None.
1. Field of the Invention
The subject matter disclosed herein relates to a piston for use in a reciprocating internal combustion engine. The piston has a slidably mounted crown forming part of a gas chamber at the top of the piston. The gas chamber acts as a gas spring to suspend the piston crown.
2. Related Art
Designers of reciprocating internal combustion engines, in general and, more specifically, diesel engines, are faced with increasingly stringent regulatory requirements relating to exhaust emissions. More specifically, future regulations will require less emission of oxides of nitrogen (NOx), particulate matter (PM), and unburned hydrocarbons (HC). It is known that an effective way to control NOx is to decrease the peak temperatures within the combustion chamber, as well as by decreasing the available oxygen through exhaust gas recirculation (EGR). Both of these remedial actions tend, however, to cause increases PM and HC emissions. Fixation of nitrogen occurs at a very high rate above 2000° K. On the other hand, hydrocarbon formation tends to increase sharply below 1500° K. Accordingly, if peak combustion chamber temperature is lowered, NOx may be reduced, but at the expense of producing more hydrocarbon. Late ignition timing, sometimes termed ignition timing retard, may be used to reduce NOx formation. This will have the effect of causing cylinder temperature to fall below 1500° K, resulting in higher hydrocarbon, and increased fuel consumption.
It would be possible to simultaneously produce beneficial results regarding emissions of NOx, PM, and HC while not adversely affecting brake specific fuel consumption if peak temperatures could be limited but, nevertheless, be held above 1500° K long enough to completely consume all the fuel.
It is desirable to have a pressure reactive piston allowing engine operation in a regime which simultaneously reduces the formation of NOx, PM, and HC, while not adversely affecting fuel consumption.
The present pressure reactive piston allows beneficial engine operation by reducing peak temperatures and pressures within the combustion chamber, while allowing energy storage in the form of a compression of a gas housed within a gas chamber in the working piston, so as to permit later expansion of the gas and to, in effect, permit operation as if at high compression, but without the attendant formation of NOx, PM, and without the drawback of additional HC resulting from combustion temperatures which are too low.
According to an aspect of the present invention, a pressure reactive piston for an internal combustion engine includes a generally cylindrical trunk having a wrist pin boss and a generally cylindrical ring portion, located above the trunk, with the ring portion having an axially directed central bore and a number of piston ring grooves circumscribing an outer wall of the ring portion. A crown is slidably mounted in the central bore, with the crown cooperating with the central bore to define a gas chamber under the crown. A volume of compressed gas is contained within the gas chamber and is maintained within the gas chamber by a flexible gas seal interposed between the crown and the ring portion.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a flexible gas seal employed in the present piston is preferably configured as a metallic bellows or as an elastomeric member. In either case, the flexible gas seal is housed within an annular space defined by a generally cylindrical outer wall of the piston crown and a generally cylindrical inner wall of the piston's central bore, as formed in the ring portion of the piston.
According to another aspect of the present invention, the piston may be configured with a unitary, generally cylindrical ring portion having a retainer step located in an uppermost part of the bore. The retainer step maintains the slidable crown within the piston during operation of an engine equipped with the present piston. Alternatively, according to another aspect of the present invention, the crown may be slidably retained within the piston by means of an annular top land applied to an upper surface of the piston's ring portion.
According to yet another aspect of the present invention, the static pressure of the compressed gas which is installed within the piston's gas chamber may be selected to be sufficient to prevent the crown from sliding in the compressive direction with respect to the ring portion of the piston during cranking and light load operation of an engine equipped with the piston.
It is an advantage of the present pressure reactive piston that the benefits of both lower and higher compression ratio are available with a single piston. For example, the benefits of low compression ratio such as low NOx production, lower frictional losses, lower heat losses, and lower mechanical stress to engine components may be had along with the higher thermal efficiency available with a high compression piston, because movement of the piston crown in response to cylinder pressure will effectively result in a reduction in maximum cylinder temperature and maximum cylinder pressure, while nevertheless allowing work done on the compressed gas in the piston to be recaptured when the piston crown moves with respect to the ring portion of the piston during the expansion stroke of the engine.
It is yet another advantage of a pressure reactive piston according to the present invention that, compared with other variable compression ratio pistons, the present piston is fast acting, but in a repeatable fashion and with more robustness than known pressure active pistons using metallic springs or hydraulic operating systems.
Other advantages, as well as features of the present invention, will become apparent to the reader of this specification.
As shown in
Piston 10 includes a trunk, 30, which incorporates a wrist pin boss 34. The upper part of the piston includes a ring portion, 38, having an outer wall 40, and a number of piston ring grooves, 42. In the embodiment of
Piston 10 also includes an axially directed bore, 46, formed in ring portion 38. Axially directed bore 46 has an inner wall, 48, upon which a slidable piston crown, 50, is mounted.
Slidable crown 50 has two outer walls, 51 and 52. Outer wall 51 is at the lower part of slidable crown 50 and is slidably engaged with generally cylindrical inner wall 48 of axially directed central bore 46. The upper portion of outer wall 52 of piston crown 50 slidably rides upon the interior diametral surface 78 of annual top land 74.
Floor 47 of axially directed bore 46 and the underside of piston crown 50 form a gas chamber, 60, having a pre-charged volume of gas, 62, contained therein. The gas pressure is selected so that piston crown 50 will not move in a compressive direction in response to cylinder pressures encountered during at least cranking of an engine. More preferably, piston crown 50 will remain immovable with respect to the remainder of piston 10 during not only cranking but also during light load operation of an engine. This allows piston 10 to function as a higher compression ratio piston, giving excellent thermal efficiency, while not decreasing peak combustion temperature during operating regimes in which nitrogen fixation does not typically occur to a prohibitive extent. Accordingly, in
Compressed gas 62 is contained within gas chamber 60 by means of a flexible gas seal, which is illustrated at 64 in
In the embodiment illustrated in
In the embodiment of
In addition to gas 62 contained within gas chamber 60, the gas chamber may also include a cooling, or heat transfer, medium, 63 (
Gas chamber 60 presents another advantage inasmuch as the size of the gas chamber may be adjusted so as to change the gas spring rate acting upon piston crown 50. Moreover, selection of cooling medium 63 from a class of materials which are solid at lower temperatures, but which eventually liquefy and ultimately vaporize at higher temperatures, would promote more stable operation of an engine by increasing the gas spring rate of piston 10.
The foregoing invention has been described in accordance with the relevant legal standards, thus the description is exemplary rather than limiting in nature. Variations and modifications to the disclosed embodiment may become apparent to those skilled in the art and fall within the scope of the invention. Accordingly the scope of legal protection afforded this invention can only be determined by studying the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090107447 A1 | Apr 2009 | US |