The invention relates to a piezo injector, in particular a piezo injector for an internal combustion engine with direct fuel injection.
In internal combustion engines with direct fuel injection, fluid injectors are used for the metering of fuel. With regard to high demands placed on internal combustion engines arranged in motor vehicles, for example with regard to highly targeted performance setting and/or the adherence to stringent pollutant emissions, precise metering of the fuel by means of the respective injector is important.
The injection quantity of injectors is controlled for example by means of a servo valve. It is also possible for the nozzle needle of the injector to be driven directly by means of a piezo element.
For this purpose, virtually play-free coupling between the piezo actuator and the nozzle needle is important.
One embodiment provides a piezo injector, comprising an actuator chamber; a piezo actuator arranged in the actuator chamber; a control piston bore; a control piston arranged in the control piston bore, the control piston have a face side; a leakage pin arranged between the piezo actuator and the face side to couple the piezo actuator to the control piston; and a connection for fluid communication with the control piston bore, the connection having a hydraulic throttle.
In a further embodiment, the piezo injector comprises a first control chamber formed by a section of the control piston bore that is delimited by the face side; a nozzle needle having a face side, wherein the nozzle needle guides a nozzle needle sleeve; and a second control chamber delimited by the nozzle needle sleeve and by the face side of the nozzle needle; wherein the connection for fluid communication is formed between the first and the second control chamber.
In a further embodiment, the piezo injector comprises a spring chamber formed by the section of the control piston bore that faces away from the piezo actuator and by the control piston, wherein the connection for fluid communication is formed between the spring chamber and a high-pressure region.
In a further embodiment, the throttle is designed such that the throttle exhibits a throughflow in the range from 300 ml/min to 600 ml/min.
In a further embodiment, the throttle has a minimum diameter in the range from 0.2 mm to 0.4 mm.
In a further embodiment, the throttle is designed such that a throughflow rate through the throttle in one direction differs from a throughflow rate through the throttle in the opposite direction.
In a further embodiment, the throughflow rate in the direction of the second control chamber is lower than the throughflow rate in the direction of the first control chamber.
In a further embodiment, the throughflow rate in the direction of the spring chamber is lower than the throughflow rate in the direction of the high-pressure region.
Example embodiments are discussed below with reference to the figures, in which:
In one embodiment of the invention, a piezo injector comprises an actuator chamber in which a piezo actuator is arranged. The piezo injector comprises a control piston bore in which a control piston is arranged. The control piston has a face side. The piezo injector furthermore has a leakage pin which is arranged between the piezo actuator and the face side in order to couple the piezo actuator to the control piston. The piezo injector has a connection for fluid communication with the control piston bore, which connection has a hydraulic throttle.
By means of the hydraulic throttle, it is possible for the inflow and/or outflow of a fluid into and/or out of the control bore to be dampened. In this way, it is possible to dampen the movement of the control piston. It is thus possible to reduce an undefined movement of the control piston, for example an overshoot. Thus, the control piston reliably follows a movement predefined by the piezo actuator. Reliable operation of the piezo injector is made possible in this way.
In further embodiments, the piezo injector comprises a first control chamber which is formed by a section, delimited by the face side, of the control piston bore. The piezo injector comprises a nozzle needle with a face side. The nozzle needle guides a nozzle needle sleeve. The piezo injector comprises a second control chamber which is delimited by the nozzle needle sleeve and the face side of the nozzle needle. The connection for fluid communication is formed between the first and the second control chamber.
Hydraulic coupling between the piezo actuator and the nozzle needle is made possible by the first and the second control chamber and the connection for fluid communication between the two control chambers. Said hydraulic coupling advantageously effects play compensation and a stroke boosting action. In this way, temperature effects, wear at contact points in the drive and changes in length in the piezo actuator caused by changes in the state of polarization of the piezo actuator can be compensated. This makes it possible for the piezo actuator to be manufactured from virtually any desired material, without the need to allow for thermal expansion characteristics of the material. It is thus possible, for example, to use a particularly high-pressure resistant material. The fluid flow from the first to the second control chamber and vice versa is dampened by the throttle. Thus, the movement of the piezo actuator is transmitted reliably to the nozzle needle. An undefined movement of the nozzle needle can thus be reduced.
According to further embodiments, the piezo injector comprises a spring chamber which is formed by that section of the control piston bore which faces away from the piezo actuator and by the control piston. The connection for fluid communication is formed between the spring chamber and the high-pressure region.
