot-melt and reach the weld area, which may result in a significant reduction in the strength and tightness of the weld. In order to avoid this problem, the cooling medium may be added later—i.e., after the welding is finished; however, this is accompanied by an additional procedural step of closing the cavity, and is therefore very expensive. A further disadvantage of the forenamed welding methods is that the process times (allowing for positioning and aligning the valve disk with respect to the valve cone, possibly subsequently adding the cooling metal and then closing the cavity) are uneconomically long. For some material combinations of the valve disk and valve cone, for example for parts made of titanium-based alloys, a protective gas atmosphere or vacuum is also necessary when using this welding method, which further increases the production expense and hence the costs of such a lightweight valve.
The present invention is therefore based on the object of providing a lightweight valve which has high stability in the face of the thermal and mechanical operating loads and is also simple and economical to produce. In addition, the present invention is based on the object of making a production method for such a lightweight valve available which is suitable for large series production.
The object is achieved according to the present invention by the features of claims 1 and 5.
Accordingly, the lightweight valve is made up of a valve body—which for its part includes the valve stem and the hollow valve cone—and a valve disk cover, which is joined to the valve cone via a compression connection welding method. Formed between valve cone and valve disk cover when the valve is in the assembled position is a weight-reducing cavity which is provided with a strength-increasing support structure.
The compression connection welding methods have the advantage—in contrast to the common fusion welding methods—that these methods involve locally closely limited warming of the welding zone. Therefore, when these methods are used negligible warping of the workpieces occurs. Furthermore, process-secure welding of the thin-walled valve components is therefore possible without the danger of weakening the welding zone (for example through contamination of the welding surface by molten cooling metal). Moreover, with the use of these methods, it is possible to join a broad spectrum of different material combinations without protective gas. Furthermore, with the compression connection welding methods—in contrast to fusion welding—there is no “welding path” in the actual meaning of the word, along which a welding head would have to be guided; therefore when using a material-displacing welding method it is possible to utilize the rotational symmetry of the valve being produced to achieve a very simple—and hence economical—highly precise relative positioning of the individual parts in the employed welding device.
Possible welding methods for joining the valve body with the valve cover are in particular friction welding or a resistance compression welding method.
In friction welding, the heat needed to weld the valve disk cover to the valve body is produced by relative movement of the individual components, which are pressed against each other (see claim 6). To this end, the valve body for example is set in rotation, while the valve disk cover is firmly clamped into an axially movable device and pressed against the rotating valve body. When the temperature and plasticity needed for welding are reached, the rotating valve body is braked and at the same time the contact pressure is increased, so compressing the valve body against the valve disk cover produces a welding of the two parts in a ring-shaped contact zone. The welding parameters (rotational speed, friction force, moment of braking, and compression, etc.) depend on the combination of materials and the geometry of the joining parts in the welding zone.
In resistance compression welding (for example projection welding or capacitor discharge welding), the workpieces to be welded—valve body and valve disk cover—are clamped into the welding device in such a way that the two workpieces are touching each other along a ring-shaped contact zone. The valve body and valve disk are welded to each other in this contact zone by the high current flow (caused for example by the discharge of a capacitor), so that a continuous ring-shaped connection is formed between the two workpieces (see claim 7). Since the welding pulse is very short (about 10 to 15 milliseconds in capacitor discharge welding), and since the currents are introduced into a locally closely limited area, only slight warping of the workpiece occurs.
In both projection welding and capacitor discharge welding, the quality of the resulting weld depends substantially on a continuous ring-shaped contact area being formed between the valve body and valve disk cover, along which the local material heating and welding occur. In an especially easily producible embodiment, the valve disk cover blank has a circumferential edge in the edge area on the side facing the valve body, which meets the valve body on a conically shaped area of the valve body in the assembled position (see claim 8). In another easily produced embodiment of the present invention, the valve disk cover blank is provided with an edge area, part of which is the shape of a truncated cone, while the valve body blank has an edge between a hollow cylindrical section and a planar section in the area of contact with the valve disk cover blank (see claim 9). In both cases, a ring-shaped edge meets a conically shaped opposite area, resulting in a high-strength ring-shaped weld.
Advantageously, a one-piece valve body blank (having a valve stem and a valve cone) is used to make the lightweight valve (see claim 2). This has the advantage that the production of the valve body blank does not require an additional procedural step to join the valve stem to the valve cone; furthermore, the risk of a loss of strength due to faulty joining of the individual parts is eliminated in the case of one-piece valve bodies.
