The invention relates to an actuator unit with a piezoelectric actuator disposed in a hollow body, and to a hollow body for biasing a piezoelectric actuator.
Actuator units with a piezoelectric actuator that is biased by a resilient hollow body are used, for example, in automotive technology to control injection valves in an internal combustion engine. DE 38 44 134 C2 discloses an injection valve that is operated by a piezoelectric actuator that is arranged in a cylindrical tubular spring and is biased by the latter against the casing of the injection valve. This design of the actuator unit has, however, the disadvantage that the biasing of the piezoelectric actuator depends greatly on the manufacturing tolerances of the casing of the injection valve. Furthermore, the installation of the actuator unit is complicated and requires a great amount of maintenance, since upon each installation and removal the bias applied to the piezoelectric actuator by the tubular spring has to be reset. Furthermore, in the case of tubular springs, the problem also is that, in order to achieve sufficient elasticity for the longitudinal movement of the piezoelectric actuator, the tubular springs must be made with an extremely thin wall, which impairs their strength and with it the useful life of the actuator unit.
The present invention addresses the problem of creating an actuator unit with a piezoelectric actuator, which is suitable especially for the control of fuel injection valves, and is characterized by simple manufacture, ease of installation, great ease of maintenance and long useful life, as well as by a hollow body for biasing the piezoelectric actuator in such an actuator unit.
This problem is solved in an actuator unit according to the present invention, and in a hollow body for biasing a piezoelectric actuator according to the present invention.
In the actuator unit according to the present invention, a piezoelectric actuator is strongly biased, so that the entire component can be pre-manufactured and is furthermore easy to install, for example, in an internal combustion engine, and no re-tightening of the piezoelectric actuator will be necessary. The design of the hollow body biasing the piezoelectric actuator according to the invention with holes that are dumb-bell shaped also assures that the hollow body will have sufficient strength at the biases usually applied to the piezoelectric actuator of 800 N to 1000 N, and at the same time will be sufficiently elastic to perform the longitudinal movement produced by the piezoelectric actuator.
It is advantageous especially to design the holes on the hollow body so that the minimum distance between adjacent holes will be one to three times the wall thickness of the hollow body, which especially offers the possibility for a simple and hence inexpensive punching of the holes. Additional advantageous embodiments of the actuator unit and of the hollow body are additionally disclosed according to the present invention.
The invention is further explained with the aid of the drawing, wherein:
The piezoelectric actuator 1 is in contact at its end faces with cover plates 5 and 6, the upper cover plate 6 having bores 61 through which the contact pins 2 extend. The top and bottom cover plates 5 and 6 are tensionally or positively joined to the hollow body 4, preferably by welding. Alternatively, the joining between the hollow body 4 and the two cover plates 5 and 6 can be accomplished by beading, with the beaded upper and lower margins of the hollow body embedded into the cover plates. The piezoelectric actuator 1 is biased with a defined force of preferably 800 N to 1000 N by the two cover plates 5 and 6, which are held in position by the hollow body 4. To be able to sustain this bias, the hollow body receiving the piezoelectric actuator is made preferably from spring steel which is distinguished by a high strength characteristic. Alternatively, however, other materials can be used, e.g., materials with a low elasticity modulus, such as copper-beryllium alloys, for example.
Also advantageous is the arrangement in rows of the holes 41 one over the other, shown in
The tubular spring is preferably made from a spring steel strip with a thickness of 0.5 mm. In a first step the holes are punched into the spring steel strip. Alternatively, it is also possible to form the holes by wire erosion, milling, drilling, or by electrochemical methods. Preferably too the marginal area around the holes is slightly bent plastically so that a strengthening of the spring steel strip is accomplished by the inherent tension thus created. This can be achieved, for example, if the punch with which the holes are made is expanded to a larger cross section after performing the punching action, so that a thickening of the marginal areas of the holes is created. In this case, furthermore, a slight bending of the burr around the holes out of the plane of the strip can occur. The marginal areas of the holes can also be strengthened by air-blasting the strip with beads.
After the holes 41 are made the spring steel strip is cut to the measure desired for the tubular spring, the holes being preferably designed, as shown in
Instead of completing the tubular form by welding, the cut edges can be held together by the top and bottom cover plates 5 and 6, so that the cut edges just touch one another. This results in an advantageous distribution of the pressures and spring forces in the hollow body.
The formation of the actuator unit with an external hollow body, which is preferably in the form of a tubular spring, and in which the piezoelectric actuator is fixed in tension and/or positively to the hollow body, makes it easy to package owing to its compact design and easy to install and remove in an internal combustion engine, for example, for the control of injection valves. The formation of “dumb-bell” shaped holes running transversely of the axis of the hollow body permits an optimum adjustment of the elasticity of the hollow body to the desired longitudinal movement of the piezoelectric actuator and simultaneously a simplified production of the hollow body.
Due to the punching, the hole 73 has on its bottom U facing the die 72 a greater surface area D1 than on the upper side O into which the punch 70 first penetrates. In addition, the punch produces a burr 74 on the bottom U surrounding the hole 73.
The different sizes of the areas D1 and D2 of the hole 73 on the upper side O and bottom side U and/or the burr 74 result in a difference in the stiffness, hardness and spring property on the upper side O in comparison to the bottom side U of the spring steel strip 71. This is disadvantageous to uniform pressure distribution and impairs the long-term stability of the tubular spring.
To reduce this non-homogeneousness, it is advantageous when making a tubular spring as in
With the described manner of manufacture, the surfaces D1 and D2 of the hole 73, which are different after punching, are matched to one another since the smaller area D2 is expanded on the outside by the bending and is thus enlarged, and the larger area D1 is upset and thus reduced. Thus the non-homogeneousness created in the spring steel strip by the punching process is reduced.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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198 35 628 | Aug 1998 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE99/02450 | 8/5/1999 | WO | 00 | 11/22/2000 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO00/08353 | 2/17/2000 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
38 33 109 | Apr 1990 | DE |
6 93 338 | Jul 1990 | DE |
38 44 134 | Feb 1992 | DE |
36 02 673 | Apr 1992 | DE |
2 106 001 | Apr 1983 | GB |
63-1383 | Jan 1988 | JP |