The invention relates to a prechamber system and an internal combustion engine with such a prechamber system.
In internal combustion engines (combustion engines), above a particular capacity, the energy of an ignition spark is no longer sufficient to reliably ignite the combustion gas/air mixture—which for emissions reasons is often very lean—in the main combustion chamber. To increase the ignition energy, in a prechamber which is connected with the main combustion chamber via channels, a small part of the mixture is enriched with a small quantity of combustion gas or an additional fuel and ignited. Combustion propagates in the form of ignition flares via the overflow channels out of the prechamber into the main combustion chamber and there ignites the lean mixture.
DE 10 2008 015 744 A1 describes, for example, an ignition device with prechamber into which opens a combustion gas nozzle (gas valve) which is connected to a high-pressure combustion gas line in order to introduce combustion gas into the prechamber under high pressure. Here, the combustion gas is mixed with a leaner (super-stoichiometric) combustion gas/air mixture present in the prechamber and enriches it. An ignition device protrudes into the prechamber to ignite the enriched combustion gas/air mixture and thus finally to ensure ignition of the combustion gas/air mixture present in the main combustion chamber.
In these so-called gas-flushed prechambers, a specific gas quantity is metered into the prechamber during the intake and/or compression stroke via a valve. At around the same time, a super-stoichiometric (λ>1) gas-air mixture is supplied to the main combustion chamber via the inlet valve. An engine operated on the “flushed prechamber” principle is described for example in DE 10 2004 016 260 B4 (Caterpillar).
On the compression stroke, lean mixture flows from the main combustion chamber into the prechamber and there mixes with the rich mixture already present. The aim is to achieve a stoichiometric composition (λ˜1) for an ignitable mixture with high ignition energy.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,129,059 A (HONDA MOTOR CO. LTD.) describes an internal combustion engine and the arrangement of channels between the main combustion chamber and the prechamber.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,170,968 A (TOYOTA MOTOR CO. LTD.) describes in more detail the arrangement of the overflow channels in the prechamber and the position of the spark plugs in relation to these channels.
DE 10 2004 016 260 (CATERPILLAR MOTOREN GMBH) discloses a gas engine with a prechamber into which gas flows via a channel. The cylinder head of a gas engine shown has a flushed prechamber and a separate gas supply channel to supply a combustion chamber with gas for the ignition energy, wherein the ordinary ignition process takes place via a spark plug. A magnetic valve is arranged in a receiver region in the gas supply channel, and the outlet opens directly into the combustion chamber.
Whereas a more or less homogenous mixture is achieved in the prechamber up to the time of ignition, in the channel (space) which connects the fuel introduction device (for example, a prechamber valve) with the prechamber (this space is referred to below as the dead space), a rich zone remains in which soot formation occurs during combustion.
This zone is not reached by the flow of lean mixture occurring on load change in the prechamber.
Publications EP 276 193 A2, JP 2069022 U, JP 1145941 U and JP 2001082148 A each show a prechamber system for an internal combustion engine, wherein a channel is provided which runs such that in the prechamber system installed in the combustion engine, it connects a main combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine with the dead space.
Experiments have shown that connection of the main combustion chamber with the dead space indeed brings a certain improvement in relation to soot reduction but still leaves something to be desired.
Due to the pressure gradient which occurs from the main combustion chamber 5 to the prechamber 10, lean mixture flows via the channel 3 from the main combustion chamber 5 into the dead space 2 and dilutes the rich mixture present there or flushes rich mixture into the prechamber 10. Thus, in the dead space 2 at the time of ignition, a leaner mixture is present than in a variant without flushing, which causes a great reduction in or prevents soot formation in the dead space 2.
The object of the invention is therefore to offer a measure to reduce, or in the best case prevent, locally richer (sub-stoichiometric) zones in the dead space in order to reduce or avoid the abovementioned negative consequences of locally rich zones (soot formation/efficiency losses).
This object is achieved by a prechamber system as described below and an internal combustion engine with such a prechamber system.
To avoid rich zones in the dead space and hence the formation of soot particles, in the prechamber according to the invention, the dead space is flushed. For this, an additional channel is provided which connects the dead space volume with the prechamber such that the dead space volume is flushed preferably using the pressure gradients naturally present on load change.
The internal combustion engine according to the invention can, for example, be a gas engine, in particular a stationary gas engine.
Advantageous embodiments of the invention are also described below.
On
Here, the channel 3 opens into the prechamber 10 in the region of a fixing segment, which in this case is a thread (extending over region a) of the spark plug 12. This variant is more favorable for production than that the configurations of
On
The channel 3 connects the dead space 2 (corresponding to the description above) with the overflow channel 4 of the prechamber 10. As can be seen from
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 1395/2010 | Aug 2010 | AT | national |
A 1810/2010 | Nov 2010 | AT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2262981 | Weber | Nov 1941 | A |
2271606 | Sheppard | Feb 1942 | A |
3068845 | Leunig | Dec 1962 | A |
3179091 | Leunig | Apr 1965 | A |
4006720 | Sato et al. | Feb 1977 | A |
4116191 | Yanagihara et al. | Sep 1978 | A |
4129100 | Habu | Dec 1978 | A |
4149495 | Miura | Apr 1979 | A |
4170968 | Noguchi et al. | Oct 1979 | A |
4204484 | Miura | May 1980 | A |
4483289 | Paul et al. | Nov 1984 | A |
4635598 | Tanaka et al. | Jan 1987 | A |
4854281 | Hareyama et al. | Aug 1989 | A |
6129059 | Asai | Oct 2000 | A |
20100132660 | Nerheim | Jun 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
372 604 | Mar 1923 | DE |
10 2004 016 260 | Oct 2005 | DE |
10 2008 015 744 | Oct 2009 | DE |
0 276 193 | Jul 1988 | EP |
509236 | Nov 1920 | FR |
207 181 | Jun 1924 | GB |
56-157320 | Dec 1981 | JP |
1-145941 | Jun 1989 | JP |
2-69022 | Mar 1990 | JP |
2001-82148 | Mar 2001 | JP |
2002-266645 | Sep 2002 | JP |
Entry |
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FR509236 (Fredrick Arther Smith) Nov. 4, 1920 (translation). |
International Search Report (ISR) issued Nov. 7, 2011 in International (PCT) Application No. PCT/AT2011/000351. |
Austrian Patent Office Search Report (ASR #1) completed Jan. 25, 2011 in Austrian Patent Application No. A 1395/2010. |
Austrian Patent Office Search Report (ASR #2) completed Apr. 13, 2011 in Austrian Patent Application No. A 1810/2010. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130160734 A1 | Jun 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/AT2011/000351 | Aug 2011 | US |
Child | 13770520 | US |