This relates to an internal combustion engine and more specifically to a method and apparatus for controlling a fuel injector.
Improved fuel injection systems allow internal combustion engines to increase fuel economy, reduce noxious emissions such as NOx and particulate matter, and increase power. Some of these gains come through increasing pressures of the fuel prior to injection into a combustion chamber. Increased pressures allow for more complete atomization of the fuel to increase the surface area of the fuel. The increased surface area promotes fuller combustion. Increasing the pressure of the fuel at the combustion chamber is accomplished in a number of manners including hydraulic intensification as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,305,358 issued to Lukich on 23 Oct. 2001. An alternative system uses an improved fuel pump to deliver high pressure fuel to a common fuel rail as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,497,750 issued to Mueller et al on 12 Mar. 1996. In both systems, timing of a fuel injection event may determined by electronic control of a valve such as movement of a solenoid.
However, providing a directly operated check valve or DOC valve provides an additional benefit of more controllability of the fuel injection system.
With a DOC valve, the fuel pressure as well as timing may be varied to create a fuel injection rate shape. By controlling the delivery of hydraulic fluid to a cavity over a check valve, a valve opening pressure needed to open the check valve may be varied. This increased controllability allows the fuel injection system to further lower engine noise and reduce emissions. Fuel from the common rail may also be used in a similar manner.
Control of DOC valve generally requires precise machining including numerous passages machined or cast into an injector body. Improved controllability typically involves using multiple control valves. The additional machining and control valves increase costs of the fuel injection system. Further, multiple control valves may increase actual size of a fuel injector reducing space on a cylinder head of an engine for other needed hardware.
The present invention is directed to overcoming one or more of the problems as set forth above.
In one embodiment of the present invention, a fuel injector includes an injector body defining a fuel supply passage, and a tip supply passage. A fuel reservoir is positioned between the fuel supply passage and the tip supply passage. A check valve is positioned in a nozzle portion of the injector body (62). The check valve has a head portion and a tip portion. A nozzle reservoir is defined by the nozzle portion and the tip portion and head portion of the check valve. The tip supply passage is in fluid communication with the nozzle reservoir. A control valve is positioned in the fuel reservoir and is control movable to at least a first position, a second position, and a third position. The first position substantially inhibits fluid communication between the fuel supply passage and tip supply passage. The second position restricts fluid communication between the fuel supply passage and the tip supply passage. Fluid communication is allowed between the fuel supply passage and the tip supply passage in the third position.
In another embodiment of the present invention, a fuel system includes a fuel pump in fluid communication with a fuel supply passage. A tip supply passage is in fluid communication with the fuel supply passage. A nozzle reservoir is in fluid communication with the tip supply passage. The nozzle reservoir is defined by a nozzle portion and a check valve. A control valve is disposed between the fuel supply passage and said tip supply passage. The control valve is movable to at least a first position, a second position, and a third position. In the first position fluid communication is substantially inhibited between the fuel supply passage and the tip supply passage. The second position restricts fluid communication between the fuel supply passage and the tip supply passage. The third position allows fluid communication between the fuel supply passage and the tip supply passage.
In yet another embodiment, a method for controlling a fuel injector includes determining an engine operating condition. A control input is sent to the fuel injector. A control valve is positioned according to the control input in one of at least three positions. In the second position a first maximum fuel rate is allowed. The third position allows a second maximum fuel rate.
A fuel injection system 10 as shown in
In this application, the controller 18 is a conventional electronic control unit. The controller 18 receives a fuel signal 46 from a fuel sensor 48 that may be placed anywhere in the fuel system such as the fuel manifold 16, fuel conduit 26, or the fuel injector 20. The fuel sensor may be adapted to measure one or more conditions of the fuel such as fuel pressure, fuel temperature, or fuel viscosity. The controller 18 also receives one or more engine condition signals 50 from engine sensors (not shown). The engine condition signals are indicative of typical conditions such as air manifold pressure, engine speed, engine load, fuel demand, air humidity, exhaust gas temperature, and air temperature.
