The present invention relates to internal combustion engines; more particularly, to gas-exchange valves for introducing and exhausting gases from firing chambers of an internal combustion engine; and most particularly, to a gas-exchange poppet valve wherein in opening the valve a poppet moves away from the engine firing chamber.
It is universally accepted that, for any new internal combustion engine design, the use of an inwardly-opening (“IO”) poppet for the engine gas-exchange valves is the only sensible architecture to consider. Inwardly opening in this context is taken from the perspective of the engine, and more specifically from the combustion chamber; that is to say, the valves move into the combustion space as they open, rather than away from it. The reasons for this choice are well known, and include the fact that the cylinder pressure acts to improve the valve seat sealing force in a self-assisting manner so that the higher the pressure to be contained, the better the valve is able to seal. Thus, this type of valve has been the standard for well over 100 years and its associated technology has evolved to a high standard.
The following is a list of some of the advantages enjoyed by the inwardly-opening valve (IOV):
This situation notwithstanding, it must be recognized that the inwardly-opening (IO) poppet valve does have some drawbacks, and over the years, alternate designs such as sleeve, rotary, swing, and piston valves have attempted to address these. On every occasion, however, technological improvement to the poppet valve has eventually been able to fight off the challenger, and in so doing, maintain its premier position.
The IOV, however, has some distinct disadvantages, including the following:
The negative aspects to the IOV notwithstanding, it has nevertheless been seen as a very satisfactory fit-for-purpose technological solution for today's engines. Indeed, the hegemonic position enjoyed by the inward-opening valve for the past century makes it seem impertinent, if not unwise, to suggest that it may not be the right solution for the future too. However, in the effort to meet certain future emission legislation, significant changes are coming to the internal combustion engine. These changes will alter the balance of technological attributes required, and in the process will make the inward-opening valve less suited to its use than has been the case in the past. As technology moves into the controlled auto-ignition regime of homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI), simply acting as gatekeepers for the inlet and exhaust strokes is no longer sufficient for gas-exchange valves. These valves also need to control effective compression ratio (CReff), and also the quantity of exhaust residuals remaining in the cylinder from the previous exhaust stroke (which may require multiple open/close valve events per cycle). Additionally, practical limits are being encountered with inward-opening valves as engine-specific power ratings increase.
It is beneficial to examine these situations individually in more detail.
Diesel Engine Power Growth:
The desire to increase engine specific-power density (expressed in terms of kW/liter) is pervasive in the industry. In this regard, the gasoline engine has always been dominant and has been the yardstick against which the diesel engine is compared, particularly in the light duty field. Heavy duty engines are typically sold on a “N-dollars per horsepower” basis, where more power within a given engine size category is also desired. It will be apparent that at any given engine speed, if more power is to be produced at the same or similar thermal efficiency, then more fuel must be burned in unit time. Given a similar combustion process, the distribution of the heat energy will be similar for each case considered, with proportionate increases in heat rejection to the exhaust and the cooling systems. Before that heat reaches the cooling system, the heat will be resident in the components most closely associated with the combustion chamber, that is to say, the piston crown and the cylinder head fire deck, including the valve heads. For the cooling system to remove that heat, there must be adequate cooling flow and straightforward heat transfer paths, particularly around the fuel injector and in the exhaust valve bridge region (the narrow section between the two exhaust valves). In the prior art, the desire for more power with its implications of larger valve diameters for better breathing and higher peak firing pressures has now come into conflict with cylinder head low-cycle fatigue (LCF) strength and thermal loading. As a result, to improve head strength and cooling, but to the detriment of breathing, new engines now being designed are obliged to have smaller valve sizes than were previously specified.
A further problem with IOV is that because early in the induction stroke the intake valve is obliged to lag the descending piston, IOVs create negative work for the piston until the valve flow area catches up with the piston rate of displacement. This undesirable throttling effect is discernable and can result in a fuel consumption penalty as great as 2%.
A solution to this dilemma is desired, although it must be pointed out that a smaller valve diameter is not a limitation of itself, since volumetric efficiency can be restored with an increase in inlet port flow capacity (higher coefficient of discharge, or Cd) where possible, or boost pressure, or both. Note however that boost pressure costs energy, and so a solution that does not require higher pressure is preferred.
Controlled Auto-Ignition, or HCCI:
Current engine designs have evolved over the last century in response to customer requirements, fuel availability, metallurgy, and other factors including emission legislation. For example, important driving factors currently are emissions, fuel consumption, durability, and minimized maintenance requirements. Legislation appears to be converging on a zero level of regulated exhaust emissions, and this situation is proving to be problematic for the conventional diesel engine, particularly with respect to nitrous oxide (NOx) emissions, and to a lesser extent with particulate material (PM) emissions. The conventional approach to this problem is to pursue the same path already taken by the gasoline spark ignition (SI) engine, which is to employ a comprehensive suite of exhaust gas aftertreatment (EGA) devices to the engine. The problem with this solution is that it is cumbersome and expensive, and works to put the CI engine at a greater cost disadvantage vs. the Si engine than it already occupies. Thus, another solution is desired.
An alternative solution that appears to be rapidly becoming the industry preference is to adopt one or more of the many advanced combustion concepts that are currently under development in the industry. Broadly, these concepts may be subdivided into those that retain conventional heterogeneous late-injection diffusion combustion (e.g. EPA “Clean Combustion”), and those that employ one or more early injections to enable a controlled auto-ignition (CAI), also known as HCCI. (See: Mello, J P and Linna, J R, “Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition”, TIAX LLC, 2003.) Both concepts require high levels of exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) back into the cylinder, but the latter approach is currently limited to about 50% of the brake mean effective pressure (BMEP) of the former since it is obliged to operate in a regime that is lean of the flammable range (>approx. 35:1 air/fuel ratio). HCCl has, however, demonstrated very low engine-out levels of NOx and PM, typically better than the first concept, and thus is an attractive path to pursue, particularly if the limited power potential issue can be overcome.
There are, however, many different “HCCI” strategies at this time and it is not clear which ones are likely to see widespread adoption. Nevertheless, a common feature of the advanced premixed auto-ignition combustion systems is that there is no positive initiation for the combustion event, as there is for the SI engine (the spark), or for the CI engine (the introduction of atomized fuel into hot compressed air). As such, other factors have to be manipulated to control the timing of the detonation which otherwise would occur well before TDC, resulting in undesirable negative work.
Assuming an engine of fairly conventional architecture operating on diesel fuel, the challenge is to postpone the start of combustion until just after TDC. Of the many published strategies to achieve CAI, a high level categorization would be between those that employ early injection(s) to achieve the necessary homogenization for clean combustion, and those that attempt late injection in which all the fuel is delivered during the “delay” period (that very short duration of time between the start of injection and the start of combustion). This latter approach has more in common with current engines, since it requires very high injection pressure in conjunction with a special multi-hole nozzle; however, achieving a homogeneous mixture in the short time available is extremely challenging, requiring a very expensive injection system. At the end of the day, the former approach is likely to win since it should be able to employ a much lower-cost injection system; however, both concepts, and particularly the latter, require start-of-combustion controls.
There are a number of parameters that can be manipulated to postpone combustion (when the engine is warm), or advance it (when the engine is cold), but chief among these are CReff and EGR, as pointed out above. In a warm engine, an increase of cooled EGR in the charge will serve to delay combustion, while in a cold engine the exhaust gas heat will serve to advance combustion. Likewise, a lower numeric compression ratio will delay combustion while a higher ratio will advance it. A means to conveniently effect these changes is therefore required.
Within the engine prior art, it is generally perceived that these changes can be made through the active modulation of valve events, sometimes referred to as variable valve actuation (VVA); however, by far the majority of mechanisms that have been proposed for this purpose are much better suited for SI engines that in general do not have the valve-to-piston interference issues that typical CI engines do. Thus it appears that the current mindset within the industry, and therefore the focus of activity, is to adapt SI VVA systems for the CI engine rather than to approach the problem from first principles.
What is needed in the engine arts is a new valve and valve train mechanism that is better suited to enabling CAI conditions in the diesel engine, and at a cost that will not disadvantage the Cl engine vs. its SI counterpart.
Desired Functionality:
The following is a brief review of the ideal functionality that a valve mechanism should possess. Recall that the objective for future engines is to deliver zero exhaust emissions with minimum fuel consumption, without giving up any of the desirable attributes of power and responsiveness that current engines provide. A number of new and little-used older strategies in addition to CAI that are being widely discussed within the industry are expected to be utilized to achieve the objective, and a common theme is that they all require VVA. More specifically, the VVA needs to be particularly flexible so that more than just a single strategy can be employed, suggesting that valve “mobility” will be an important attribute in the future. Mobility in this context implies the freedom to open or close any intake or exhaust valve at any time in the cycle without undue difficulty or hindrance. Such freedom is clearly impossible in an IO interference engine.
