1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is in the field of internal combustion engines, and pertains more particularly to two-stroke internal combustion engines.
2. Description of Related Art
There are many sorts of two-stroke internal combustion engines known in the art at the time of the present patent application, and all of similar operating characteristics and similar problems. One commonality is that oil to lubricate cylinder and bore needs to be mixed with the gasoline used for fuel, because in such engines the crank case volume is not completely sealed from the intake and exhaust. Another is that the pistons in such engines heat very rapidly due to the two-stroke duty cycle, with each cylinder firing with every stroke. Two-stroke engines, however, typically provide substantially higher torque and substantially more power than comparable-sized four-stroke engines, but suffer from lower reliability and service life than comparable four-stroke engines. Further the two-stroke, due to the oil mixture with the fuel, are significantly polluting engines.
What is clearly needed is a two-stroke engine with an oil-bathed crankcase and an improved system for cooling the pistons.
In an embodiment of the present invention a two-stroke internal combustion engine is provided, comprising at least one cylinder having a bore diameter, a central axis, a cylinder wall, and an upper and a lower extremity, a piston slip-fit in the cylinder, the piston having an overall height and a top surface, an upper portion and a lower portion each of approximately the bore diameter, each of the upper and lower portions having at least one seal ring between the piston and the cylinder wall, and a central portion of significantly less than the bore diameter and a height at least one-half of the overall piston height, providing an annular space between the central piston portion and the cylinder wall, a crank mechanism coupled to the piston in a manner providing a repeating stroke of a specific stroke length in the direction of the central axis of the cylinder, the repeating stroke providing a varying volume V between the top of the cylinder and the top surface of the piston, one or more exhaust ports through the cylinder wall, each exhaust port having a first height in the direction of the cylinder axis, centered at a first dimension from the top of the cylinder, one or more intake ports through the cylinder wall, each intake port having a second height in the direction of the cylinder axis, centered at a second dimension from the top of the cylinder, and a forced-air mechanism providing air to the one or more intake ports. For a significant portion of every stroke both the one or more exhaust ports and the one or more intake ports are open to the annular space between the central piston portion and the cylinder wall, allowing the air pump to force air from the one or more intake ports around the central piston portion to the one or more exhaust ports.
In one embodiment of the engine a fuel injection system is provided to allow timed injections of fuel into the air provided by the forced-air mechanism at the one or more intake ports, the first height of the exhaust ports overlaps with the second height of the intake ports, and the first dimension is greater than the second dimension, such that at one position in an upstroke the upper portion of the piston closes the one or more exhaust ports while the one or more intake ports are still partially open, allowing fuel injection into the varying volume V.
In another embodiment the piston overall height, the stoke length, and the position of the ports provides for the one or more seal rings in the lower portion of the piston to traverse always between the lower extremity of the cylinder and a position below either the one or more intake ports or the one or more exhaust ports, allowing for the crank mechanism to be oil-bathed, and the two-stroke engine to be operated with gasoline not mixed with oil.
In still another embodiment the engine may be operated as a diesel engine, and in some embodiments there is a spark firing mechanism in the cylinder top for firing compressed air-fuel mixture in the varying volume V.
Also in some embodiments there is a wick ring in the upper portion of the piston, wherein the stroke length is such that at a lower extremity of the stroke the wick ring wipes a portion of the cylinder wall exposed at the upper portion of the stroke to the oil-bathed crank mechanism, such the wick ring approaching the upper extremity of the stroke provides oil to an upper portion of the cylinder wall never exposed in operation to the oil-bathed crank mechanism.
a is a sectioned illustration of an engine in an embodiment of the present invention with the piston substantially at top-dead-center.
b is a sectioned illustration of an engine in an embodiment of the present invention with the piston substantially at bottom-dead-center.
a is a sectioned illustration of an engine in an embodiment of the present invention with the piston on the up-stroke, having covered the exhaust port but not the intake port.
b is a sectioned illustration of an engine in an embodiment of the present invention with the piston on the up or the down-stroke, illustrating a way to air cool the piston.
