Embodiments described herein relate generally to valves that control a flow of fluid, and more particularly, to valves for controlling the flow of fluid in engine exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) systems.
Engine exhaust gas recirculation is a known technique for reducing oxides of nitrogen in products of combustion that are exhausted from an internal combustion engine to the atmosphere. A typical EGR system comprises an EGR valve that is controlled in accordance with engine operating conditions to regulate the amount of engine exhaust gas that is recirculated to the intake flow entering the engine, so as to limit the combustion temperature, and further, to reduce the formation of oxides of nitrogen during combustion. To the extent that exhaust gas is introduced into the flow entering the engine, the exhaust gas displaces air that would otherwise enter the engine.
The EGR valve is the main emissions control component in the EGR system. The EGR valve is typically located at an intake manifold and is connected between an EGR conduit and the engine. Typically, the EGR valve has a housing that is inserted into an intake manifold pocket, and the EGR valve opens a small exhaust gas recirculation passageway between the EGR conduit and the intake manifold to allow a metered amount of exhaust fluid flow to the engine.
Different amounts of EGR fluid are provided at different engine operating conditions. At cruising, high-speed or mid-range acceleration, when combustion temperatures are very high, high EGR fluid flow is provided. At low speed and light load conditions, low EGR fluid flow is provided. At engine warm-up, transient, idle, or wide open throttle conditions, no EGR fluid flow is provided.
Typically, the flow of EGR fluid is controlled not only by the EGR control valve, but also by a separate modulator assembly. The modulator assembly typically uses the exhaust backpressure (which is proportional to engine load) to send a vacuum signal to control the EGR flow rate through the EGR valve to be generally proportional to the amount of load applied to the engine. A bypass valve can be used to divert excess EGR fluid flow around the EGR cooler during engine conditions where EGR fluid flow is low or not provided.
A modulating bypass valve includes a valve housing defining a modulating fluid passageway and a bypassing fluid passageway through the valve housing. The valve also includes a throttle plate assembly that is inserted through the valve housing and has a rotating shaft on an axis that is generally perpendicular to the modulating fluid passageway and the bypassing fluid passageway. A modulating throttle plate is attached to the shaft and located within the modulating fluid passageway. A bypassing throttle plate is attached to the shaft and located within the bypassing fluid passageway. An actuator rotates the shaft.
Another modulating bypass valve includes a valve housing defining a modulating fluid passageway and a bypassing fluid passageway through the valve housing. A throttle plate assembly is inserted through the valve housing and has a modulator shaft on an axis that is generally perpendicular to the modulating fluid passageway, and a bypassing shaft on an axis that is generally perpendicular to the bypassing fluid passageway. A modulating throttle plate is attached to the modulator shaft and located within the modulating fluid passageway. A first actuator rotates the modulator shaft and the modulating throttle plate within the modulating fluid passageway. A bypassing throttle plate is attached to the bypassing shaft and is located within the bypassing fluid passageway, and a second actuator rotates the bypassing shaft and the bypassing throttle plate within the bypassing fluid passageway.
A method of modulating and bypassing EGR fluid flow in a valve of an EGR system includes providing a valve housing defining a modulating fluid passageway and a bypassing fluid passageway through the valve housing, rotating a modulating throttle plate within the modulating fluid passageway to selectively open and close the modulating fluid passageway, and rotating a bypassing throttle plate within the bypassing fluid passageway to selectively open and close the bypassing fluid passageway. The method further includes fluidly communicating the EGR fluid flow through at least one of the modulating fluid passageway and the bypassing fluid passageway.
Referring to
The modulating fluid passageway 16 and the bypassing fluid passageway 18 may be defined by through-bores 22 in the valve housing 12. These through-bores 22 can be of any size, but may range between 30 to 50 mm. The size of the through-bores 22 may be the same or may be different. One application might require a large through-bore 22 for the modulating fluid passageway 16 and a small through-bore for the bypassing fluid passageway 18 (flow restricting the bypass flow at high flow conditions) or vice versa (flow restricting the modulating flow at high flow conditions). EGR fluid flow F, which for purposes of the modulating bypass valve 10 include gas, liquid and solid (pellets, powder), may flow in the direction indicated at
Modulation of the EGR fluid F and bypassing of the EGR fluid F is effected by a throttle plate assembly. 30 inserted in the valve housing 12, including a modulating throttle plate 32 and a bypassing throttle plate 34 which are positioned within the modulating fluid passageway 16 and the bypassing fluid passageway 18, respectively, on a modulator shaft 36 and a bypassing shaft 38, respectively. The modulating throttle plate 32 is fixed to and rotational on the modulator shaft 36, and the bypassing throttle plate 34 is fixed to and rotational on the bypassing shaft 38. Both the modulator shaft 36 and the bypassing shaft 38 define a shaft axis A, which is generally perpendicular to the through-bores 22 defining the modulating fluid passageway 16 and the bypassing fluid passageway 18. The modulator shaft 36 and the bypassing shaft 38 may be the same shaft.