By virtue of the fact that the throttle is formed in the connection between the spring chamber and the high-pressure region, it is possible for the movement of the control piston to be dampened. The fluid flow to the spring chamber and out of the spring chamber is dampened. It is thus possible for an undefined movement of the control piston to be prevented. In this way, reliable operation of the piezo injector is made possible.
The throttle is formed either in the connection between the first and the second control chamber or in the connection between the spring chamber and the high-pressure region.
According to further embodiments, a throttle is arranged both in the connection between the first and the second control chamber and in the connection between the spring chamber and the high-pressure region.
According to embodiments, the throughflow rate through the throttle in one direction differs from a throughflow rate through the throttle in the opposite direction. It is thus possible, for example, for the throttle throughflow during the opening of the needle to differ from the throttle throughflow during the closing of the needle. In particular, the throttle is designed such that the damping action in the direction of the closing of the needle is less than that in the direction of the opening of the needle. Fast closing of the nozzle needle is thus ensured. Efficient operation of the internal combustion engine is thus possible.
The piezo injector 100 has a high-pressure port 101 via which highly pressurized fuel can be supplied. A high-pressure bore 103 in a housing 125 of the piezo injector 100 is hydraulically coupled to the high-pressure port 101. The high-pressure bore 103 runs in the longitudinal direction through the piezo injector 100 to a high-pressure region 123.
The piezo injector 100 has an actuator chamber 119 in which a piezo actuator 104 is arranged. The piezo actuator 104 is for example a fully active piezo stack. The piezo actuator 104 has an approximately cylindrical shape and can have an electrical voltage applied to it via an electrical connector 102 in order for the length of the piezo actuator 104 in the longitudinal direction to be varied.
A nozzle needle 116 is arranged in the high-pressure region 123. The change in length of the piezo actuator 104 is transmitted hydraulically to the nozzle needle 116. The coupling of the piezo actuator 104 to the nozzle needle 116 will be discussed below in conjunction with
The piezo injector 100 has a control piston bore 121 in a control plate 108, in which control piston bore there is arranged a control piston 110. The control piston 110 has a face side 118 pointing in the direction of the piezo actuator 104. A section of the control piston bore 121 that is delimited by the face side 118 forms a first control chamber 111. At its longitudinal end situated opposite the first control chamber 111, the control piston bore 121 forms a spring chamber 114. The control piston is thus formed between the first control chamber 111 and the spring chamber 114.
In the spring chamber 114 there is situated a spring 115 (
The spring chamber 114 is connected via a high-pressure connection 109 (
A leakage pin 106 is arranged between the piezo actuator 104 and the control piston bore 121. The leakage pin 106 is designed to transmit an increase in length of the piezo actuator 104 to the control piston 110. The leakage pin 106 is held by an intermediate plate 107.
The nozzle needle 116 is arranged in the high-pressure region 123, on the upper region of which nozzle needle a nozzle needle sleeve 117 is guided. An end of the nozzle needle 116 that points in the direction of the piezo actuator 104 has a face side 122. Above the face side 122 there is formed a second control chamber 112 which is delimited by the second face side 122 and by the nozzle needle sleeve 117. The second control chamber 112 is hydraulically connected to the first control chamber 111 by way of a connection 113.
The nozzle needle 116 is for example subjected by a helical compression spring to a force directed away from the second control chamber 112.
In the closed state of the piezo injector 100, the nozzle needle 116 bears against a lower tip of the piezo injector 100. The piezo actuator 104 is discharged and exhibits its minimum length. The piezo injector 100 does not perform an injection of fuel.
If the piezo actuator 104 is charged via the electrical connector 102 and thus the length of the piezo actuator 104 is increased, the piezo actuator 104 exerts a force on the control piston 110 via the leakage pin 106, as a result of which the control piston 110 is moved in the control piston bore 103 in the direction of the spring chamber 114. The volume of the first control chamber 111 is thus increased, whereby the pressure in the first control chamber 111 and in the second control chamber 112 falls. Thus, the reduced pressure in the second control chamber 112 exerts a now reduced force on the face side 122 of the nozzle needle 116. The high pressure of the high-pressure region 123, which continues to act on the lower end of the nozzle needle 116, consequently effects a movement of the nozzle needle 116 upward in the direction of the second control chamber 112. The piezo injector 100 is thus opened in order to inject fuel.
