The present invention concerns an oil pan intended to be fixed under the engine block of an internal combustion engine.
The main function of an oil pan is to contain the oil needed to lubricate an engine and to dissipate some of the heat generated by the engine.
Conventionally, an oil pan includes a shell which is fixed under the engine block.
During operation, the oil present in the pan is sucked by an oil pump and is propelled to the various engine members to be lubricated (for example, camshafts, valve stems, crankshaft bearings, piston/cylinder, piston/connecting rod, crankshaft/connecting rod interfaces, etc.), then the oil returns to the pan by natural run-off or channelized return depending on the case.
The pan receives in its interior volume a strainer allowing to stop solid materials such as filings produced by the engine members contained in the oil before reaching the suction orifice of the pump, and a plate called anti-emulsion plate, whose role is to prevent or limit the movements of the oil in the pan, particularly at the free surface of the oil.
During its path, the oil is heated by the engine parts and cooled in the oil pan.
When starting the engine, the engine members are at ambient temperature. During the transitional phase of temperature rise to the optimum operating temperature, the engine does not operate optimally and particularly the fuel consumption proves to be substantially higher; this is because the combustion does not occur at optimum temperature.
In a general issue of optimizing the operation of an engine in order to reduce its consumption, a search pathway aims at reducing the duration of the transitional startup phase so that the engine reaches its optimum operating temperature as quickly as possible.
In this context, the purpose of the present invention is to provide an oil pan which allows decreasing the heating time of the oil of the engine lubrication circuit and therefore decreasing the fuel consumption when starting the engine as well as the carbon dioxide emissions.
According to a general definition, the invention concerns an oil pan comprising a lower shell intended to contain oil for lubricating an engine block, in which an oil flow, called sucked oil flow, is sucked by a suction tube for supplying a lubrication circuit and an oil flow, called returning oil flow, falls into the oil pan. The oil pan comprises an anti-emulsion plate disposed in the oil pan and orientation means allowing to orient at least a portion of the returning oil flow to an area located at the mouthpiece of the suction tube for a transitional period during which the oil has a temperature lower than an optimum operating temperature.
Thus, the invention provides an oil pan which allows the oil flow returning to the pan (that is to say an oil flow which, when in contact with the members that it has lubricated, is at a temperature which is higher than the temperature of the oil stored in the pan which is for its part at a temperature substantially equal to the ambient temperature) to make a short path by leading the returning oil flow directly to the mouthpiece of the suction tube of the oil pump. In other words, during the startup transition phase, the oil flow returning into the pan is directly sucked by the oil pump without having dissipated the heat that it carries in the oil mass of the pan. The invention establishes a bypass of the returning oil flow in order to retain the heat contained therein and to directly use the returning oil flow to supply the lubrication circuit.
Indeed, during the transitional period, the sucked oil flow mostly comes from the oil flow returning from the lubrication circuit. When in contact with the engine parts, the returning oil flow rises in temperature. Thus, the oil flow sucked during the transitional period, mostly contains oil heated by the engine members, which accelerates the rise in temperature of the sucked oil to its optimum operating temperature. In other words, the repeated re-use, during the transitional period, of the returning oil flow as a sucked oil flow allows accelerating the temperature rise of the sucked oil by avoiding a cooling caused by the mixing of the returning oil flow with the oil stored in the lower shell. The rapid rise in temperature of the sucked oil to its optimum temperature allows decreasing the heating time of the engine lubrication circuit. Thus, the invention provides an oil pan which allows decreasing the heating time of the oil of the engine lubrication circuit. The engine more quickly reaches its optimum operating temperature and therefore allows lowering the fuel over-consumption during the engine startup phase as well as reducing carbon dioxide emissions.
The orientation means may comprise a bypass tube opening at a first end into an opening of the anti-emulsion plate and at a second end into the mouthpiece of the suction tube.
The bypass tube and the suction tube can open into a casing having an opening allowing the oil stored in the lower shell to be sucked.
The bypass tube and the suction tube may comprise a platen connecting the bypass tube and the suction tube, the plate can be adapted to be fixed to the casing.
According to a first embodiment, the orientation means may comprise a bimetal shutter positioned in the opening of the anti-emulsion plate. The bimetal shutter can be movable between an open position in which the oil can flow into the opening and a closed position in which the bimetal shutter doses off the opening. The bimetal shutter can be adapted to switch to the closed position when the oil reaches or exceeds its optimum temperature.
The anti-emulsion plate may have a series of orifices for the passage of the oil flow returning to the lower shell.
According to one embodiment, the orientation means may comprise a series of bimetal shutters each positioned on a passage orifice. The bimetal shutters are movable between a closed position in which the bimetal shutters close off the passage orifices and an open position in which the oil can flow into the passage orifices. The bimetal shutters are adapted to switch to the open position when the oil reaches or exceeds its optimum temperature.
According to another embodiment, the orientation means may comprise a grid, the grid may have a plurality of micro-perforations, the micro-perforations being configured to be traversed by the oil reaching or exceeding a determined viscosity. The rise in the oil temperature allows changing the oil viscosity.
The anti-emulsion plate may comprise a gutter in which the opening and the passage orifices are positioned.
The gutter may have a slope adapted to promote the oil flow to the opening of the anti-emulsion plate.
The anti-emulsion plate may have a curved geometry adapted to recover the oil coming from the engine block.
Other features and advantages of the invention will emerge from the following description with reference to the appended drawings that show two embodiments of the invention.