In the same way that flexibility of injection characteristics provided by common rail fuel injection systems have revolutionized the diesel engine in recent years, so it is thought that flexibility in valve event timing will bring another step change improvement by enabling advanced strategies hitherto thought impossible. Among the strategies being discussed are included:
1. The Atkinson Cycle (Late Exhaust Valve Opening, or EVO, giving high expansion ratio).
2. The Miller Cycle (Early or late Intake Valve Closing, or IVC, to modify CReff in conjunction with external compression).
3. The Air-Hybrid Cycle (Compression regeneration; see U.S. Pat. No. 6,223,846).
4. The Curtil Cycle (Pressure-wave supercharging technique utilizing VVA; see U.S. Pat. No. 5,819,693).
5. Two-stroke, four-stroke, six-stroke, eight-stroke switching.
6. Engine braking (Compression retardation).
Strategies 1, 2, and 3 are primarily aimed at fuel efficiency improvement; strategies 4 and 5 offer performance enhancement particularly in CAI mode; and strategy 6 extends the benefits of compression retardation to engines below the circa 2.0 liter/cylinder, heavy duty category that utilizes it today. An engine of conventional architecture but with a flexible VVA system would be able to adopt the Atkinson, Miller, and Curtil cycles under differing operating conditions, whereas air-hybrid and multiple stroke-switching engines would require additional complexity to function effectively. Note, however, that CAI/HCCI is possible today over a limited operating range with today's engines, but practical implementation is essentially technology-limited; the better and more flexible the technology, the more capable the engine will be.
These requirements suggest that in future CI engine design, thee will be a migration to camless valve trains that offer valve mobility with good refinement; minimal noise, vibration, and harshness (NVH); high reliability; and durability that is at least up to current standards, assuming it is not accompanied by excessive on-cost.
It is a principal object of the present invention to provide a gas-exchange valve system wherein the entire valve port is open to passage of gas therethrough.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a way wherein camless engines may be confidently enabled.
Briefly described, an outwardly-opening (OO) gas-exchange valve for an internal combustion engine includes a port in a firing chamber in an engine head, the port having a valve seat on a side opposite from (outside of) the associated firing chamber. A poppet valve head in the form of a piston slides in a bore formed in the engine head concentric with the port and has a face for mating with the valve seat to occlude passage of gas across the valve seat. Withdrawal of the poppet valve head from the seat (opening of the valve) along the axis of the piston and cylinder opens the firing chamber to communication with an intake or exhaust manifold runner in the engine head. The poppet valve head may be actuated by any convenient means, for example, an overcenter lever arrangement having a high mechanical advantage and actuated selectively by hydraulic pressure or mechanical means.
A valvetrain in accordance with the invention is especially useful as a combustion air intake valvetrain, a combustion exhaust valvetrain, and/or an exhaust gas recirculation valvetrain.
In a presently preferred embodiment, a plurality of OO intake and exhaust valves are arranged in a hemispherical firing chamber formed in an engine head with their respective axes radially disposed.
The present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. The exemplifications set out herein illustrate currently-preferred embodiments of the invention, and such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
The present invention is directed to an outward-opening valve and its actuating mechanism; that is to say, a valve that opens by moving away from the combustion chamber. The concept of OO valves for internal combustion engines is not new, and some recent prior art examples can be found (see, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,522,358 and 5,709,178), notably the latter to which the present invention disclosure has some superficial similarity. Prior art OO valvetrains are, however, relatively complex, having been designed with heavy-duty engines in mind, and a lower cost concept would be more likely to be considered for production, particularly for light and medium-duty engines, this being an objective of the present invention. The present invention may be applied to all gas exchange valves, either inlet or exhaust (including stand-alone EGR valves) as may be desired.
The benefits and advantages of OO valves in accordance with the invention may be better understood and appreciated by first considering the poppet valve properties of a typical prior art IO valve train.
Referring to
Referring now to
Referring additionally now to
The various negative features of an IO valvetrain just described are overcome by an OO valvetrain in accordance with the invention.
Referring now to
As is the case for conventional 10 valves, the OO valve must lift by an amount that provides a curtain area 150 (
Referring now specifically to
Also in pocket 189 and loading adjustable ring 190 is a resilient component 193, such as for example, a Belleville washer (but other spring devices such as a helical spring, hydraulic pressure, pneumatic pressure, or an elastomeric medium (not shown) are alternatively contemplated) to which a load force is applied by screw or shim adjustment 199 between ring 190 and abutment 164. The load force may also be a force that can be varied depending on engine operating conditions. This force is equal to or greater than the product of valve area multiplied by the anticipated peak cylinder pressure, so that valve 114 stays seated under all normal operating conditions. The preload can of course be calibrated to permit the valve to open should the cylinder pressure exceed a predetermined maximum. By this means, a known maximum structural loading can be designed for the engine block and head, safe in the knowledge that the valve will blow-off if the threshold pressure is exceeded, hence confidently permitting a lower margin of safety and a lighter engine structure than is currently the case in prior art engines.
Any of several means of actuation of the valve train are contemplated, but in the preferred embodiment an electro-hydraulic “camless” system is described. A source of hydraulic or pneumatic pressure 194 is generated, and in conjunction with appropriate valving (not shown), this pressure is caused to displace a piston 195 disposed in a transverse bore 196 in actuator housing 166 and with it, the connecting rod 180 and scissor mechanism 160. Alternatively, any obvious mechanical mechanism may be employed to displace piston 195.
It will be recognized that with the valve on its seat, the over-center linkage is very heavily loaded (for example, 200 bar cylinder pressure acting upon a 25 mm diameter valve will result in a load of almost 10 kN); however, a very much lower force is required to lock and unlock the mechanism from the on-center position.
Turning now to the operation of the valve mechanism, it will be understood that the default position for the valve will be on its seat with the linkage mechanism either “on-center” or just “over-center”, being so positioned due to the coercion of the torsion spring acting upon the upper link. In this condition, valve 114 is loaded upon its seat 120 by the preload spring 193 at the top of the linkage stack, and a small clearance gap 192 exists between the adjusting ring and the floor of spring pocket floor 189. In the combustion chamber 32, a smooth surface is presented to the swirling air since there are no valve pockets in the piston crown or valve recesses in the fire deck. This permits the desired air motion to be better sustained through the compression stroke and into the combustion event. Additionally, without such dead air pockets, the air utilization (percentage of air that can be accessed by the fuel spray and thus participates in the combustion) is markedly increased.
During and following combustion, heat from the conflagration is transferred into the valve through its face, whence it can escape either through the adjacent valve seat 120 into the cooled valve train housing 119 or through the molten sodium salts of medium 151 within the hollow piston valve that are in constant agitation and thence to the side walls and valve guide bore.
When a valve event is required, for instance EVO at the end of the exhaust stroke, the valve actuator (e.g., hydraulic pressure 194 and piston 195) acting through the connecting rod 180 pushes the linkage of scissor mechanism 160 aside so that it is no longer an on-center rigid strut, as shown in
This same sequence of events takes place, whether the valve in question is an intake valve or an exhaust valve, and whether the function is a conventional valve event or an atypical event such as engine braking or a Curtil event. No details are provided here concerning the electro-hydraulic valve actuating system since a conventional system without novelty is assumed. Although described with a single-acting hydraulic actuator, other embodiments are contemplated including an arrangement wherein the mechanism is spring-biased open and energized closed, and a double-acting actuator in which case the torsion return spring may be eliminated.
Referring now to
First and second valve heads 114a, 114b are connected respectively to adjacent scissor mechanisms 160a, 160b, as described individually above. Connecting rods 180 are replaced by first and second scissor arms 180a, 180b connected individually at first ends thereof to first and second intermediate pivot pins 182a, 182b and jointly at second ends thereof to an actuator rod 181 connected to a piston 195 in a bore 196 in actuator housing 166. Piston 195 is actuated identically to piston 195 in
The arrangement shown will cause the valves to be normally open; however, a similar arrangement wherein rod 181 is longer and the scissor arms 180a, 180b are driven downwards to open and drawn upwards to close will cause the valves to be normally closed. Also, of course, the actuation mechanism shown may be double-acting.
Note that valve axes 115a, 115b are shown as being parallel. This is not a requirement, however, and the actuation arrangement shown in
Alternative Constructions:
Most high speed CI engines require a controlled level of air motion in the combustion chamber to aid in the mixing of the air, the fuel, and the EGR. This air motion typically comprises both swirl (rotation around the cylinder axis) and squish (a radial in-flow), and it has been found that the optimum level of swirl typically varies with engine speed. Thus some means to effect this change in swirl level is desired so that it may be optimized over the engine operating range.
Referring to
In operation, charge air 229 from the inlet manifold enters the inlet runner and port 246, whence it encounters the valve surrounded by the helical spring. To enter the firing chamber 32, the air is obliged by the spring to circulate around the periphery of the valve, such that an intense helical motion is imparted to air 229 as it passes through the port, and this motion of the air is sustained as it fills the cylinder. Precise variation of the swirl ratio may be made by causing the bearing sleeve to move axially, having the effect of changing the spring pitch angle and thus the helix encountered by the incoming air. The axial position of bearing sleeve 223 will be modulated in the preferred embodiment by any one of many well known prior art actuators (not shown) that can be controlled electronically. In
As noted in the Background of the Invention, in the case of medium- and heavy-duty diesel engines being designed today, a limitation has been reached in which thermal loading and low-cycle fatigue concerns are causing valve sizes to shrink relative to previous engine generations. The need to maintain cylinder head strength as cylinder firing pressures increase is causing a reduction in free-breathing capacity.
Referring now to
Revisiting this situation now but with OO valves 314 in mind, the following factors are observed:
1. The doming of the combustion chamber 332 improves fire deck strength.
2. The radial format opens up space in the center of the valve train housing 319 for improved coolant flow around the injector 341 and valves to address thermal loading and conduction.
3. The radial format allows larger valves than is possible with a flat fire deck without invoking the sidewall flow interference mentioned previously, for enhanced breathing.
4. The improved flow coefficient of the OO valve coupled with the larger valve potential pen head strength.
5. With OO valves, the machining problem mentioned above is eliminated since the valve seats 320 are machined from the top; thus, all seats can be machined in one pass again permits a trade-off to be made between improved flow and improved head strength.
6. Because the choice of OO valves eliminates the potential for valve to-piston collisions, adoption of camless valve trains is encouraged. In turn, camless mechanisms resolve the kinematic problems with radial valve trains. Together, they are positively synergistic.
Unique Features Accruing to the Outward-Opening Valve:
1. The valve is hollow, light weight, and partially filled with sodium salts for cooling.
2. The valve is surrounded by an annulus which helps to minimize the valve lift necessary for maximum flow.
3. By eliminating the valve head and stem of a conventional inward-opening valve, the flow coefficient is better, permitting smaller valves for the same air flow.
4. Because the valve cannot fall into the cylinder, the arrangement is essentially “fail-safe”, and thus can be made lighter than a comparable 10 valve.
5. The need for recessed valve heads and/or valve pockets in the piston crown is eliminated, to the benefit of in-cylinder swirl, air utilization, and combustion efficiency.
6. There is no possibility of valve-to-piston collision, thus enabling robust camless operation.
7. In contrast to conventional IO valve trains, the mechanism can be lighter since cylinder pressure assists valve opening, particularly in the case of early EVO or engine braking events.
8. Valve opening velocity is no longer constrained by piston position or velocity, resulting in lower pumping losses along with improved engine braking performance.
9. A peak cylinder pressure safety-valve feature is readily accommodated.
10. Preferably, the fire face 352 of each piston valve 314 is hemispherically dished at the same radius as the fire deck 342 to provide a virtually unbroken arcuate surface with the fire deck.
11. Because the piston-shaped poppet valve is physically constrained by a linkage, better spatial control is possible in contrast to a conventional 10 poppet valve that at high speed has a tendency to follow a ballistic trajectory and thus depart from its intended motion.
12. In comparison with the slim valve stems of conventional prior art 10 valves, the larger surface area of the external guide diameter of the OO valves 114, 214, 314 provide a better heat transfer pathway from fire face 152 to cylinder head 119, 219, 319.
While the invention has been described by reference to various specific embodiments, it should be understood that numerous changes may be made within the spirit and scope of the inventive concepts described. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the described embodiments, but will have full scope defined by the language of the following claims.
This application is a divisional application of U.S. Ser. No. 11/725,345, filed Mar. 19, 2007.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11725345 | Mar 2007 | US |
Child | 11998296 | US |