The present invention generally relates to a piston engine cooling system. More specifically, the present invention relates to a system for cooling a piston engine by passing lubrication oil through one or more piston heads so as to efficiently transfer heat away from the engine.
Piston engines, and in particular internal combustion engines, are often cooled using lubrication oil. This is conventionally achieved by spraying lubrication oil onto the piston to facilitate heat transfer between the piston head and the sprayed lubricant. The heated oil then flows down to a sump from where it is recycled by a pressurized lubrication system. In a dry-sump lubrication system, the sump flow is first scavenged to a storage tank which is usually located remotely from the sump itself.
Such heat transfer, however, is inefficient, as the contact time between the piston and the oil spray is short. Moreover, the small contact area at the rear face of the piston also hampers efficient heat transfer. Due to these inefficiencies, a relatively large volume of oil spray having a high flow rate is required to cool the piston. This large volume of oil having a high flow rate requires additional components such as larger-than-necessary oil storage tanks, thereby reducing the engine's power-to-weight ratio and increasing the manufacturing and operational costs of the engine.
Some systems, however, teach a closed-loop oil system in which lubrication oil flows through the crankshaft, the connecting rod, and the piston. There are a number of drawbacks associated with such systems. First, lubrication oil does not make sufficient contact with the piston for a sufficient length of time to efficiently remove heat from the piston. Second, flow channels within different pistons are typically serially connected such that lubrication oil heated by a preceding piston is used for cooling a subsequent piston. Therefore, the lubrication oil cooling different pistons has different temperatures. Accordingly, heat transfer between a piston and the lubrication oil is not uniform across the engine. This causes thermal gradients and strains within the engine potentially leading to the formation of cracks, etc.
In light of the above, it would be highly desirable to provide an efficient cooling system for a piston engine while maintaining a high power-to-weight ratio and reducing costs.
The present invention provides a piston cooling system that injects lubrication oil into a cooling chamber in the piston head of a piston engine. The cooling chamber includes a tortuous flow channel that is configured to increase the contact surface between the lubrication oil flowing through the cooling chamber and the piston head and prolong the contact time period during which the lubrication oil contacts the piston head. Lubrication oil is injected into the cooling chamber through a series of fluidly coupled channels embedded in a crankshaft and a rod connecting the piston head to the crankshaft.
After heat exchange with the piston head in the cooling chamber, the lubrication oil is either returned to a lubrication pressure pump inlet for reuse or flows into an oil reservoir without being mixed with air in a crankcase associated with the piston engine.
The crankshaft has two embedded oil flow channels, a crankshaft inlet channel allowing cooling oil entering different pistons to have substantially similar parameters, such as temperature, and a crankshaft outlet channel allowing heated lubrication oil exiting each individual piston to be recycled. As a result, heat transfer is conducted uniformly from one piston head to another. This can significantly reduce the chance of engine failures caused by thermal gradients and strains within the engine.
The foregoing and other aspects and advantages of the present invention will be better understood from the following detailed description when read in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
Like numerals refer to similar elements throughout the drawings.
The lubrication oil is cooled-down by passing it through a heat exchanger 119 to remove at least some heat transferred from the piston engine 300. The cooled lubrication oil then passes into the piston engine 300 to remove more heat generated by the piston engine. A more detailed discussion about the oil flow inside the piston engine 300 is provided below in connection with
In this embodiment, the lubrication oil flow from the piston engine 300 flows directly to the inlet of the oil pump 117, thereby significantly reducing the amount of lubrication oil that must be collected from the crankcase for a dry sump system. This configuration significantly reduces the dimensions of the scavenge pump and the oil reservoir and therefore increases the engine's power-to-weight ratio. The reduced cooling flow also reduces the power consumption of the lubrication pressure pump.
In both embodiments, the cooling system allows the cooling lubrication oil to directly contact a large surface area within the piston head for a predetermined length of time. This, when combined with a predetermined flow rate, optimizes the heat transfer process and minimizes the amount of cooling lubricant required to maintain the piston engine at the desired temperature.
Each piston head 321 contains one or more flow channels 302, 303 at its rear (crankcase side) face, i.e., disposed behind the front face 305 of each piston. These channels allow pressurized lubrication oil to flow from a pressure lubrication system as shown in
In some embodiments, each piston head 321 includes a cooling chamber 304 behind its corresponding front face 305. A piston head inlet channel 302 introduces cooled lubrication oil into the cooling chamber 304, while a piston head outlet channel 303 allows heated lubrication oil to be expelled from the cooling chamber 304. The cooling chamber 304 is configured to include appropriate flow channels and/or interleaved cooling fins 313, 314 to maximize heat transfer from the piston head 321 to the lubrication oil, e.g., by increasing the contact area between the piston head and the lubrication oil. Sometimes, the space or compartment defined in the cooling chamber 304 is reduced to a tortuous flow path from the piston head inlet channel 302 to the piston head outlet channel 303. A more detailed description of the cooling chamber 304 is provided below in connection with
As shown in
During operation of the piston engine 300, pressurized lubrication oil flows under pressure from the crankshaft inlet channel 306, through an inlet oil journal 309, through the connecting rod inlet channel 310 and the piston head inlet channel 302 and into the cooling chamber 304. As the pressurized lubrication oil flows through the cooling chamber 304, heat is transferred to the lubrication oil from the piston head 321. The lubrication oil exiting the cooling chamber 304 flows through the piston head outlet channel 303, through the connecting rod outlet channel 312 and an outlet oil journal 309 and into the crankshaft outlet channel 308. In some embodiments shown in
Note that the inlet flow paths of cooling lubrication oil within different pistons 301 of
As mentioned above in connection with
The foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present invention are presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Obviously many modifications and variations are possible in view of the above teachings. For example, the pressure lubrication system 100 or 200 may include more or less components depending on the overall working environment. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical applications, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the following claims and their equivalents.
The present application claims priority pursuant to 35 U.S.C. §119(e) to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/583,001 filed Jun. 25, 2004, which is hereby incorporated by reference for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60583001 | Jun 2004 | US |