An oil separating device for a combustion engine.
The instant invention relates to an oil separating device for a combustion engine, particularly an internal combustion engine.
An oil separating device as known from EP 0 472 130 A1 comprises a passage for so-called blow-by gases flowing from the combustion chambers of the cylinders of an internal combustion engine through the piston rings into the crankcase, to be returned through the oil separating device to the inlet manifold section of the internal combustion engine, said passage being defined by a slot in a slotted plate arranged transversely of the inlet direction of the blow-by gas and disposed at a fixed distance from a baffle around which the blow-by gas undergoes sharp deflection, whereby the oil particles are separated at the walls of the oil separator.
Efficient oil separators are desirable in crankcase ventilation of internal combustion engines in order to meet the strict legal exhaust gas regulations and the demand for less oil consumption.
Investigations made by the inventors have shown that the efficiency of oil separation varies in accordance the conditions of mounting of the engine, such as the inclination of the longitudinal axis of the engine and the type of charge control of the cylinders of the internal combustion engine.
Conflicting aims for the development of oil separators with gravity separation result from the requirement that there be little pressure loss because, with increasing volume flow, i.e. rising flow velocity, the pressure loss increases non-linearly. In view of the fact that in internal combustion engines the blow-by flow may vary considerably with the engine operation conditions and as, moreover, a conventional gravitational separator will not achieve satisfactory efficiency before a sufficiently high flow velocity is reached, separators of simple structure built so far cannot be more than a compromise between a decent degree of efficiency at small volume flows and great pressure losses at great volume flows.
It is, therefore, an object of the invention to provide a highly efficient oil separator for an internal combustion engine of simple structure and low tendency of contamination in which pressure losses are small and which works independently of mounting conditions of the engine and which also permits adaptation to different systems of charge control.
Claim 1 serves to meet these objects.
In an oil separating device according to the invention, at least one elastic member controlling a passage for blow-by-gas from the crankcase to the inlet manifold is exposed to the blow-by gases. The elastic member controls a variable flow cross sectional area of the passage for the blow-by-gas, thus creating almost constant flow velocities that are sufficient to provide the gravitational effects for separating the oil particles from the gas flow. This has an essential advantage in that the pressure loss rises approximately linearly with the volume flow increase across the operating range. The slot width of the or each passage varying with the volume flow or the pressure differential of the pressures prevailing in the gas flow upstream and downstream of the passage makes it possible to adapt the separating performance of the oil separator to all installation conditions and charge control methods of the internal combustion engine occurring in practice.
According to an advantageous modification of the invention the spring force of the elastic member which counteracts the pressure of the blow-by gas is provided by at least one spring member which limits the slot width of the or each passage.
In an advantageous structural embodiment of the invention the plurality of spring members are presented by the windings of a helical spring, the passages being defined between the windings. The spacing between individual windings defining the slot width varies with the volume flow through the passages or with the pressure differential between the pressures in the blow-by gas flow upstream and downstream of the passages.
A baffle may serve to separate the oil particles from the gas flow, and this baffle may be embodied by the inside wall of an oil separator casing. But it may also suffice to utilize the downstream wall portions of the windings of the helical spring themselves for separating and discharging the oil particles.
In another advantageous embodiment, of which the total height is much less, the or each elastic spring member may be embodied by a leaf or tongue spring exposed transversely of its longitudinal extension to the flow of the blow-by gas, thus uncovering a slot of a size in correspondence with the magnitude of the volume flow of the blow-by gas to let the gas pass through.
The best possible separating effect to get the oil separated from the blow-by gas is obtained according to an advantageous modification of this second embodiment of the invention with which a plurality of tongue springs clamped in cantilever fashion may be arranged transversely of the flow direction, especially in a common plane, to be exposed simultaneously to the blow-by gas flow.
A high degree of separation may be enhanced still further by forming the or each tongue spring with a baffle edge upon which the gas flowing through the slot impinges at high velocity, leaving behind oil that has been separated.
Especially preferred is an oil separating device comprising an oil separator which is integrated in the valve hood of the internal combustion engine, such as known from DE 198 13 702 C1. The integration of the oil separator in the valve hood according to the invention has the advantage that the blow-by gases can be directed through the existing oil return flow bores in the engine block towards the existing valve hood, whereby conduits for blow-by gases outside of the engine can be dispensed with.
Further modifications of the invention are protected by the other subclaims.
The invention will be described further, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the embodiment of an oil separating device according to the invention shown in
The feed pipe 2 which extends from below into the vertical casing is closed at its inner upper end 12 and in its jacket, slightly below that upper end, longitudinal slots 7 are formed through which the blow-by gas enters a chamber 13 in the interior of the casing via a space within a helical tension spring 8. The helical tension spring 8 is slightly biased between a lower spring plate 9 which is firmly connected to the feed pipe 2 and an upper, movable spring plate 10 which is guided axially at the closed upper end 12 of the feed pipe 2 by a guide sleeve 11 formed in one piece with the movable spring plate 10. The vertical cylindrical inside wall of the casing 1 presents the baffle 4. In its upper range, said wall limits the chamber 13 which serves to collect the oil-free gas and through the ceiling of which passes the discharge pipe 3 for this gas.
Passages or slots s are defined between the windings of the helical tension spring 8, the slot width thereof depending on the volume flow through the slot or on the pressure differential between the pressure of the blow-by gas within the feed pipe 2 or the helical tension spring 8 and the pressure within the chamber 13 outside of the helical tension spring 8. The blow-by gas flows at great velocity through the slots s between the windings 81 towards the cylindrical baffle 4. The heavy oil particles entrained by the gas impinge on the baffle 4 and drip down from it into the collecting space 5. From the collecting space 5 they flow back into the crank-case through the oil drain pipe 6. On the other hand, the gas which has been freed of oil is deflected upwardly towards the discharge pipe 3 in the direction of the arrows shown. Alternatively and/or additionally, the windings 81 of the helical tension spring 8 themselves, with their downstream wall portions at the outside of the spring, may provide the required surfaces for separation and deviation of the oil to be separated. In that event a baffle 4 may become superfluous.
The embodiment of an oil separating device according to the invention as shown in
Oil-bearing blow-by gas which flows through the feed pipe 22 into the casing 21 urges the resilient tongues 28 away from the corresponding openings 31 into an open position so that the gas first will pass through the openings 31 in the partition 30, then through the slots s between the resilient tongues 28 and the partition 30, ultimately hitting the baffles 24 at high speed and, thereby, separating the oil entrained in the gas flow. This oil will flow from the open lower ends 24a, 24b (
The embodiment illustrated in
In the other modification shown in
The embodiment according to
In the embodiment according to
In the embodiment shown in
In another modification the baffle 24 of the embodiment illustrated in
Finally,
Instead of providing a slit 313, the border strip may be roughened.
In
The structure of the sintered body may easily be manufactured as requiring merely insertion of the sintered body 100, which is a component to be made at low cost, into the oil drain pipe 41.
According to
The features disclosed in the specification above, in the claims and drawing may be significant for implementing the invention in its various embodiments, both individually and in any combination.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 20 215 | May 2003 | DE | national |
20 2004 004 803 U | Mar 2004 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040261776 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |