The invention concerns a valve and a method for the production of valve seats.
A valve generally comprises a valve seat which surrounds a bore hole as well as a valve closing member which, when the valve is “opened”, allows for the flow of medium through the bore hole and closes same in the “closed valve” state. Valve seats often have a conical sealing surface on which a likewise conically shaped valve needle, constituting the valve-closing member, seats over a large area. Even in the event of very precise manufacturing tolerances, good sealing performance is usually not achieved for pressures in excess of 100 bar. The reason for this is, among other things, that grinding with a grinding body exercising rotational and translational motion effects finishing. Towards this end, channels are produced which have a certain pitch. A labyrinth, communicating channel structure through which leakage can occur is thereby formed.
EP 09 55 128 B1 describes a method for the production of a sealing seat between a valve ball and a valve body having a conical valve seat. Towards this end, a valve body having a conically ground valve seat for a valve ball (valve closing member) is clamped into a rotationally driven tool holder. A cylindrical grinding stone is introduced into the tool holder for the polishing process and with an adapter which permits radial motion of the grinding stone under an addressing angle tilted by 1 to 10 degrees with respect to the rotational axis, as a result of which, as seen in longitudinal section, a circular arc shaped valve seating surface is processed into the conical valve seat. This method leads to a sunken seating surface into which the sealing ball seats. Line contacts should be avoided. Towards this end, the contact surface is relatively large. The partial surfaces of the ball that contact the sealing surface have a corresponding low seating pressure.
DE 197 57 117 A1 describes a method for the production of a valve seating body for fuel injection valves with which the valve seating region and the guiding sections are simultaneously processed by a working tool in the form of a master ball. A line shaped sealing surface for seating the ball is effected in that the valve seat has a narrow enlargement which projects past the surrounding surface by approximately 0.1 mm. This procedure requires expensive processing steps and, in the event that the protrusion is damaged to even a slight extent, perhaps through interaction with a very small metal particles, the valve leaks. DE 44 41 623 describes a method for the grinding of conical valve seats with which the through bore is honed and then serves for guiding the tool for honing the conical valve seat.
Further conventional methods for the processing of valve surfaces or valves are known in the art from US 59 54 312 A, US 2002/00 40 523 A1 and DE 100 46 304 C1.
It is the underlying purpose of the invention to create a valve having improved sealing properties and to present improved methods for the production of valve seats of this kind. In particular, a creeping through the processed channels of the medium to be sealed should be prevented to improve the sealing properties.
This purpose is achieved by a valve having the features of claim 1 and by a method having the features of claim 12.
The plurality of concentric raised structures in the valve seating surface provided in accordance with the invention undergo elastic deformation when loaded by the valve closing member, since the roughness depth of the valve closing member is substantially less than that of the valve seating surface. This elastic deformation leads to narrow concentric valve seating surfaces, which substantially reduce leakage caused by creeping of the medium along the processing grooves of the valve seat so that any residual leakage remains in an acceptable region. The above-mentioned raised structures are thereby created by the method in accordance with the invention.
Substantial advantages thereby result, among others, for fuel injection pumps for engines. In a housing for fuel injection pumps having a plurality of valve seats, sealing with respect to a system pressure of in excess of 2000 bar is the critical parameter. The sealing performance is generally defined as the amount of leakage per unit time under a particular operating conditions, such as pressure, temperature and density of the medium.
Use of a ball as the valve-closing member in accordance with the invention leads to a seating along the plurality of concentric, narrow and therefore essentially line shaped sealing surfaces. Very large surface pressures and therefore large elastic deformations of the individual raised structures of the valve seat on which the ball seats thereby occur. This is geometrically permitted by the very high rounding requirements of the ball, of less than 1.0 μm. Within this tolerance, the elasticity of the raised structures can compensate for possible macro-shaped tolerances in roundness.
The described and claimed method leads to concentric processing grooves in the valve-seating surface, which have the same propagation direction as the seating circles of the ball. The processing grooves as well as their intermediate profiled raised structures are generated during honing and have no pitch relative to the line shaped sealing surface of the ball or of the valve sealing member on the valve sealing surface. Leakage currents cannot travel through spiral shaped channels. For the leak-proof character, the concentricity of the raised structures and a high roundness for the ball as well as elastic deformation of the raised structures of the valve seat are all important.
In accordance with a preferred improvement of the invention, the honing is carried out in a plurality of sequential operations. This has the advantage that each operation permits adjusted operating conditions, i.e. differing working tools. Towards this end, it is particularly advantageous when each operation removes the roughness profile of the preceding honing operation using a tool having finer cutting grit. Moreover, it is advantageous when the tool is periodically removed from engagement in order to apply cooling and lubricating medium to the processing location and to clean off residual, removed material. This leads to a particularly effective cooling and lubrication of the processing region.
