The present invention relates to engines of all sorts. More particularly, the present invention relates to an engine having a rotating cylinder bank.
Internal combustion engines have been around for a long time and include, primarily, the Otto-type and Wankel engines. The Otto-type engine is a four-cycle engine in which a piston linearly reciprocates within a cylinder combustion chamber. The cylinders are typically arranged in one of three ways: a single row (in line) with the centerlines of the cylinders vertically oriented; a double row with the centerlines of opposite cylinders converging in a V (V-engine); or two horizontal, opposed rows (opposed or pancake engine). Beginning in the early part of the twentieth century, the conventional Otto-type reciprocating engine began to assume dominance as the most practical approach, even though it was recognized that a large portion of the energy developed through combustion of fuel was wasted in decelerating and accelerating the pistons on their reciprocating strokes. The Wankel engine, which is also known as a rotary engine, is denoted as such because it utilizes a triangular rotating disc which forms combustion chambers as it rotates within a fixed cylinder. The Wankel engine is also a four-cycle engine, and while it has several advantages over the Otto-type engine, it lacks torque at low speeds which leads to greater fuel consumption.
It is desirable that a practical internal combustion engine have one or more, and preferably all, of the following advantageous features not heretofore provided: (1) a smooth, relatively vibration-free engine; (2) no energy lost in accelerating and decelerating reciprocatingly moving pistons; (3) multiple power take-off points; (4) a plurality of ignition systems optional; (5) an option of employing conventional supercharger and fuel injector-spark plug ignition or compression ignition of air and fuel injection analogous to a diesel engine; (6) improved central fuel/air injection in which the fuel/air is moved outwardly through the engine by centrifugal force to afford a more nearly uniform combustion mixture and complete exhaust through a peripherally disposed discharge port; (7) an unusual high-power-to-weight ratio; (8) a mechanical efficiency curve that becomes more advantageous to doing meaningful work earlier in the power stroke, than in the conventional Otto-type engine, in order to take advantage of the higher cylinder pressures at that time which results in increased torque and more power; (9) an ability to change the cubic displacement and therefore the torque potential of the engine while it is running thereby giving it the ability to respond to varying power needs; (10) an ability to take advantage of a four-cycle progression which includes intake, compression, ignition-power, and exhaust, in a rotary configuration; and (11) the option of altering the mechanical efficiency curve to virtually any configuration.
In the early 1970's a two-cycle rotary vee engine was invented as illustrated in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,830,208; 3,902,468; and 3,905,338. In essence, the rotary vee included six cylinders in each end of a housing, the middle of which was bent at a vee angle of 110°. The pistons in each cylinder at one end of the housing were fixedly attached to the respective piston in the opposite end of the housing, and the entire cylinder-piston arrangement revolved. The advantages of the rotating cylinder banks of the vee engine were in the substantial increased power and efficiency when compared to a linearly reciprocating Otto-type engine or Wankel engine. However, the design structure of the vee engine failed because the torque developed by the second cylinder bank was transmitted through the first via a violent twisting motion which scored the pistons and cylinder walls whenever a large load was applied. The other problem with the vee engine was that it was a two-cycle oil-in-fuel mixture design which is less reliable and less clean burning than a four-cycle configuration.
It is therefore desirable to provide a new rotary engine with a rotating cylinder bank like the vee engine, but with improved fuel efficiency, lower emissions, smaller size, and/or greater power and which has the advantageous features mentioned above.
The present invention relates to an engine including a stationary housing; a cylinder bank rotatably mounted to the housing about a central longitudinal axis, the cylinder bank having a plurality of cylinders therein radially distanced from and parallel to the central longitudinal axis, each cylinder having a cylinder wall, an intake port, an exhaust port, a valve assembly governing the opening and closing of the intake port and the exhaust port, a piston moveable within the cylinder between an up position and a down position, and a connecting member having an inner end connected to the piston and an outer end; a torque plate operatively connected to the outer ends of the connecting members, the torque plate being rotatably mounted in a torque plane defined by the outer ends of the connecting members and which makes an oblique angle to a plane perpendicular to the central longitudinal axis, so that as the cylinder bank rotates the torque plate sequentially guides each piston from the up position to the down position during a first portion of a rotation of the cylinder bank and then sequentially guides each piston from the down position to the up position during a second portion of the rotation of the cylinder bank; and a synchronizing member operatively connected to the cylinder bank and the torque plate so that the cylinder bank and torque plate rotate at the same speed.
