Piezoelectrically actuated fuel injection valve

Abstract
A valve for controlling liquids which for its actuation is provided with a liquid-filled coupling chamber, which is disposed between an actuator piston of a piezoelectric actuator and a piston that actuates a valve member. To compensate for liquid losses suffered by the coupling chamber, which is briefly at high in each work cycle, the pressure difference that exists during the return stroke of the actuator piston between the coupling chamber and the opposite sides of the actuator piston and of the that actuates the valve member that are remote from the coupling chamber is utilized to achieve refilling in valveless fashion along gaps. The valve is used for use in fuel injection systems for internal combustion engines of motor vehicles.
Description




PRIOR ART




The invention relates to a valve for controlling liquids One such valve is known from European Patent Disclosure EP 0 477 700. There, the actuating piston of the valve member is disposed, tightly displaceably, in a smaller-diameter portion of a stepped bore, while conversely a larger-diameter piston which is moved by the piezoelectric actuator is disposed in a larger-diameter portion of the stepped bore. A hydraulic chamber is defined between the two pistons, in such a way that whenever the larger piston is moved a certain distance by the actuator, the actuator piston of the valve member is moved by an increased distance, the increase being due to the step-up ratio of the cross-sectional areas of the stepped bore. The valve member, the actuator piston, the larger-diameter piston and the piezoelectric actuator are located in line with one another along a common axis.




In such valves, there is the problem of compensating for changes in length of the piezoelectric actuator, the valve, the enclosed pressure chamber liquid, or the valve housing by means of the hydraulic coupling chamber. Since, to open the valve, the piezoelectric actuator generates a pressure in the pressure chamber, this pressure also leads to a loss of pressure chamber liquid. To prevent the coupling chamber from being pumped dry, refilling is necessary. A device which is supposed to effect such refilling is indeed already known from the prior art defined at the outset, but it has the disadvantage that a constantly open communication in both of the possible flow directions between the coupling chamber and a closed supply container, the latter being equipped with a certain constant volume, has a substantial influence on the operating performance of the piezoelectric actuator. In particular, a thus-increased volume leads to a compressibility that lessens the transfer rigidity of the hydraulic column formed by the coupling chamber. Yet the known device essentially contemplates leakage from the coupling chamber, in order to compensate for tolerances in the working stroke. To counteract the attendant increase in compressibility, provision is made for adding stabilizing material, which has a compressibility-reducing effect, to the liquid in the coupling chamber. This purpose is served for instance by rubber or metal elements that are added to the liquid.




ADVANTAGES OF THE INVENTION




The valve of the invention has the advantage over the prior art that the coupling chamber always remains adequately well filled, because replenishing coupling liquid can flow toward the coupling chamber from the adjoining low-pressure chambers in the periods between the working strokes of the piezoelectric actuator. Any change in length of the overall device that may occur is thus corrected on an ongoing basis. The refilling or replenishment of the coupling chamber is accomplished without problems via the piston guides. This is true even if the piezoelectric actuator, the valve, the enclosed pressure chamber liquid, or the housing should change its length, for instance from warming up, because such a change in length in the coupling chamber is compensated for by leakage. It is also advantageous that the device functions securely and reliably, is simple in design, and assures secure, reliable sealing.




In an advantageous refinement set forth herein, the filling is promoted by the volumetric increase in the return stroke of the actuator piston, along with the piezoelectric actuator and the resultant pressure drop.




This pressure drop is advantageously also reinforced according to claim


4


, by a spring that urges the actuator piston toward the piezoelectric actuator. The invention is substantially improved by the provision gaps of defined size, which are designed for their task of refilling the coupling chamber. The dimensioning rule recited herein promotes this sizing very substantially.




The planning of the construction of the piston that actuates the valve and of the actuator piston can be done on this basis, which says that only part of the length of the pistons determines the criteria that define the communication between the low-pressure chamber and the coupling chamber, while a remaining part of the piston in each case furnishes the length that is required to assure exact guidance of the pistons. This is improved still further in which only a short gap length near the coupling chamber is provided for the pistons, and where the liquid can be brought, unthrottled, out of the low-pressure chamber to quite near the gap l


w


via the pressure fluid conduit.