Generally circular or disk-shaped, the throttle plates 32, 34 may be attached to the modulator shaft 36 and the bypassing shaft 38 with fasteners 39 such as screws into receiving holes 37 on the shafts 36, 38. The throttle plates 32, 34 are sized and shaped to be rotational within the fluid passageways 16, 18, and to be generally the same size or slightly smaller than the x-sectional area of the passageways 16, 18, however it is possible that the throttle plates 32, 34 may have other shapes and sizes. The throttle plates 32, 34 are rotational on shafts 36, 38 about shaft axis A to selectively impede or allow the flow of EGR fluid F through the modulating fluid passageway 16 and the bypassing fluid passageway 18, respectively.
The throttle plate assembly 30 may have a clutch driver 40 that couples the modulator shaft 36 to the bypassing shaft 38. The clutch driver 40 may be received in a housing pocket 42, which is an opening defined by the valve housing 12 that is parallel with the modulating fluid passageway 16. The clutch driver 40 may be a generally round disk 44 with a through-bore 46 for receiving a second end 48 of the modulator shaft 36 and a first end 50 of the bypassing shaft 38. The clutch driver 40 is parallel to the axis defined by the fluid passageways 14, and located between the modulating fluid passageway 16 and the bypassing fluid passageway 18. When coupled with the clutch driver 40, both the modulator shaft 36 and the bypassing shaft 38 are actuated by an actuator 52.
The clutch driver 40 may have several configurations. The clutch driver 40 may be mechanical, for example a ratchet-type. The clutch driver 40 may also be electric, for example an electric-magnetic coupling. Further, the clutch driver 40 may be hydraulic, for example a hydraulic coupling or a hydraulic-mechanical coupling. Further still, the clutch driver 40 may be a magnetic coupling, a pneumatic coupling, or a pneumatic-mechanical coupling. The clutch driver 40 may also be a damper, for example a pneumatic or hydraulic damper which can close off EGR fluid flow F during engine transient conditions. The clutch driver 40 might also contain a magnetic or electric rheological fluid that changes it viscous characteristics via magnetic or electric input. In high loading conditions or at a preset time constant, the damper can open and revert to a default rotation of both throttle plates 32, 34 under spring force.
Referring to
A return spring 68 is disposed around the modulator shaft 36 between the lower tray 56 and the gear 64. The return spring 68 is configured to rotate the modulator shaft 36 to a default position when the actuator 52 is not actuated. In a default position of the modulator shaft 36, the modulating throttle plate 32 may be generally parallel with the modulating fluid passageway 16, may be generally perpendicular to the modulating fluid passageway, or may be at any location therebetween. The default position may have the modulating throttle plate 32 in a closed condition. However, depending on the EGR strategy, the default position may have the modulating throttle plate 32 in a slightly opened condition using the balancing spring assembly 68, or may have the modulating throttle plate in a opened position.
When the cover 58 is attached to the lower tray 56, the gear 64, a bearing 70 and the spring 68 may be contained within the header portion 54. The receiving hole (not shown) of the header portion 54 is aligned with a receiving channel 72 in a main valve body 74. The receiving channel 72 is generally coaxial with the shaft axis A and is generally perpendicular to the modulating fluid passageway 16 and to the bypassing fluid passageway 18.
The first end 50 of the bypassing shaft 38 is attached to the clutch driver 40. The bypassing shaft 38 extends from the clutch driver 40 along shaft axis A generally perpendicularly through the bypassing fluid passageway 18 to a retaining portion 76 of the valve housing 12. The retaining portion 76 has a surface 78 that is generally perpendicular to the shaft axis A, and may include a lip or walls 80 extending from the surface that are generally parallel to shaft axis A. The bypassing shaft 38 may extend through the surface 78 and have a second end 82 with an enlarged head 84. The bypassing shaft 38 may also include a bearing 86 for allowing the relative rotation of the bypassing shaft with respect to the retaining portion 76. Disposed around the bypassing shaft 38 and between the surface 78 and the enlarged head 84 is a return spring 88 which returns the bypassing shaft 88 to a default position when the actuator 52 is not actuated. As with the modulator throttle plate 32, the bypassing throttle plate 34 may have any default position. For example, for a cold start-up of the engine, the bypassing throttle plate 34 may be generally parallel to the bypassing fluid passageway 18 in a fully open position to aid the warm-up phase of the engine.