The engine according to the present invention is adaptable to a four-cycle internal combustion engine having an exhaust stroke, an intake stroke, a compression stroke, and a power stroke. In this case, the engine further comprises valve control means for sequentially opening the intake port of every other cylinder for a first rotation of the cylinder bank for the exhaust stroke during which combusted gases are exhausted from every other cylinder as the respective piston therein moves from the down position to the up position and then for the intake stroke during which the combustible fuel is supplied to every other cylinder as each respective piston therein moves from the up position to the down position, and the valve control means then sequentially closing the valve of every other cylinder for a second rotation of the cylinder bank for the compression stroke during which the combustible fuel in every other cylinder is compressed as the respective piston therein moves from the down position to the up position and then for the power stroke during which the ignition means sequentially ignites the combustible fuel in every other cylinder forcing the respective piston therein from the up position to the down position, wherein the four-cycle operation is completed for each cylinder after two full rotation of the cylinder bank.
The power production assembly 12 includes a stationary housing 18, a cylinder bank 20 rotatably mounted within the stationary housing 18 about a central longitudinal axis 22 via bearings 21 and 25, an exhaust manifold 23 fixedly attached to the stationary housing 18, a spark plug commutator 24 mounted to the stationary housing 18 so as to operate in contact with the rotating cylinder bank 20, and a control unit 26 for providing the desired ignition sequence. The cylinder bank 20 includes a plurality of equidistantly-spaced and radially-offset combustion chambers therein, each of which is formed by a cylinder 28, a piston 30, and a valve 32, and each of which further includes an intake port 34, an exhaust port 36, and a spark plug 38. The fuel control assembly 14 admits a fuel and air mixture in a timed sequence into each cylinder 28 via its intake port 34 as the piston 30 therein moves from an up position to a down position as the cylinder bank 20 rotates. The fuel/air mixture is compressed within the cylinder 28 as the piston 30 therein moves from the down position to the up position as the cylinder bank 20 rotates, and then the control unit 26 explodes the fuel/air mixtures in timed sequence as the spark plug 38 in each cylinder 28 operatively engages the spark plug commutator 24 at location 29 as the cylinder bank 20 rotates. Commutator as used herein includes any form of mechanical or electronic timing of initiating spark. The explosion drives the respective piston 30 from the up position to the down position and causes the cylinder bank 20 to rotate thereby capturing the expanding gases from the exploded fuel and transferring the energy to torque. The combusted gases within the cylinder 28 are exhausted through the exhaust port 36 thereof and into the exhaust manifold 23 as the piston 30 moves from the down position to the up position as the cylinder bank 20 rotates.
Each piston 30 is connected to a rod 40 which transfers the torque to the power take off assembly 16. Each rod 40 has an inner end 42 spherically mounted to an underside of the respective piston 30 using a retaining ring 44 so that the inner end 42 of the rod 40 freely rotates and pivots about its own axis as the cylinder bank 20 rotates. Each rod 40 has an outer end 44 coupled (e.g. spherically, universal joint, etc.) mounted to power take off assembly 16 using a retaining ring 48 so that the outer end 46 of the rod 40 freely rotates and pivots about its own axis as the cylinder bank 20 rotates.
In order to achieve the four-cycle operation, it is preferred that there is an odd number (1, 3, 5, 7, 9, etc.) of combustion chambers so that as the cylinder bank 20 rotates, each cylinder 28 goes through the four-cycle operation in a simple timed sequence wherein every other cylinder 28 is acted upon. More specifically, on one side of the engine adjacent cylinders 28 alternate between the intake and power cycles, wherein the control unit 26 times the spark plugs 38 so as to fire in every other cylinder 28 as the cylinder bank 20 rotates, and wherein the fuel control assembly 14 admits a fuel and air mixture to every other cylinder 28 as the cylinder bank 20 rotates. On the other side of the engine, the adjacent cylinders 28 alternate between the compression and exhaust cycles. In the seven cylinder 28 engine illustrated in
The valves 32 seal the cylinder 28 from the intake port 34 and the exhaust port 36 and are built to withstand the full pressure of the exploding gasses within the combustion chamber. The valves 32 are typically poppet valves as are used in standard contemporary gasoline engines. This single valve 32 configuration is preferred over separate intake and exhaust valves because it achieves greater volumetric efficiency, simplifies the cam geometry, enables less energy to be spent depressing the valve 32 only once during each four cycle operation, and reduces the need for rapid acceleration of the valve stroke as is necessary in a two valve configuration. Nevertheless, it should be noted one or more intake and one or more exhaust valves can be used in other embodiments of the invention.