A substantial improvement in the refilling according to the invention is obtained by setting a certain pressure, which is raised above the ambient pressure, in the low-pressure chambers. This increases the pressure drop toward the coupling chamber, which promotes the refilling of the coupling chamber; this pressure is furnished as recited hereinafter.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




Several exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown in the drawings and described in detail in the ensuing description. Shown are:





FIG. 1

, a fuel injection valve in section;





FIG. 2

, a first exemplary embodiment of a piston arrangement for a coupling chamber with liquid replenishment;





FIG. 3

, another design of a piston;





FIG. 4

, a modification of the piston design of

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 5

, a further modification of a piston design of

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 6

, a graph of the course of the refilling over time;





FIG. 7

, a design with three pistons; and





FIG. 8

, an injection system having the fuel injection valve of the invention.











DESCRIPTION OF THE EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS




The valve of the invention is used in a fuel injection valve, which is shown in its essential parts in section in FIG.


1


. This injection valve has a valve housing


1


, in which a valve needle


3


is guided in a longitudinal bore


2


; this valve needle can also be prestressed in the closing direction by a closing spring in a known manner and not shown further here. On one end, the valve needle is provided with a conical sealing face


4


, which cooperates, on the tip


5


of the valve housing that protrudes into the combustion chamber, with a seat


6


from which injection ports lead away into the interior of the injection valve, in this case connecting the annular chamber


7


, filled with fuel under injection pressure, with the combustion chamber so as to execute an injection once the valve needle has lifted from its seat. The annular chamber communicates with a further pressure chamber


8


, which is in constant communication with a pressure line


10


, by way of which fuel is delivered at injection pressure to the fuel injection valve from a high-pressure fuel reservoir


9


. This high fuel pressure also acts in the pressure chamber


8


, specifically on a pressure shoulder


11


there, by way of which the nozzle needle can be lifted from its valve seat in a known manner, under suitable conditions.




On its other end, the valve needle is guided in a cylinder bore


12


, where with its face end


14


it encloses a control pressure chamber


15


that communicates constantly, via a throttle connection


16


, with an annular chamber


17


, which like the pressure chamber


8


is always in communication with the high-pressure fuel reservoir


9


. A bore that has a throttle


19


leads axially away from the control pressure chamber


15


to a valve seat


20


of a control valve


21


. Cooperating with the valve seat is a valve member


22


of the control valve, which in the lifted state of the valve establishes communication between the control pressure chamber


15


and a low-pressure chamber


18


that communicates constantly with a relief chamber. A compression spring


24


that urges the valve member


22


in the closing direction is disposed in the low-pressure chamber


18


and urges the valve member


22


onto the valve seat


20


, so that in the normal position of the control valve, this communication of the control pressure chamber


15


is closed. Since the area of the end face of the valve needle


3


in the region of the control pressure chamber is larger than the area of the pressure shoulder


11


, the same fuel pressure in the control pressure chamber as prevails in the pressure chamber


8


now keeps the valve needle


3


in the closed position. If the valve member


22


is lifted from its seat, however, then the pressure in the control pressure chamber


15


, which is decoupled via the throttle connection


16


, is relieved. With the closing force now absent or reduced, the valve needle


3


opens quickly, optionally counter to the force of a closing spring, and on the other hand can be brought into the closing position as soon as the valve member returns to its closing position, because from that time on, via the throttle connection


16


, the original high fuel pressure then rapidly builds up again in the control pressure chamber


15


.




The control valve of the invention has a piston


25


for its actuation, which acts on the valve member


22


and is actuatable by a piezoelectric actuator


32


not shown in further detail. The piston


25


is tightly guided in a guide bore


28


disposed in a housing portion


26


of the fuel injection valve, and with its end face


29


, as can be seen from

FIG. 2

, it defines a coupling chamber


30


, which is closed off on its opposite wall by an actuator piston


31


of larger diameter, which is in a bore


65


and is part of the piezoelectric actuator


32


and which in addition can be coupled in force-locking fashion to the piezoelectric actuator


32


by a spring washer


57


disposed in the coupling chamber


30


. The return of the actuator piston together with the piezoelectric actuator


32


can also be done in some other suitable way instead. Both pistons


25


and


31


are guided tightly in their bores. Because of the different piston face areas of the two pistons


25


and


31


, the coupling chamber


30


acts as a step-up chamber, because it steps up a structurally dictated short stroke of the piezoelectric actuator piston


31


into a longer stroke of the piston


25


that actuates the control valve


21


. Upon excitation of the piezoelectric actuator


32


, the piston


25


is displaced far enough that the valve member


22


lifts from its seat


20


. The effect of this is a relief of the control pressure chamber


15


, which in turn brings about the opening of the valve needle


3


.




