This patent application claims priority from Italian patent application no. 102022000004115 filed on Mar. 4, 2022, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to a motor-driven throttle valve for an exhaust duct (namely, suited to be inserted along an exhaust duct to adjust the flow rate of the exhaust gases flowing along the exhaust duct).
An exhaust system of an internal combustion engine can comprise (at least) one motor-driven throttle valve, which is controlled so as to change (typically, depending on the engine point) the path followed by the exhaust gases. In an exhaust system, a motor-driven throttle valve can be mounted, for example, in an EGR circuit in order to adjust the flow rate of the recirculated exhaust gases or it can be mounted in the area of the silencer in order to have a greater silencing and, hence, a greater back pressure in the presence of a small load and in order to have a smaller silencing and, hence, a smaller back pressure in the presence of a high load.
A motor-driven throttle valve comprises a tubular duct, which is designed to allow exhaust gases to flow through, a throttle shutter, which is arranged inside the tubular duct and is mounted in a rotary manner around a rotation axis so as to rotate between a maximum closing position and a maximum opening position, a shaft, which is mounted in a rotary manner around the rotation axis and supports the throttle shutter, and an electric actuator, which is designed to rotate the shaft around the rotation axis.
The shaft is normally mounted in a rotary manner by means of two support bearings, which are arranged in the area of two opposite ends of the tubular duct, and at least one of the two support bearings is arranged in the area of a through opening of the tubular duct, through which a side of the shaft projects from the tubular duct in order to receive the motion from the electric actuator (namely, in order to be connected to the electric actuator).
A significant technological challenge for a motor-driven throttle valve for an exhaust duct lies in the thermal screening of the electric actuator, as an electric actuator cannot stand continuous work temperatures exceeding 75-90° C., whereas the exhaust gases flowing through the tubular duct can reach temperatures of more than 600-700° C. (in case of installation of the throttle valve in an EGR circuit).
Patent applications DE102018114360A1, DE3707904A1, WO2010123899A1 and US2015226161A1 and utility model DE202008005992U1 describe respective examples of a motor-driven throttle valve for an exhaust duct.
The object of the invention is to provide a motor-driven throttle valve for an exhaust duct, which can preserve the integrity of the electric actuator and, at the same time, is easy and economic to be manufactured.
According to the invention, there is provided a motor-driven throttle valve for an exhaust duct as claimed in the appended claims.
The appended claims describe preferred embodiments of the invention and form an integral part of the description.
The invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings showing a non-limiting embodiment thereof, wherein:
In
The throttle valve 1 comprises a tubular duct 2, which is designed so that exhaust gases can flow through it, and a throttle shutter 3, which is arranged inside the tubular duct 2 and is mounted in a rotary manner around a rotation axis 4 so as to rotate between a (complete) maximum closing position and a (complete) maximum opening position. Furthermore, the throttle valve 1 comprises a shaft 5, which is mounted so as to rotate around the rotation axis 4 and supports the throttle shutter 3, and an electric actuator 6, which is designed to rotate the shaft 5 around the rotation axis 4.
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The electric actuator 6 is provided with two mounting brackets 12, which are internally hollow, are arranged at the two opposite ends of the electric actuator 6 and each has a corresponding through hole. The two support elements 13 are fixed to the tubular duct 2, are “U”-shaped, are made of a bent pressed sheet metal, are welded to an external wall of the tubular duct 2 and each has a corresponding through hole. The electric actuator 6 is connected to the tubular duct 2 by means of the two support elements 13; in particular, each mounting bracket 12 of the electric actuator 6 is coupled to a corresponding support element 13 so as to align the through hole of the mounting bracket 12 with the through hole of the support element 13. A corresponding threaded screw 14 is inserted into the aligned (coaxial) through holes of a mounting bracket 12 and of a corresponding support element 13 and is locked by means of a first nut 15. In the embodiment shown in the accompanying figures, each support element 13 embraces the corresponding mounting bracket 12 from the outside; namely, the corresponding mounting bracket 12 is inserted inside each support element 13.
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According to a preferred embodiment, the plate 16 has a tail, which, when the throttle shutter 3 is in the maximum opening (or maximum closing) position, rests on one of the support elements 13; in this way, the tail of the plate 16 defines, in a precise and certain manner (namely, through a mechanical limit stop), the maximum opening (or maximum closing) position of the throttle shutter 3. In other words, the tail of the plate 16 constitutes a mechanical limit stop, which establishes, in a precise and certain manner, the maximum opening (or maximum closing) position of the throttle shutter 3.
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According to a preferred embodiment, the plate 17 is part of a tubular connection structure 19 (namely, an internally hollow structure), which contains, on the inside, the plate 16 and the spring 11 and has a plate 20, which is rigidly fixed to the plate 17 and is angularly integral to the shaft 18 of the electric actuator 6. Namely, the plate 16 is arranged between the plate 17 and the plate 20. In particular, the plate 17 has to side walls, which are arranged at the two opposite ends of the plate 17 and end in the plate 20.
Owing to the above, the spring 11 clearly fulfils two functions: applying an axial thrust along the pushing direction D to the shaft 5 and, at the same time, transmitting a rotary motion around the rotation axis 4 from the shaft 18 of the electric actuator 6 to the shaft 5 supporting the throttle shutter 3. Indeed, an end of the spring 11 is integral to the plate 16, which, in turn, is integral to the shaft 5 supporting the throttle shutter 3, whereas the opposite end of the spring 11 is integral to the plate 17, which, in turn, is integral to the shaft 18 of the electric actuator 6. In this way, the rotation movement generated by the electric actuator 6: is transmitted from the shaft 18 of the electric actuator 6 to the plate 17, is transmitted from the plate 17 to the spring 11, is transmitted from the spring 11 to the plate 16 and is finally transmitted from the plate 16 to the shaft 5. It should be pointed out that the spring 11 (inevitably) has a given torsion elasticity; therefore, the transmission of the rotation movement to the shaft 5 through the spring 11 takes place with a given yielding and, hence, with a given shock absorption.
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In other words, the tank 21 is arranged between the electric actuator 6 and the tubular duct 2 so as to create a “thermal screen” interposed between the electric actuator 6 and the tubular duct 2 so as to protect the electric actuator 6 from the high temperature of the tubular duct 2.
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The edges of the tank 21 are welded (for example through laser) to the external surface of the electric actuator 6 so as to create a fluid-tight coupling (which has to ensure the absence of cooling liquid leaks spilling out of the tank 21).
The embodiments described herein can be combined with one another, without for this reason going beyond the scope of protection of the invention.
The throttle valve 1 described above has numerous advantages.
First, the throttle valve 1 described above preserves the integrity of the electric actuator 6, for it minimizes the transfer of heat from the exhaust gases flowing along the tubular duct 2 to the electric actuator 6. This result is obtained thanks to the limited possibility of transmission of heat through conduction from the tubular duct 2 to the electric actuator 6 and thanks to the tank 21, which constitutes both a thermal screen to the transmission of heat through irradiation and a cooler (heat exchanger) for the electric actuator 6. In this way, all components of the electric actuator 6 never exceed their surviving temperatures (in the range of 150-160° C.), even under the most unfortunate conditions (namely, when the ambient temperature exceeds 40° C. and the temperature of the exhaust gases flowing along the tubular duct 2 reaches 950-970° C.).
Furthermore, the throttle valve 1 described above is simple and economic to be manufactured, since it consists of (relatively) few parts with a non-complicated shape and easy to be assembled together.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102022000004115 | Mar 2022 | IT | national |