Using exhaust backpressure, which is typically proportional to engine load, the actuator 52 actuates the rotation of the modulator shaft 36 and the bypassing shaft 38 to control the EGR fluid flow F through the modulating fluid passageway 16 and the bypassing fluid passageway 18, respectively. It is possible that the actuator 52 may use engine conditions and signals other than, or in addition to, exhaust backpressure to actuate rotation of the modulator shaft 36 and/or bypassing shaft 38.
The actuator 52 may control the rotation of the modulating throttle plate 32 and the bypassing throttle plate 34 in the following way: under transient operating conditions, the actuator 52 may rotate the modulating throttle plate 32 to close-off the modulating fluid passageway 16 (by positioning the modulating throttle plate generally perpendicular to the flow of EGR fluid, i.e. to impede the flow of EGR fluid flow through passageway 16) and by rotating the bypassing throttle plate 34 to open the bypassing fluid passageway 18 (by positioning the bypass throttle plate to be generally parallel to the flow of EGR fluid, i.e. to allow the flow of EGR fluid through the bypass passageway 18). When the bypassing throttle plate 34 is at least partially open (not perpendicular to the direction of EGR fluid flow F), then there will be fluid communication of EGR fluid through the bypassing fluid passageway 18 around the EGR cooler.
Similarly, the actuator 52 may control the rotation of the modulating throttle plate 32 and the bypassing throttle plate 34 in the following way: under high load operating conditions, the actuator 52 may rotate the modulating throttle plate 32 to open the modulating fluid passageway 16 (by positioning the modulating throttle plate generally parallel to the flow of EGR fluid, i.e. to allow the flow of EGR fluid through passageway 16) and by rotating the bypassing throttle plate 34 to close the bypassing fluid passageway 18 (by positioning the bypass throttle plate to be generally perpendicular to the flow of EGR fluid, i.e. to impede the flow of EGR fluid through the bypass passageway 18). When the modulating throttle plate 32 is at least partially open (not perpendicular to the direction of EGR fluid flow F), then there will be fluid communication of EGR fluid through the modulating fluid passageway 16 to the EGR cooler 20.
The actuator 52 may control the rotation of the modulating throttle plate 32 and the bypassing throttle plate 34 in the following way: in low load operating conditions, the actuator 52 may rotate the modulating throttle plate 32 to a position between 0 and 90-degrees to the direction of EGR fluid flow F (by positioning the modulating throttle plate to partially open the modulation fluid passageway 16 to allow a portion of the EGR fluid flow F through the modulating passageway) and to rotate the bypassing throttle plate 34 to a position between 0 and 90-degrees to the direction of EGR fluid flow (by positioning the bypassing throttle plate to partially open the bypassing fluid passageway 18 to allow a portion of the fluid flow through the bypassing passageway).
It should be understood that the throttle plates 32, 34 may be located in the same rotational plane about shaft axis A, or may be rotationally offset from each other about shaft axis A. The throttle plates may be parallel, orthogonal to each other, or at any angle therebetween. The modulating throttle plate 32 may have a default position that is about 45-degrees to the direction of EGR fluid flow F, although other orientations are possible. The bypassing throttle plate 34 may have a default position to be generally perpendicular to the direction of EGR fluid flow F, generally parallel to the direction of EGR fluid flow F, and all other orientations are possible.
With the modulating bypass valve 10, the rotation of the modulating throttle plate 32 and the bypassing throttle plate 34 can be controlled by the actuator 52 by as much as 0.5 degrees rotation about the shaft axis A, although it is possible that greater control may be exhibited by the actuator. It should be appreciated that the actuator 52 can operate the modulating throttle plate 32 and the bypassing throttle plate 34 to various positions according to various engine operating conditions and/or preset time constants. It should also be understood that any default position may be set for the throttle plates 32, 34, with or without springs 68, 88 returning the plates to their default positions when the actuator 52 does not rotate the plates. Further, the rotation of the throttle plates 32, 34 may be preset to achieve fixed EGR fluid flow F.
Referring to
With respect to the actuator 52 of the modulating bypass valve 10 of
In embodiments of the modulating bypass valve 10, 110, the electric actuator 52, 152A, 152B may be powered by 12, 24, 48 VDC or 110/220/440 VAC single or multiphase power sources. In the modulating bypass valve 10, 110, the hydraulic/pneumatic actuator 52, 152A, 152B may be driven by engine pressurized oil lubricating system, pressurized oil pressure amplification system, the fuel system, and the coolant system, among others.
The modulating bypass valve 10, 110 can operate to both modulate EGR fluid flow F and to bypass EGR fluid flow F, to modulate EGR fluid flow F only, or to bypass EGR fluid flow F only. Additionally, the modulating bypass valve 10 is in a single, relatively compact housing that achieves low pressure losses through the EGR system 11.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2012/037213 | 5/10/2012 | WO | 00 | 11/10/2014 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2013/169253 | 11/14/2013 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20150176538 A1 | Jun 2015 | US |