Referring now to
Piston 101 has an upper portion 107 and a lower portion 108 both of a diameter to fit the diameter of the cylinder bore. A central portion 109, however, joins upper and lower portions 107 and 108 in the shape of a truncated cone diminishing in diameter toward the upper portion. The diameter of central portion 109 is everywhere substantially smaller than the bore diameter, creating substantial space between the central portion and any point on the cylinder inner wall.
An exhaust port 110 and an intake port 111 are strategically spaced and sized to provide, in conjunction with the piston design, for certain operating features more fully explained below. In the position shown piston lower portion 108 substantially blocks exhaust port 110 but not intake port 111. A high-capacity blower or air-pump (not shown in
b is a cross section of the same engine as
As the piston approaches the bottom-dead-center position on a power stroke as shown in
a illustrates the same engine as in
b illustrates the same piston further in the compression stroke, or at the same position on the power stroke. For a long portion of both the compression stroke and the power stroke the volume around central portion 101 of the piston is swept by cooling air driven by the air blower or pump through the intake port and out the exhaust port. This provides for significant cooling of the piston not available in other two-stroke engines.
Referring again to
Following the descriptions provided above, using the various drawings provided, a two-stroke internal combustion engine according to an embodiment of this invention may have at least one cylinder having a bore diameter, a central axis, a cylinder wall, and an upper and a lower extremity, and a piston slip-fit in the cylinder, the piston having an overall height and a top surface, an upper portion and a lower portion each of approximately the bore diameter, each of the upper and lower portions having at least one seal ring between the piston and the cylinder wall, and a central portion of significantly less than the bore diameter and a height at least one-half of the overall piston height, providing an annular space between the central piston portion and the cylinder wall. There may also be a crank mechanism coupled to the piston in a manner providing a repeating stroke of a specific stroke length in the direction of the central axis of the cylinder, the repeating stroke providing a varying volume V between the top of the cylinder and the top surface of the piston, one or more exhaust ports through the cylinder wall, each exhaust port having a first height in the direction of the cylinder axis, centered at a first dimension from the top of the cylinder, and one or more intake ports through the cylinder wall, each intake port having a second height in the direction of the cylinder axis, centered at a second dimension from the top of the cylinder. There may further be a forced-air mechanism providing air to the one or more intake ports, and for a significant portion of every stroke both the one or more exhaust ports and the one or more intake ports may be open to the annular space between the central piston portion and the cylinder wall, allowing the air pump to force air from the one or more intake ports around the central piston portion to the one or more exhaust ports.
The engine in an embodiment of the invention may also have a fuel injection system to provide timed injections of fuel into the air provided by the forced-air mechanism at the one or more intake ports, and the first height of the exhaust ports may overlap with the second height of the intake ports, and the first dimension is greater than the second dimension, such that at one position in an upstroke the upper portion of the piston closes the one or more exhaust ports while the one or more intake ports are still partially open, allowing fuel injection into the varying volume V.
In some engines according to the invention the piston overall height, the stoke length, and the position of the ports provides for the one or more seal rings in the lower portion of the piston to traverse always between the lower extremity of the cylinder and a position below either the one or more intake ports or the one or more exhaust ports, allowing for the crank mechanism to be oil-bathed, and the two-stroke engine to be operated with gasoline not mixed with oil. Such an engine may be operated either as a diesel engine or as a spark-filed engine.
In some such engines there may be a wick ring in the upper portion of the piston, wherein the stroke length is such that at a lower extremity of the stroke the wick ring wipes a portion of the cylinder wall exposed at the upper portion of the stroke to the oil-bathed crank mechanism, such the wick ring approaching the upper extremity of the stroke provides oil to an upper portion of the cylinder wall never exposed in operation to the oil-bathed crank mechanism.
Some examples have been provided of the elements and practice of the present invention, but there are many changes that might be made that will fall within the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, there may be more than one compression ring and more than one wick ring per piston. Many materials may be suitable for different parts of the engine, and dimensions may vary widely. Engines may be built incorporating these inventive features having multiple cylinders arranged in many different ways, such as in-line or V. Diesel versions may be provided as well by adjusting the stroke and compression and eliminating the spark plug. There are many other such changes that may be made within the spirit and scope of the invention. The invention is limited only by the scope of the claims that follow.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100288252 A1 | Nov 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60844190 | Sep 2006 | US |