This application claims priority to German Patent Application No. 10 2012 213 558.8, filed Aug. 1, 2012, and International Patent Application No. PCT/EP2013/066092, filed Jul. 31, 2013, both of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The present invention relates to a piston of an internal combustion engine having a circumferential cooling duct according to the introductory clause of claim 1. The invention furthermore relates to a cooling duct cover made of sheet metal for a cooling duct of such a piston, and an internal combustion engine with at least one such piston.
Generic pistons are sufficiently known and are produced for example as cast or respectively as forged pistons. A covering of the cooling duct of such a piston, which is initially open on one side, usually takes place by means of a cooling duct cover in the manner of a metal sheet. The metal sheet itself already has here at least one inlet opening and an outlet opening, which are usually arranged adjacent to one another, so that there are almost 360° between the inlet opening and the outlet opening.
From DE 10 2008 038 324 A1 a piston is known having a cooling duct formed through a foundry core, which cooling duct has two inlet openings arranged adjacent to one another and two opposite outlet openings, separated from one another by a throttle. A cooling oil jet, incident obliquely to the piston axis, enters in the upper and lower dead centre through respectively one of the two inlet openings into the cooling duct.
From DE 10 2006 013 884 A1 a further piston is known for an internal combustion engine with a piston head and with a piston crown exposed to at least one combustion jet and with a piston skirt. The piston head and the piston skirt include here a circumferential outer cooling duct, wherein in the latter an annular dividing wall is provided, arranged parallel to the piston crown, which dividing wall has one or more nozzle-like openings which are arranged such that their respective outlet jet is directed parallel to the piston axis towards the underside of the piston crown. Hereby, the cooling effect of the cooling oil, supplied to the cooling duct, is to be improved.
From DE 10 2008 020 231 A1 a cast piston is known, which has a cooling duct formed through a foundry core. This cast cooling duct has an oil feed opening, which is arranged perpendicularly to the direction of the cooling duct and which has a funnel-shaped inlet to receive an oil jet directed parallel to the piston axis.
From EP 1 238 191 B1 a further generic piston is known, wherein in the region of an inlet opening a tube-like feed is fastened to the cooling duct cover by a snap-on connection or by clipping in.
The present invention is concerned with the problem of indicating an improved embodiment for a piston of the generic type, which is distinguished in particular by an improved cooling effect.
This problem is solved according to the invention by the subjects of the independent claims. Advantageous embodiments are the subject of the dependent claims.
The present invention is based on the general idea, in a piston known per se with a cooling duct cover covering a cooling duct, to provide on this cooling duct cover both an inlet opening and an outlet opening and to arrange in the region of the inlet opening a guide element on the cooling duct cover, which guides an incident coolant jet in a funnel-shaped manner into the cooling duct and thereby catches the cooling duct jet and, at the same time, deflects the introduced coolant jet in precisely a circumferential direction of the piston, that is to say therefore in a flow direction of the cooling duct. Through the funnel-like configuration of the inlet opening, it is possible to introduce coolant, i.e. cooling oil, preferably independently of the position of the piston, also into the cooling duct when it is injected in an oil jet aligned obliquely to the piston axis, whereby the degree of catching is increased and more coolant flows through the cooling duct and the latter is therefore better cooled. Through the conically widening inlet opening, it is possible in particular to catch the coolant, injected from a coolant nozzle, in the upper dead centre, in the lower dead centre and also in all intermediate positions and to deflect it directly into the cooling duct. In the case of inlet openings hitherto, in particular round inlet openings, it was not possible to catch the coolant jet, injected by a coolant nozzle, in all positions of the piston, in particular both in the upper and also in the lower dead centre, and to thereby use it for the cooling. Depending on the configuration of the guide element provided according to the invention, not only is an axial injecting of the coolant into the inlet opening possible here, but also an oblique injecting, wherein with an upper dead centre the injected coolant jet strikes one side of the guide element, whereas in the lower dead centre it strikes the opposite side of the funnel-like guide element and in both points deflects the arriving coolant jet into the coolant duct. It is thereby also possible that with a shared so-called Y-coolant nozzle the two pistons in respectively two adjacent cylinders are supplied with coolant simultaneously from the centre, i.e. are injected with coolant. Here, despite an injecting which is not parallel to the piston axis, a high degree of catching can be achieved and the structure of the internal combustion engine, in particular its oil circuit, can be simplified by the omission of several lines etc.
In an advantageous further development of the solution according to the invention, the guide element is constructed in the manner of a nozzle, a funnel, a connecting piece or a deflector. The list already suggests how varied the embodiment possibilities of the guide element according to the invention are, wherein all embodiments have in common the fact that the guide element is able to introduce almost 100% of the coolant, injected by the coolant nozzle, into the cooling duct and thereby use it for cooling.