A transmission ratio between a change in length of the piezo actuator 104 and a stroke of the nozzle needle 116 is set by way of the ratio of the diameter of the control piston 110, and thus the diameter of the first control chamber 111, to the diameter of the nozzle needle 116 at its face side 122, and thus to the diameter of the second control chamber 112.
If the piezo actuator 104 is subsequently discharged and thus decreases in length, the high pressure prevailing in the spring chamber 114 and the force exerted on the control piston 110 by the spring 115 effects a movement of the control piston 110 in the direction of the first control chamber 111. As a result, the pressure in the first control chamber 111 and thus also the pressure in the second control chamber 112 increase. This results in a return movement of the nozzle needle 116 to the lower end of the piezo injector 100, whereby the piezo injector 100 is closed and the injection of fuel is ended.
A throttle 120 is arranged in the connection 113 between the first control chamber 111 and the second control chamber 112. The throttle 120 dampens the fluid flow between the two control chambers 111 and 112. Thus, the speed of the pressure increase in the control chamber 111 during a movement of the nozzle needle 116 upward in the direction of the second control chamber 112 is reduced. Thus, an oscillation amplitude of the nozzle needle 116 is also reduced. An excessive acceleration and overshoot of the nozzle needle 116 are thus prevented. These may arise conventionally because, during the opening movement of the nozzle needle 116 for the injection of the fuel, the pressure in the blind bore below the needle seat rises very rapidly to almost the pressure in the high-pressure bore 103. The hydraulic closing force on the nozzle needle 116 falls by the same extent. As a result, the force required for opening the nozzle needle 116 is significantly higher than the force required for holding the nozzle needle 116 in the open position. The piezo actuator 104 and the hydraulic path to the seat of the nozzle needle 116 are elastically preloaded from the beginning of the injection process until the opening of the nozzle needle. In this case, the pressure in the two control chambers 111 and 112 is reduced to a value considerably lower than that required for holding the nozzle needle 116 in the open position. After the nozzle needle 116 has lifted from the seat, the elastic preload is depleted. In this way, the nozzle needle is conventionally subjected to intense acceleration, and overshoots. The resulting oscillation amplitude, which leads to intensely non-linear quantity characteristic curves, which are disadvantageous for transient operation of the internal combustion engine, can be prevented through the use of the throttle 120.
By means of the throttle 120, it is possible for the speed of the pressure increase in the first control chamber 111 after the nozzle needle 116 has lifted from the seat to be reduced. In this way, the oscillation amplitude of the nozzle needle 116 is also reduced. The throughflow rate through the throttle 120 is predefined in a manner dependent on the energization profiles of the piezo actuator 104, such that the quantity characteristic curves exhibit adequate linearity even without the use of a needle stop for the nozzle needle 116. An overshoot of the nozzle needle 116 is dampened, and thus the linearity of the quantity characteristic curves is increased. It is thus possible to dispense with a needle stop which delimits the needle oscillations. It is thus possible even in the case of relatively small injection quantities for the needle oscillations of the nozzle needle 116 to be reduced.
For example, the throttle 120 exhibits a throughflow rate in a range from 300 to 600 ml/min. For example, during the measurement process at the manufacturing stage, the throttle 120 exhibits a pressure difference of 100 to 60 bar. The throttle throughflow rate is configured such that, in particular during the closing of the nozzle needle 116, the nozzle needle movement relative to the movement of the piezo actuator 104 is maintained.
The movement of the control piston 110 is dampened by the throttle 120. The movement of the nozzle needle 116 is dampened by the throttle 120. Thus, the nozzle needle 116 reliably follows the movement of the control piston 110 during the opening of the piezo injector 100 and while the latter is held open.
For example, the throttle 120 has a diameter 124 (
According to embodiments, the throttle 120 is designed such that the throughflow rate in the flow direction through the connection 113 during the opening of the nozzle needle 116 differs from the throughflow rate in the flow direction through the connection 113 during the closing of the nozzle needle 116. In particular, the throughflow rate in the direction of the second control chamber 122 is lower than that in the direction of the first control chamber 111.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2012 222 509.9 | Dec 2012 | DE | national |
This application is a U.S. National Stage Application of International Application No. PCT/EP2013/075693 filed Dec. 5, 2013, which designates the United States of America, and claims priority to DE Application No. 10 2012 222 509.9 filed Dec. 7, 2012, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/075693 | 12/5/2013 | WO | 00 |