In

FIG. 2

, the coupling chamber


30


and the two pistons


25


and


31


are shown separately from the valve housing


1


. The low-pressure chamber


18


is disposed in housing part


26


on the side of the piston


25


, while a low-pressure chamber


33


is disposed on the side of the piston


31


remote from the coupling chamber


30


. The cylinder bores for the pistons


25


and


31


have gaps


35


and


36


of width s


1


and S


2


, respectively, by way of which the low-pressure chambers


33


and


18


communicate with the coupling chamber


30


. The length of the gap


35


is designated l


1


and that of the gap


36


is designated l


2


; the diameter of the piston


31


is d


1


and that of the piston


25


is d


2


.




For actuating the valve member


22


, the piezoelectric actuator


32


is excited, and consequently the actuator piston


31


is displaced. This leads to a pressure increase in the coupling chamber


30


, which in turn results in a displacement of the piston


25


together with the valve member


22


. Because of the different diameters of the pistons, the piston


25


moves farther in this process than the actuator piston


31


. The pressure increase in the coupling chamber leads to leakage losses of coupling chamber liquid via the leakage gaps between the pistons


25


and


31


and their guidance in the bores. However, the time periods within which a high pressure prevails in the coupling chamber, in order to actuate the valve member, are short in comparison to the time periods, or load pauses, in between.




In order for the coupling chamber


30


not to be pumped dry over the course of time via the gaps


35


and


36


, at a high pressure that ensues in valve operation, the invention makes it possible by means of rapid refilling of the coupling chamber


30


in the load pauses and also at relatively low pressures in the low-pressure chambers


18


and


33


, so as to compensate for any liquid loss that has occurred. This is promoted by the fact that the actuator piston moves back again along with the piezoelectric actuator when it is not excited. This is advantageously reinforced if the actuator piston is urged toward the piezoelectric actuator by a restoring force, which is preferably furnished by the spring


57


that is supported in the coupling chamber


30


.




For this refilling, the two pistons


25


and


31


and their guides must be designed geometrically in a special way, to attain optimal operability of the arrangement and repeated restoration of the fill volume of the coupling chamber


30


. The goal, as the characteristic leakage rate value, is a geometric ratio in accordance with the following equation:









n
·
d
·

s
3




V
0

·
1



4

,










in which d is the mean piston diameter in mm,




s is the gap width in μm,




l is the sealing gap length in mm,




n is the number of sealing gaps or pistons, and




V


0


is the initial volume of the coupling chamber in mm


3


, or even better, a ratio:








n
·
d
·

s
3




V
0

·
1



8.










From such a ratio onward, the fastest possible refilling is achieved, without tolerances, especially in the gaps


35


and


36


, having any major influence on the duration of the refilling. From the above ratio, it follows that the gaps and the piston diameter selected should tend to be large, and that the initial volume and the sealing gap length selected should be small. This characteristic leakage rate value of ≧8 should not be selected as being overly large, however, because otherwise the leakage rate becomes too high and the coupling function, that is, the hydraulic rigidity of the coupling chamber filling volume becomes less and thus the stroke becomes shorter. To keep the rigidity of the coupling chamber


30


, which is required for switching the valve, as high as possible, the initial volume V


0


of the coupling chamber should be as small as possible.




If, for reasons of guidance precision and the attendant gap geometry that should be kept constant for the two pistons


25


and


31


, the gaps


35


and


36


are not selected to be overly large, and the piston lengths l


1


and l


2


are not selected to be overly short, and nevertheless the characteristic value should be









n
·
d
·

s
3




V
0

·
1



4

,










then designs of the kind shown in

FIGS. 3

,


4


and


5


can be used for the pistons


25


and


31


; in these designs, the hydraulically effective sealing gap length is reduced, or in other words is limited to a short length that defines the above characteristic value.