It has turned out to be advantageous when, in adjusting to the appropriate working conditions, differing rates of rotation for the tool are used. During honing operations, the tool can be driven at a rate of 500 to 6000 revolutions per minute. Following the honing, burr removal can be performed, in particular, using diamond splint tools or brushes containing cutting grit. In order to effect desired honing of the initially basically conical shaped valve, the preparation procedures are advantageously carried out in such a fashion that, in the finishing step, an axial amount of valve seat material of approximately 50 μm to 90 μm is removed. The axial feed should completely remove the previously generated structures.
During polishing, it the axis of the rotating spindle of the processing machine may not be perfectly aligned with the axis of the valve seat. It therefore has turned out to be advantageous when the head of the working tool can be bent relative to the working tool holder during polishing or honing. The bending can be effected by pivoting of the tool about a pivot location in the tool holder or through elastic deformation of the tool shaft. During honing of the tool, the tool and the work piece can advantageously be driven in opposite directions with respect to each other in order to increase the processing speed.
Embodiments of the invention will be now to be described in a more detailed fashion with respect to the drawing.
a, 9b, and 9c show a multi-layered grinding body in schematic representation having ceramic or metallic bound layers in a sharpened state prior to wear (
A schematic representation of the valve seat 4 with channels 6 and raised structures 7 is given in longitudinal cut in
The valve seat 4 is first prepared, for example hardened or machined. The machining processing following the hardening can be skipped in the event that hardening distortions are minimal. Subsequent thereto, finishing is carried out with the assistance of the tool 8 shown in
The tool 8 is moved in the axial direction in correspondence with material removal. Towards this end, it is advantageous to periodically remove the tool from engagement with the working area for cooling, rinsing, and lubrication purposes. A positioning device for the tool that controls both the path and the amount of applied force does this. The axial positioning force of the tool is controlled in a fashion appropriate to the process, and the amount of material removal is also monitored. Spring-loaded application of the tool is also, in principle, possible. The finishing of the piece is carried out in a plurality of operations by honing the conical seat. In each operation, the shape and the roughness profile from the previous honing operation is completely removed using finer cutting grit. The final operation creates the final surface shape mentioned above. The processing steps correct irregularities created by preceding steps, thereby leading to successfully finer surfaces. In response to these dynamics, the concentric channels 6 shown in
An electro-magnetic controller can e.g. control the control and travel. The spindle device initially travels in rapid advance into axial proximity to the desired working position. Towards this end, the tool is located in close proximity to the work piece, with a safety separation being traversed by the spindle at reduced speed. As soon as the tool seats on the working surface of the work piece, the axial seating force is increased to the desired working force. This position is set to “0” and the tool is set into rotation so that the working mode begins. The removal in the axial direction during a working operation should be performed with predetermined cycle times. The control device registers the amount of the material removed as well as the time required therefor and/or the working speed. In the event that an amount of material removal is not achieved in the desired time, the force is automatically increased during operation of the next work piece.
The method described above facilitates creation of valve seating surfaces with good sealing properties, in consequence of the topography of the roughness profile and due to the extremely precise tolerances with respect to the roundness of the valve seat 4.
In principle, as is usually the case with honing, a single diamond cutting layer or a cBN cutting layer (cBN=cubic boron nitrite) can be utilized. Both are built up using galvanic binding. The grinding mechanism of such a single galvanic cutting layer is effected by projection of the cutting crystals out of a nickel matrix in such a fashion as to effect material removal on the work piece. This, however, has the associated disadvantage that the cutting crystals become worn with increasing use. For this reason, the introductory pressure must be constantly increased in order to achieve the required penetration depths. The tool is fully worn when the raised cutting crystals are substantially worn away.
In the event of a plurality of grinding layers, the cutting crystals are disposed in a three dimensional fashion within a binding matrix. One is usually dealing with sintered or bonded mechanisms produced by high vacuum soldering (HVS) involving metallic bonding with diamonds or cBN grit.
Due to the circulating cutting track defined by the tool dynamics, no self-sharpening occurs during grinding, unless the direction of rotation is changed. In the event of a multi-layered structure, one must push back the bonding medium by dressing at regular intervals.
During dressing, the axis of rotation 46 of the cutting body 30, having a cutting layer 41, is slanted relative to the axis of rotation 47 of the dressing wheel 40 in correspondence with the desired conical angle of the tool. As indicated by arrow 48, the cutting body 30 is rotated in such a fashion that its conical covering 30′ moves opposite to the direction of motion of the dressing wheel 40 at the point of their mutual engagement.
With cutting tools made from diamond or cBN and having a plurality of layers, ceramic dressing wheels 40 are used having a grain size which is smaller than the grain size of the tool and with a cutting velocity of 1 to 3 m/s. Ceramically bound silicon carbide or aluminous tools are, in contrast thereto, dressed using a diamond wheel having a grain size of D181 to D426.
In correspondence with the deflection relationships, the flat tool in accordance with
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03014909.0 | Jul 2003 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/07062 | 6/30/2004 | WO | 00 | 1/11/2008 |