With reference to
The oil pan 1 comprises in particular a lower shell 2, a suction tube 44 connected at one of its ends to an oil pump and which opens at its second end into the lower shell 2, an anti-emulsion plate 8 and orientation means which allow orienting a returning oil flow. A strainer is positioned at the mouthpiece of the suction tube 44 in order to stop solid materials such as filings produced by the engine members contained in the oil.
The lower shell 2 has a substantially parallelepiped shape with an upper opening 21. The opening 21 is surrounded by a flange 22. The flange 22 has bores 23 allowing to fix an anti-emulsion plate 8 to the lower shell 2. The bottom shell 2 is adapted to contain oil. According to the example presented here, the lower shell 2 is made of polymeric material. According to other embodiments, the lower shell 2 could, for example, be made of aluminum casting.
The anti-emulsion plate 8 is intended to cover the upper opening 21 of the lower shell 2. According to the example presented here, the anti-emulsion plate 8 is made of polymeric material. According to other embodiments, the anti-emulsion plate 8 could, for example, be made of aluminum. The anti-emulsion plate 8 has a collection segment 81. The collection segment 81 has two fixing flanges 82. Each fixing flange has bores 83 for fixing the anti-emulsion plate 8 to the lower shell 2. The fixing of the anti-emulsion plate 8 to the lower shell 2 may for example be made with bolts or rivets. The collection segment 81 has a substantially semi-cylindrical section. The collection segment 81 comprises a bottom area offset in the direction of the bottom of the lower shell 2 relative to the fixing flanges 82. The bottom area comprises a gutter 84. The gutter 84 has a bottom wall 84a and flanks 84b.
According to a first embodiment, the oil passage orifices 86 are formed in the flanks 84b of the gutter 84.
An opening 87 is formed in the bottom wall 84a. The bottom wall 84a is inclined on both sides of the opening 87, so that the opening 87 is at the low point of the bottom wall 84a.
According to the first embodiment, shown in
According to a second embodiment, shown in
According to a third embodiment, shown in
The orientation means comprise a bypass tube 41. The bypass tube 41 opens at a first end into the opening 87 of the anti-emulsion plate 8 and at a second end into the mouthpiece of the suction tube 44. The bypass tube 41 and the suction tube 44 open into a casing 45. The casing 45 has an opening 42 allowing the oil stored in the lower shell 2 to be sucked.
The bypass tube 41 and the suction tube 44 comprise a platen 43 which connects the bypass tube 41 and the suction tube 44. The platen is adapted to be fixed to the casing 45.
In conditions of use, when the engine is stopped, the majority of the oil is in the lower shell 2 of the oil pan 1. From the startup of the engine, a sucked oil flow I is sucked through the suction tube 44 by the oil pump. The oil circulates in the engine parts to ensure their lubrication. When returning, the returning oil flow II falls on the anti-emulsion plate 8.
According to the first embodiment, whose operation is shown in
Thus, the sucked oil flow I which passes through the suction tube 44 mainly contains oil directly coming from the engine that has already been heated when in contact with the engine elements. When the returning oil flow II present on the anti-emulsion plate reaches or exceeds its optimum temperature, the bimetal shutter 88 switches to the closed position. In this case, all the returning oil flow flows through the orifices 86 in the lower shell 2, as shown in
Thus, the first embodiment comprises active orientation means whose change of state allows the orientation of the returning oil flow II.
According to the second embodiment, the returning oil flow flows on the grid 89. As long as the returning oil flow has not reached or exceeded a defined temperature, the returning oil flow cannot pass through the grid 89. In this case, all the returning oil flow flows through the opening 87 in the bypass tube 41. When the returning oil flow reaches or exceeds a defined viscosity, the returning oil flow can pass through the grid 89 and flow through the passage orifices 86. The change in viscosity of the oil flow is caused by the change in temperature of the oil flow. The returning oil flow then flows through the passage orifices 86 and through the opening 87. The sucked oil flow I then partly comes from the lower shell 2 and passes through the opening 42 of the casing 45 in order to pass through the suction tube 44. Thus, the second embodiment comprises passive orientation means. The change of temperature and fluidity of the oil allows, or does not allow, the returning oil flow to pass through the grid 89.
It is also possible to combine the first and the second embodiment by jointly using the grid 89 and the bimetal shutter 88.
According to the third embodiment, the returning oil flow II flows on the anti-emulsion plate 8. As long as the oil has not reached its optimum temperature, the bimetal shutters 90 are in the closed position and close off the passage orifices 86. During this period, the oil therefore flows through the opening 87 in the bypass tube 41. When the returning oil flow II reaches or exceeds its optimum operating temperature, the bimetal shutters 90 switch to the open position and the oil flows through the passage orifices 86.
Thus, the third embodiment comprises active orientation means whose change of state allows the orientation of the returning oil flow II.
It is possible to combine the first and third embodiment.
Of course, the invention is in no way limited to the embodiments described above and illustrated by the various figures, these embodiments having been given only as examples. Modifications remain possible, in particular from the point of view of the substitution of technical equivalents without departing from the scope of the invention. Thus, it is possible to replace the bimetal shutters by other thermostat trigger devices of the wax capsule or shape memory alloy type.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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16/60104 | Oct 2016 | FR | national |
This application is a National Stage of PCT Application No. PCT/FR2017/052816 filed on Oct. 12, 2017, which claims priority to French Patent Application No. 16/60104 filed on Oct. 18, 2016, the contents each of which are incorporated herein by reference thereto.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2017/052816 | 10/12/2017 | WO | 00 |