Referring to
Air in the turbine 50 flows axially and radiates downwards from the air intake port 58 and towards the circumference of a stationary turbine shroud 68 by action of turbine impellers 70 and thereby becomes pressurized for entering the rotating cylinder bank 20. This pressurized air can serve two purposes. First, the pressurized air enters the plurality of cooling ports 72 to cool the interior of the cylinder bank 20. A bimetallic valve 74, or similar acting device, at the entrance to cooling port 72 automatically opens and closes to increase or decrease the heat dissipation, thereby keeping the engine 10 at a uniform operating temperature. The cylinder bank 20 has cooling fins 76 protruding therefrom to help increase the efficiency in transferring cooling air to and heat away from the interior of the engine 10. The pressurized air from the turbine 50, augmented by the spinning, turbine-like motion of the cylinder bank 20 and the cooling fins 76, exits the cylinder bank 20 via a plurality of cooling slots 78 on the exterior stationary housing 18. The cooling slots 78 should be irregularly spaced so as to avoid harmonic whistling. The second function of the pressurized air from the turbine 50 is to provide pressurized air for combustion in the cylinder chambers. In this case the pressurized air passing through the turbine 50 then passes butterfly valve 80 and through intake port 34, where it mixes with the fuel, and then into the cylinder 28. Fuel is added to the cylinder 28 via the series of fuel lines 51, which pass longitudinally through a portion of the stationary turbine shroud 68 and then to fuel injectors 52, which can be in the intake manifold or associated with the cylinder. The control unit 54 supplies and controls the flow of liquid fuel through the fuel injectors 52 to the stream of pressurized air passing through the intake port 34, depending on engine conditions.
Referring to
Referring again to
As shown in
Since the pistons 30 are linked to the torque plate 120 by connecting rods 40 they are thus made to follow said trajectory thereby forming an oval trajectory with the long axis of the oval at an oblique angle to the central longitudinal axis 22. This oval trajectory of the pistons 30 is important because as the cylinder bank 20 rotates, the pistons 30 and connecting rods 40 travel in sequence along a longer path than the circular path of the cylinder bank 20, thereby in effect increasing the mechanical efficiency of the pistons 30 to the torque plate 120.
Referring to
The variable torque power take-off assembly 216 may be tilted about pivot axis 164 while rotating in step with the cylinder bank 20 at any stage of the operation of the engine in order to change the length/displacement of the piston stroke, the compression ratio, and the advancement, retardation or alteration of the mechanical advantage curve. The torque plate 220 freely pivots at an oblique torque plate angle 130 around pivot axis 164, which is essentially perpendicular to the central longitudinal axis of rotation 22 and radially located at a distance from the central longitudinal axis 22 so as to keep the compression ratio fixed or at a desirable change ratio. The oblique torque plate angle 130 is most useful from 0° in relation to the central longitudinal axis 22, which allows the cylinder bank 20 to be free spinning, to about 90° for maximum torque potential. The larger the oblique torque plate angle 130, the more torque the engine 10 develops and the more stress there is on the structure of the universal joints 160 and 162. The pivot axis 164 may be, if desired, varied in location from 90° to the central longitudinal axis 22 or to any other angle and any distance from the central longitudinal axis 22 in order to optimize performance. The tilting of the variable torque power take-off assembly 216 causes the synchronizing member 154 to lengthen or shorten, as externally splined shaft 158 slides, respectively, out of or into the internally splined shaft 156. The power output shaft 124 is fixed to the spinning thrust plate 222 for rotation therewith and for delivering the output torque of the engine 10. The oblique torque plate angle 130 is ultimately controlled by the control unit 54 which regulates both the fuel and air and/or expansion products. When a throttle (not shown) is activated, the control unit 26 causes the expansion products to increase in pressure and volume and therefore enlarge the combustion or buckling pressure between the cylinder bank 20 and the torque plate 220. This increased pressure compresses the spring 169 which increases the torque plate angle 130 and the cubic displacement in the cylinders 28, and therefore increases the torque of the entire system.