In

FIG. 3

, a piston


37


is shown whose length


1


is interrupted twice by annular grooves


38


and


39


, so that despite a short sealing gap length, guide elements that are far apart are obtained, which improves the guidance precision. The gap lengths located between the annular groove


39


and


38


, the low-pressure chamber


18


and


33


and the coupling chamber


30


are shorter than the original total length of the piston. The result is a geometric ratio for the characteristic leakage rate value in accordance with the above formula, which is more favorable for the filling while having very good guidance precision.




In the design of

FIG. 4

, a piston


40


has an annular groove


41


, which is disposed near the coupling chamber


30


and thus there defines a short effective gap length l


w


. This short gap length enters only into the value obtained by the above formula. The piston part following this effective gap length serves as a necessary guidance part but has no influence of the value resulting from the above formula. In this way, the favorable value for refilling in the load pauses can be attained in a simple and reliable way.




Finally, in

FIG. 5

a piston


42


is shown which compared with the version of

FIG. 4

with the short sealing gap length for the piston


40


, is modified such that here, one or more lateral flat faces


44


lead away to the end of the piston from the annular groove


43


, which is equivalent to the annular groove


41


of FIG.


4


. In such a design, the very short gap length l


w


, which meets the above requirement is attained, yet the guidance of the piston


42


is still over a relatively long length and thus is precise. The gap width defined by the annular groove


43


and the lateral flat faces


44


is hydraulically so large that it is inoperative for a sealing function, and the piston part that is determined by its length acts only as a piston guide but does not enter into the result of the characteristic leakage rate value. The flat face


44


can be considered a pressure fluid conduit, through which the annular groove


43


is supplied with pressure fluid from the adjoining low-pressure chamber. This flat face may be realized in some other way, instead, however, such as in the form of a bore or some other kind of conduit between the annular groove


43


and the low-pressure chamber.





FIG. 6

shows a graph which with the three curves


45


,


46


and


47


illustrates the variable duration of the refilling in proportion to the duration of application of the operating pressure in the coupling chamber and at various ambient pressures. A time ratio is plotted on the ordinate, which is determined by the length of time required to refill the coupling chamber to a certain pressure, such as 90% of the ambient pressure, and the values of the leakage rate variable that result from the above formula at different parameters and with two gaps, that is, with two pistons, i.e., the pistons


25


and


31


, are plotted ascending the abscissa. It can be seen that with large gaps, i.e. as the values resulting from the above formula increase, the refilling proceeds faster and in a more favorable way. Conversely, for characteristic leakage rate values <4, the lengths of time tend to infinity. An essential factor here is also the pressure that prevails in the low-pressure chamber. With increasing pressure, faster refilling is obtained.




In

FIG. 7

, a design with three pistons is shown, that is, with the actuator piston


31


already described and with the coupling chamber


30


. However, here a piston that actuates the control valve


21


is embodied as a stepped piston, which is provided with two pistons


49


and


50


. Consequently there is a total of three gaps


135


,


136


, and


135


here, by way of which liquid can escape from the coupling chamber and by way of which the coupling chamber


30


must be refilled. For this kind of design as well, the refilling according to the invention can be employed. It can also be employed for devices with more than three pistons.




In an injection system of the kind shown in simplified form in

FIG. 8

, one injection valve


51


per engine cylinder, as described above in conjunction with

FIG. 1

, is used. The injection valve


51


is connected on the one hand to a high-pressure reservoir


53


via a supply line


52


, and to a low-pressure container


55


(tank) via a return line


54


. The injection system also includes a fuel pump


56


, a high-pressure pump


57


, an overflow valve


58


, a pressure control valve


59


, a pressure limiter


60


, a flow limiter


61


, and an electronic control unit


62


.




According to the invention, a pressure holding valve


63


, which is set to a pressure of from 10 to 20 bar, is inserted into the return line


54


that leads from the injection valve


51


to the tank


55


. The return line


54


must then be embodied in a suitably stable way. In the injection valve


51


, the two low-pressure chambers


18


and


33


which are located on the two sides, remote from the coupling chamber


30


, of the actuator piston


31


and of the piston


25


that actuates the valve member


22


are connected to the low pressure, as already described, and this low pressure is now held to an elevated level, for instance of 10 to 20 bar, by the pressure holding valve


63


.