Expediently, the inlet opening is arranged adjacent to the outlet opening and is separated by a separating plate. The adjacent arrangement of the inlet opening and the outlet opening entails a cooling duct which runs around almost 360° in the piston and thereby achieves an optimum cooling effect. Between the inlet opening and the outlet opening, a separating plate or a throttle can be provided here, which prevents a direct flowing off of the coolant, injected into the inlet opening, on the short path in the direction of the outlet opening, without previously flowing through the cooling duct. Through the configuration of the guide element according to the invention, however, this is in any case already prevented because the guide element deflects the incident coolant jet in precisely one flow direction, i.e. in through-flow direction on the long path into the cooling duct and thereby prevents an immediate emergence of the coolant at the adjacent outlet opening.
Expediently, the guide element and/or the separating plate form an integral component of the cooling duct cover. In order to have to use as few working steps as possible for the production and in particular for the installation of the piston according to the invention, the guide element can also already form an integral component of the cooling duct cover, so that it is conceivable, for example, that the cooling duct cover is produced in a single stamping/deforming working step together with the guide element and/or with the separating plate. Of course, a separate production of the guide element or respectively of the separating plate is also conceivable, wherein then the guide element must be connected with the cooling duct cover in the region of the inlet opening in a later working step.
In an advantageous further development of the solution according to the invention, the inlet opening has an elongated or oval shape. Through such an oval shape, the region in which the coolant jet, injected by the coolant nozzle, strikes in the course of the piston stroke can be enlarged, whereby more coolant can be caught and used for cooling the piston. An orientation of the ovality or generally the longest extent of a differently shaped inlet opening extends here preferably substantially in circumferential direction of the piston. Thereby, an inlet opening can be provided which is longer than the cooling duct is wide. This makes it possible to always direct the oil jet into the cooling duct preferably over the entire piston stroke. An obliquely injecting oil nozzle can be arranged here so that the striking point of the oil jet preferably lies approximately in the centre of the cooling duct and travels during the movements of the piston in the duct- or respectively tangential direction to and fro. Expediently, the piston is constructed as a cast light metal piston with a milled cooling duct or as a forged steel piston. In a preferred embodiment, the piston needs to have only a preferably fully circumferential open cooling duct with a constant cross-section, on which the cooling duct cover according to the invention is mounted in one step. In particular, such a piston can also be constructed as a so-called monotherm piston and consist completely of forged steel. In monotherm pistons, the piston skirt is connected securely with the hub bore and the piston head, and the cooling duct is closed by a cooling duct cover, in particular by a spring metal sheet, on the underside.
Further important features and advantages of the invention will emerge from the subclaims, from the drawings and from the associated figure description with the aid of the drawings.
It shall be understood that the features mentioned above and to be further explained below are able to be used not only in the respectively indicated combination, but also in other combinations or in isolation, without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Preferred example embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the drawings and are explained in further detail in the following description, wherein the same reference numbers refer to identical or similar or functionally identical components.
There are shown, respectively diagrammatically,
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The guide element 6 can be constructed in the manner of a nozzle, a funnel, a connecting piece or a deflector, wherein all embodiments have in common the funnel-like catching of the coolant jet 7, 7′. For the funnel-like catching of the coolant jet 7, 7′ and for its deflection in longitudinal direction of the cooling duct 2, the guide element 6 has a spout 8, for example similar to an outlet on a teapot.
The guide element 6, the separating plate 9 or respectively the throttle 10 can form an integral component of the cooling duct cover 3, that is to say can be constructed in one piece therewith. This offers the particular advantage that the piston 1 can be produced in a conventional manner and both the inlet opening 4 and also the outlet opening 5 or respectively the separating plate 9 or the throttle 10 and the guide element 6 can be already prefabricated by a shared working step. A production of such a cooling duct cover 3 can take place for example by a stamping/deforming process, wherein in this case the cooling duct cover 3 is stamped for example from a metal sheet and is subsequently deformed. Hereby, the cooling duct cover 3 can be produced in a cost-efficient manner. Of course, a constructed cooling duct cover 3 is also conceivable, in which the guide element 6 and/or the separating plate 9 and/or the throttle 10 are connected with the cooling duct cover 3 in a separate working step.
The piston 1 can generally be constructed as a cast light metal piston, for example as an aluminium piston, with a milled cooling duct 2, or as a forged steel piston. A connection of the cooling duct cover 3 with the piston 1 can take place for example by way of a welded connection 11 and/or by way of a snap-on connection 12 (cf.
Of course, it is also conceivable to produce the cooling duct cover 3 according to the invention separately and to market it separately, so that in this application protection is also claimed solely for such a cooling duct cover 3.
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Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2012 213 558 | Aug 2012 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/066092 | 7/31/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2014/020066 | 2/6/2014 | WO | A |
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English abstract for DE—102006056013. |
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English abstract for JP2008-240609. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150167584 A1 | Jun 2015 | US |