The present invention relates to an either explosion or internal combustion engine that, maintaining the functional features of reciprocating piston engines, that is, dividing its work cycle in four times, intake, compression, explosion, combustion and exhaust, achieves this operative cycle by means of a rotary work system, which considerably improves its functional features, setting a considerably greater output and, consequently, a greater power harnessing, allowing a much greater rating due to an explosion each 45° of rotation; which is equivalent to eight useful times each 360° and a significant reduction in manufacturing costs, volume, weight, number of parts, and maintenance costs due to breakdowns.
This means better use of its power, as the explosion time thrust is completely tangential to the rotor diameter, as well as the increase of the surface of the pushing blade in the explosion chamber as it advances in its circular displacement.
With this successive chamber system, no electrical o mechanical equipment is necessary for producing the explosion or combustion, simply by communicating the explosion chamber with the immediate chamber to explode by means of a slot machined in the side covers to the rotational degrees in which we desire the next explosion time to occur.
Explosion or internal combustion rotary engines with the aforementioned four times are known in which a rotor rotates inside a stator, both coaxially assembled, such that while the rotor is cylindrical, the stator has an irregular contour, defining chambers of different width with the rotor, which are made independent from each other in collaboration with floating blades projecting radially from rotor housings and which tend to press on the stator wall by centrifugal force, properly making the mobile chambers, which are generated on the engine perimeter and which correspond to said intake, compression, explosion, and exhaust stages, independent from each other.
In this sense it is worth mentioning, among others, Spanish patent with application number P9700883.
This solution, absolutely valid from a theoretical standpoint, has in practice tightness problems making this type of motors unfeasible.
Such tightness problems are specifically derived from the floating nature of the blades, since if a perfect fit between them, the rotor, and the stator is set, mobility problems are generated, and if they are provided with the necessary play so that said mobility is completely satisfactory, tightness is lost and communication between chambers occurs, drastically reducing the output of the engine, even making it inefficient.
The rotary engine proposed by the invention, starting from the basic generality of using a coaxial rotor and stator, solves in a completely satisfactory way the problems set forth above, ensuring a perfect mobility for the blades, as well as an also perfect tightness between chambers defined by said blades.
More particularly, the stator is carried out in a tubular block of elliptical section, with the typical intake and exhaust nozzles and the also typical cooling conduits inside of it, tubular block that is closed by means of a pair of end covers screwed thereto with the placing in-between of respective gaskets, covers incorporating the bearings or rotation means for the rotor, which is cylindrical, has a diameter coincident with the minor axis of the ellipse corresponding to the stator and includes eight radial blades that play in eight other housings, but the special characteristic that each one of said blades includes in its inner extremity a shaft and such that between the eight shafts corresponding to the eight blades there are set sixteen articulated connecting rods, eight on each side of the engine, hingedly joined by connecting alternate blades, such that four of said blades are connected to each other by means of four articulated connecting rods on each end configuring two articulated parallelograms, while the other four blades are also connected to each other at each end of the engine by means of four articulated connecting rods determining a second pair of articulated parallelograms.
Thereby and by means of an adequate sizing of said articulated connecting rods, these force the blades to be in permanent contact with the inner surface of the stator, that is with the jacket, without the centrifugal force having to act in order to do so, said blades losing the typical floating nature, and being impossible under any circumstances, that is under any type of stress, that any of said blades may separate at any time from the stator wall.
In accordance with another of the invention features, it has been provided for each one of said blades to have its outer edge grooved in the shape of a channel for the emplacement of a segment of complementary configuration, such that said segments may freely swing with respect to the corresponding blades in order to achieve at all times a perfect emplacement thereof on top of the stator wall regardless of the degree of tilt that the blades adopt with respect to said wall.
Segments of rectangular section set on both the blade faces and the minor edges or ends thereof ensure tightness both in their housings in the rotor and with respect to the end covers or walls of the chambers defined in-between the rotor and stator.
To complement the description being made and for the purpose of aiding to better understand the features of the invention, in accordance with a preferred practical embodiment thereof, a set of drawings is attached as an integral part of said description, wherein with an illustrative and non-limiting nature, the following has been shown:
In view of the indicated figures, it can be seen how the rotary engine proposed by the invention is made up of a tubular stator (1) which externally can adopt any configuration but that internally has an elliptical section, tubular body which is closed by means of a pair of end covers (2) fixable in collaboration with through screws through holes (3) of the covers and which thread in holes (4) of the body (1), the covers (2) having a central hole (5) for passage of the shaft (6) of the rotor (7), rotor which is essentially cylindrical and which has a plurality of radial grooves (8) which affect it in its entire length, namely in a number of eight, intended for receiving respective blades (9), basically rectangular, with their free and longitudinal edge (10) grooved for receiving a sealing segment (11) of section approximately of a circular segment, as specially seen in
In accordance with the essentiality of the invention, the blades (9) include stepped recesses (14) in their inner apexes in which respective coaxial shafts (15) are located, intended for hingedly receiving articulated connecting rods (16) such as the one shown in detail in
Thereby and by means of an adequate sizing of said articulated connecting rods (16), it is achieved that these act as spacers for the blades (9), such that each group of four articulated connecting rods or rather each pair of groups of four articulated connecting rods located on both ends of the engine forces the corresponding four blades (9) to be in permanent contact with the inner face (17) of the stator (1), jointly ensuring with segments (11) and (11′) a perfect tightness for the chambers (18) that said blades (9) configure between the stator (1) and rotor (7).
In all other respects and as is conventional, the stator (1) will have the typical intake (9) and exhaust (20) nozzles, as well as the typical pipes (21) for cooling water circulation, and the stator (1) will also have water circulation conduits properly communicated with manifolds set at the ends of its shaft.
In accordance with another of the features of the invention, it has been provided for that, at the level of the housing (22) of the stator (1) for the spark plug, small recesses (23) are set in the covers (2) making that at the moment in which each blade (9) passes by said housing (22) of the spark plug, the recesses (23) set a certain communication between the immediately preceding and subsequent chambers of said blade (9), which substantially improves ignition.
Thereby, a motor is obtained the rotor and stator of which generate by their own mobility, in collaboration with the blades (9), the chambers corresponding to different cycles without the need of valves, cam shafts or other accessories, with an output that can amount to in the order of four times greater than that of classic reciprocating engines, with an extraordinary structural simplicity that has an impact at both the cost level and the breakdown level, a 20 to 1 compression ratio being achieved, more than enough for working in both combustion engines and explosion engines.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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P200201707 | Jul 2002 | ES | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/ES03/00369 | 7/15/2003 | WO | 9/13/2005 |