This kind of provision then effects rapid refilling of the coupling chamber


30


via the gaps


35


and


36


(see

FIG. 2

) in accordance with the equation







Q
=



π
·
d
·

s
3



12
·
n
·
l


·

(

P0
-
Pkopp

)



,










in which Q is the flow rate, d is the piston diameter, s is the gap size, n is the dynamic viscosity, and l is the leakage gap length.




The use of a restraining valve


63


is especially recommended whenever the pressure difference between the pressure in the coupling chamber


30


, which has dropped to approximately 0 bar after the actuator stroke, and the ambient pressure of 1 bar until the next injection event of the internal combustion engine (25 ms, for instance, at an engine speed of 4800 rpm) is not sufficient for refilling the coupling chamber


30


. With the differential pressure increased to from 10 to 20 bar, it is certain that the coupling chamber


30


can be refilled within the short length of time available. An advantage here is that only a single pressure holding valve


63


per engine is needed.




The foregoing relates to a preferred exemplary embodiment of the invention, it being understood that other variants and embodiments thereof are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, the latter being defined by the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A valve for controlling liquids, comprising a piezoelectric actuator (32), a valve member (22) which is actuatable in an opening direction via a piston (25) by said piezoelectric actuator (32) counter to a force of a spring (24), said piston (25) includes a first face end (29) which closes off a hydraulic coupling chamber (30), said hydraulic coupling chamber (30) is defined on a second side by a second face end of an actuator piston (31) which has a larger diameter than a diameter of the piston (25) and is a part of said piezoelectric actuator (32), a working stroke of said piston (31) increases a pressure in the coupling chamber (30), the piston (25) is adjusted by said working stroke and the pressure in said coupling chamber (30) counter to the force of the compression spring (24), a low pressure chamber (33) is formed on an end of said piston (31) remote from the coupling chamber (30) and a low pressure chamber (18) is formed opposite a second face end of said piston (25) remote from said first end face (29), via the pressure chamber (18) a piston (15) actuates the valve member (22), respective low-pressure chambers (18 and 33) are provided in which oil leakage pressure prevails, a gap (36) is located between the outer circumference of the piston (25) and a guide bore (28) and a gap (35) is located between an outer circumference of the actuator piston (31) and a guiding bore (65) by which oil leakage is directed to low pressure chambers (18 and 33), said guiding bores (28 and 65) along the pistons (25) and (31) are dimensioned such that whenever there is no pressure increase in said coupling chamber (30), the coupling chamber (30) is refilled from the low-pressure chambers (18) and (33) via said gaps (28 and 65) to compensate for leakage losses via said gaps into the low-pressure chambers that occur during high pressure periods, and the periods that are between these occurrences of pressure increases are shorter than the periods during which the pressure increases occur.
  • 2. The valve according to claim 1, in which a leakage loss in the coupling chamber (30) is compensated for by an increase in a volume of a coupling chamber pressure drop, occurring as a result of a return stroke of the actuator piston (31), between the coupling chamber (30) and the low-pressure chambers (18) and (33).
  • 3. The valve according to claim 2, in which the actuator piston (31) is coupled by a restoring spring (66) to the piezoelectric actuator (32) for a return stroke.
  • 4. The valve according to the claim 3, in which the coupling chamber (30) is refilled via the gaps (35) and (36) along a defined length l1 and l2, respectively, of the gaps of the pistons (25) and (31), and the gaps are dimensioned such that refilling of the coupling chamber (30) is always made possible within the periods between the individual working strokes of the piezoelectric actuator (32).
  • 5. The valve according to claim 2, in which the coupling chamber (30) is refilled via the gaps (35) and (36) along a defined length l1 and l2, respectively, of the gaps of the pistons (25) and (31), and the gaps are dimensioned such that refilling of the coupling chamber (30) is always made possible within the periods between the individual working strokes of the piezoelectric actuator (32).