The fuel injector 20 as shown in
The check valve 36 is positioned in the nozzle portion 34. The check valve 36 has a head portion 38 and a tip portion 40 distal from the head portion 38. The tip portion 40 is proximate to a seating portion 42 of the nozzle portion 34. The nozzle portion 34 and check valve 36 define a nozzle reservoir 44 between said head portion 38 and said tip portion 40. In an embodiment, a spring 45 is connected to the head portion 38.
As shown in
The actuation portion 64 for this embodiment includes a solenoid 84 and an armature 86. The solenoid 84 operates at multiple power levels such as multiple currents or voltages. The armature 86 connects with the actuation portion 68 in a conventional manner. The controller 18 provides a control input 88 to the solenoid 84. Alternatively, the actuation portion 68 may be any conventional actuation mechanism such as a piezo-electric actuator.
In an embodiment, the control input 88 to the solenoid 84 as shown in
Industrial Applicability
In operation fuel flows from the fuel tank 12 into the fuel pump 14 where fuel pressure is increased to pressures suitable for atomizing liquid fuel as it exits the nozzle portion 34 of the fuel injector 20. The fuel lift pump 24 may be used to transmit fuel to the fuel pump 14. Fuel passes through the fuel conduit 26 into the fuel manifold 16 where high pressure fuel may be stored or accumulated prior to entering the fuel injector 20. Alternatively, fuel may be pressurized after exiting the fuel manifold 16 in cases where the fuel pump 14 is associated with a fuel injector 20.
Functionally, fuel passes from the manifold 16 into a fuel supply passage 28 that may be inside or outside the fuel injector body 62. As the controller 18 receives the engine condition signal 50 and fuel signal 46, the controller 18 sends the control input 88 to direct the control valve 30 into one of the three positions. In the first position, no substantial quantity of fuel passes into nozzle reservoir 44 to act against the check valve 36. In the second position, the control valve 30 allows some fuel to pass through the fuel supply passage 28 into the nozzle reservoir 44. However, partial restriction of fluid communication between the fuel supply passage 28 and tip supply passage 32 reduces pressures in the nozzle reservoir 44 and fuel injection rates from the nozzle portion 34. Moving the control valve 30 to the third position reduces restrictions in fluid communication between the fuel supply passage 28 and tip supply passage 32 to increase pressure at the nozzle reservoir 44 and thus injection rate from the nozzle portion 34.
Using the poppet 66, the fuel is essentially contained in the fuel reservoir 82 where the solenoid is at current level a and corresponding armature position “a”. To get the stable injection rate “a”, current level “b” is sent initially to the solenoid to move armature 86 to armature position b and current level “c” holds the armature 86 in position. As the armature 86 moves to position “b”, fuel passes from the fuel reservoir 82 into the tip supply passage 32. However, the poppet 66 restricts fuel flow through the fuel reservoir 82 and reduces fuel pressure. Fuel from the tip supply passage 32 builds pressure in the nozzle reservoir 44. Fuel applies force to the check valve 36 near the head portion 38 causing the check valve 36 to act against the spring 45 and move the tip portion away from the seating portion 42 of the nozzle portion 34.
To create the ramp injection rate “b”, the current level “b” is sent to the solenoid 84 to move the armature 86 from either position “a” or position “b” to position “c”. Fuel flows from the supply passage 28 through the fuel reservoir 82 into the tip supply passage 32 with less restriction to flow than exhibited where the armature 86 is in position “b”. Again fuel applies force to the check valve 36 to move the tip portion 40 away from the seating portion 42. Due to reduced restrictions, fuel pressures experienced at the tip portion 40 are greater and result in the ramp injection rate b.
Using the control valve 30 to restrict flow between the fuel supply passage 28 and tip supply passage 32 allows a fuel injector 20 to perform various injection patterns without using two control valves. Adding the flow restriction 37 in the tip supply passage allows further control of fuel injection. Other aspects, objects and advantages of this invention can be obtained from a study of the drawings, the disclosure and the appended claims.
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| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20040011331 A1 | Jan 2004 | US |