In an advantageous embodiment of the present invention, the cavity between the valve cone and valve disk cover is filled with a cooling medium, which improves the dissipation of heat from the thermally heavily loaded areas of the valve disk cover and the adjoining zones of the valve cone (see claim 3). Sodium is used in particular as the cooling medium. The good heat conductivity of sodium is utilized here, but in particular the transfer of the heat by the vibrating motion of the valve in operation, whereby hot sodium is transported to cooler areas, gives off heat there, and when cooled is available again to absorb heat in the hotter disk area. Instead of sodium, other metals with a low melting point such as potassium or potassium-sodium alloys may also be used.
It is particularly advantageous to extend the cavity in the interior of the valve into the valve stem (see claim 4). This offers great advantages, in particular when the cavity is filled with a cooling medium, since in this case the cooling medium may be transported by the vibrating motion of the valve from the hot area of the valve disk into the cooler interior of the stem, where it undergoes particularly effective cooling due to the greater temperature differential.
The present invention will be explained in greater detail below on the basis of a plurality of exemplary embodiments depicted in the drawing.
a shows a lightweight valve according to the present invention;
b shows an alternative design of the lightweight valve according to the present invention;
a . . . before welding;
b . . . during welding
c . . . in the finished welded state.
a shows a schematic representation of a lightweight valve 1 according to the present invention including a valve body 2 and a valve disk cover 3, which are welded together by a compression connection welding method. Valve body 2 is made up of a valve shaft 4 and a hollow valve cone 5, and has a one-piece design in the present exemplary embodiment. Valve cone 5 and valve disk cover 3 together form valve head 6. A weight-optimizing cavity 7 is formed between valve cone 5 and valve disk cover 3. A support structure 8 positioned in cavity 7 supports valve disk cover 3 vis-a-vis stem 4; in the present case support structure 8 is formed by a pin 9 centered in cavity 7. Instead of one-piece valve body 2 shown in
Valve disk cover 3 may be welded to valve cone 5 according to the present invention, using capacitor discharge welding. The associated procedural steps are represented schematically in
For welding the two joining parts 10, 14, valve disk cover blank 14 is inserted into cavity 11 of valve body blank 10; circumferential edge 17 of valve disk cover blank 14 then makes linear contact with conical joining zone 13 in interior cavity 11 of valve cone 5. Then, using a compressor discharge welding device 18 (indicated schematically by broken lines in
Conical angle 23 of conical joining area 13 is preferably between 10° and 80°. The diameter of disk 15 is matched to the diameter and conical angle 23 of joining area 13 and the welding parameters (current strength, contact pressure, etc.) are chosen so that valve disk cover blank 14 penetrates so deeply into interior cavity 11 during welding that it rests against support structure 8; this ensures that valve disk cover 3 is braced against valve stem 4 by support structure 8 during later operation.
The use of capacitor discharge welding allows a broad spectrum of different materials to be welded, so that the materials of valve body 10, 2 and valve disk cover 14, 3 may be selected according to the other (e.g., functional) requirements. In particular, all known valve materials, as well as for example titanium aluminides, iron aluminides, metal matrix composite materials, titanium and aluminum alloys etc., may be utilized and combined with each other. The method is thus also usable in particular for applications for which other welding methods are unusable, or usable only with difficulty.
An alternative design of joining areas 13′, 16′ on valve body blank 10′ and valve disk cover blank 14′ is shown in
As an alternative to capacitor discharge welding, the two parts to be joined may also be joined by projection welding, circumferential edge 17, 13′ acting on valve body blank 10, 10′ or valve disk cover blank 14, 14′ as an ignition-initiating projection.
In addition, the two parts to be joined may be joined to each other by friction welding. In this case, valve disk cover blank 14 for example is held in the friction welding machine so that it is not able to rotate but may move axially, while valve body blank 10 is mounted and driven so that it rotates in a fixed position. First, valve disk cover blank 14 is pressed against conical joining area 13 of valve cone 5, initially still with moderate axial force, the material of both parts located near the contact zone heating up and becoming soft as a result of the friction. If a temperature appropriate for welding is reached and a doughy condition is reached in the contact zone of the parts, rotating valve body blank 10 is very quickly stopped and at the same time the axial force of valve disk cover blank 14 is increased and the latter is pressed into internal cavity 11 of valve cone 5, by a certain axial stroke. As that happens, parts 10, 14 become deeply welded to each other at the contact zone. In contrast to projection and capacitor discharge welding, friction welding does not require the contact area between the two joining parts 10, 14 to be linear; instead it may be useful—depending on the wall thickness and the geometry of joining parts 10, 14 in the joining area—to provide a two-dimensional contact zone.
After joining parts 10, 14 have been welded, valve 1 is machined; an area of valve disk cover blank 14 that projects from valve cone 5 is machined down to the desired dimension (broken line 24 in
An alternative embodiment of a lightweight valve 1′ according to the present invention is depicted in
Alternatively to or in addition to pins 9′ shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 09 770.4 | Mar 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/02178 | 3/4/2003 | WO | 8/15/2005 |