  • 6. The valve according to claim 5, in which for refilling the coupling chamber (30), in the periods during which there are no pressure increases, the following geometric ratio is adhered to for the length and the width of the gaps, referred to the largest volume occupied by the coupling chamber: n·d·s3V0·1≥4,in which V0 is the volume of the coupling chamber (30) in mm3, n is the number of gaps that lead away from the chamber (30), s is the width of the gap (35, 136) in μm, 1 is the length of the gap in mm, and d is the mean diameter of the pistons in mm.
  • 7. The valve according to claim 6, in which the piston (25) for actuating the valve member (22) and/or the actuator piston (31) is subdivided in a length of its guidance in the respective bore (28) and (65) by at least one annular groove (38, 39, 41, 43).
  • 8. The valve according to claim 7, in which between the coupling chamber (30) and the at least one annular groove (41, 43), a short gap length lw is defined which meets the geometric ratio, and the parts of the piston located on a far side of the at least one annular groove (41, 43) are embodied as parts (40, 42) used for guidance.
  • 9. The valve according to claim 8, in which between the at least one annular groove (43) and a side of the piston (42) toward the low-pressure chamber (18, 34), a pressure fluid conduit (44) is provided, by which the annular groove is supplied, unthrottled, with pressure fluid.
  • 10. The valve according to claim 5, in which for refilling the coupling chamber (30), in the periods during which there are no pressure increases, the following geometric ratio is adhered to for the length and the width of the gaps, referred to the largest volume occupied by the coupling chamber: n·d·s3V0·1≥4,in which V0 is the volume of the coupling chamber (30) in mm3, n is the number of gaps that lead away from the chamber (30), s is the width of the gap (35, 136) in μm, 1 is the length of the gap in mm, and d is the mean diameter of the pistons in mm.
  • 11. The valve according to claim 10, in which the piston (25) for actuating the valve member (22) and/or the actuator piston (31) is subdivided in a length of its guidance in the respective bore (28) and (65) by at least one annular groove (38, 39, 41, 43).
  • 12. The valve according to claim 11, in which between the coupling chamber (30) and the at least one annular groove (41, 43), a short gap length lw is defined which meets the geometric ratio, and the parts of the piston located on a far side of the at least one annular groove (41, 43) are embodied as parts (40, 42) used for guidance.
  • 13. The valve according to claim 12, in which between the at least one annular groove (43) and a side of the piston (42) toward the low-pressure chamber (18, 34), a pressure fluid conduit (44) is provided, by which the annular groove is supplied, unthrottled, with pressure fluid.
  • 14. The valve according to claim 2, in which the coupling chamber (30) is defined by a face end of the actuator piston (31) and by a plurality of pistons (49) and (50).
  • 15. The valve according to claim 2, in which the pressure in the low-pressure chambers is kept at a predetermined level that is raised compared to the ambient pressure.
  • 16. The valve according to claim 1, in which the coupling chamber (30) is defined by a face end of the actuator piston (31) and by a plurality of pistons (49) and (50).
  • 17. The valve according to claim 16, in which the pistons (49) and (50) are combined into one stepped piston (48).
  • 18. The valve according to claim 1, in which the pressure in the low-pressure chambers is kept at a predetermined level that is raised compared to the ambient pressure.
  • 19. A fuel injection system which comprises a valve as set forth in claim 18, a high-pressure pump (57), high-pressure reservoir (52), and low-pressure container (55), and a low-pressure side of said valve is connected to the low-pressure container (55) and communicates with the low-pressure chambers (18) and (33) of the valve, a pressure holding valve (63) which is set to a pressure of over 1 bar is inserted into a return line (54).
  • 20. A fuel injection system as set forth in claim 19, in which the operative pressure in the low-pressure chambers (18) and (33) is set to from 10 to 20 bar.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
197 43 668 Oct 1997 DE
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 102e Date 371c Date
PCT/DE98/01763 WO 00 6/2/1999 6/2/1999
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO99/18347 4/15/1999 WO A
US Referenced Citations (6)
Number Name Date Kind
4728074 Igashira et al. Mar 1988
5660368 De Matthaeis et al. Aug 1997
5697554 Auwaerter et al. Dec 1997
5779149 Hayes, Jr. Jul 1998
5803370 Heinz et al. Sep 1998
5810255 Itoh et al. Sep 1998