It should now be apparent that the torque plate angle 130 may be varied by other more controlled means such as mechanical actuators (not shown) like stepper motors, hydraulic pistons, magnetic actuators or manual controls. These systems can be operatively linked to the control unit 26 and made to operate in real time by monitoring and reacting to the physical conditions within the engine such as RPM, torque load, accelerator position, cylinder temperature, intake pressure, torque plate angle, turbine RPM, etc.
It should also be noted that in the illustrated case of a variable torque power take off assembly 216 as shown in
In still another embodiment (not shown), the torque plate angle 130 may be varied using a system of six load-bearing, telescoping struts which are operatively connected between the cylinder bank 20 and the torque plate 120. The struts are positioned at an angle with respect to each other so that adjacent struts are closer to one another at one end thereof. The configuration forms a series of six nesting triangular spaces. By coordinating the extension and retraction of the telescoping struts, the torque plate axis 126 may be positioned at any angle in relationship to the central longitudinal axis 22, may be positioned at any point longitudinally along central longitudinal axis 22, and may be positioned at any point radially separated from central longitudinal axis 22. This total freedom of movement, in addition to changing the torque plate angle 130, can also change the position of top dead center, the acceleration rate, and the rate of the trajectory curve of the interaction between the pistons 30 and the cylinder bank 20. Again, the torque plate angle 130 is varied in real time in order to optimize the engine performance while operating in changing conditions of altitude, weather, RPM, fuel inconsistencies, simple throttle position, etc.
Referring to
With reference to Cylinder #1, the intake cycle starts with the piston 30 in the top dead center position at 0°, the torque plate 120 set at an oblique angle in relation to the cylinder bank 20, and the poppet valve 32 opened by action of the cam surface 31. As the Cylinder #1 rotates, the piston 30 in that cylinder 28 is pulled downward in relation the cylinder bank 20 by the torque plate 120 thereby enlarging the combustion chamber within the cylinder 28. The poppet valve 32 is serially modulated to open by action of the cam surface 84 on the cam plate 82, which is synchronized to the cylinder bank 20 by the meshing action of external gear 100 on cam plate 82 with internal gear 102 on cylinder bank 20 at location 104 at a ratio of seven rotations of the cam plate 82 to six rotations of the cylinder bank 20. Pressurized air from the turbine 50 passes through stationary port 180 (see
The compression cycle begins at 180° of rotation at which point the intake manifold inlet 184 ends and the poppet valve 32 closes by action of the cam plate 82 and passes into intake manifold sealed area 186 thereby effectively sealing the combustion chamber within the cylinder 28 via the poppet valve 32 for the entire compression and power cycles of the engine. As the cylinder 28 moves from 180° to 360°, the piston 30 now moves circumferentially upward, in relation to the cylinder bank 20, by action of the torque plate 120, thereby compressing the air/fuel mixture to its smallest volume at about 360° of rotation.
The power cycle commences at 360° of rotation. During the power cycle the compressed air/fuel mixture in the cylinder 28 is ignited by any one of a variety of means including a spark plug, glow plug, diesel effect or other ignition promoter. As shown in
The exhaust cycle commences at 540° of rotation through 720°. The combustion exhaust is released from the cylinder 28 as the valve 32 is depressed by action of the cam surface 84. The combustion exhaust passes through exhaust port 34 and through circumferential exhaust opening 192 in the stationary housing 18, which leads to exhaust manifold 23, and then to an appropriate collection system, preferably including a muffler and catalytic converter (not shown). The exhaust opening area 192 and the exhaust manifold 23 end just prior to 720° of rotation and the four-cycle operation is complete. As the degrees of rotation turn past top dead center (720°), circumferential opening 180 again is exposed and a fresh charge of air is again introduced as described above and the valve 32 remains open for the next cycle.
The above description is made with respect to Cylinder #1 and applies respectively to Cylinders #2-190 7.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, slight modifications to the structure of the present invention which has been described with respect to a four cycle internal combustion engines, would permit the functioning principals of the design to be applied to a two cycle, diesel, steam or sterling cycle engines.
The present application is based on and claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Serial No. 60/346,534, filed Jan. 8, 2002, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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60346534 | Jan 2002 | US |