This disclosure relates generally to sealing sleeves for slip joints, and more specifically to sleeves for sealing the high temperature slip joints found in the exhaust manifolds of large internal combustion engines.
The temperature of the exhaust manifolds on large internal combustion engines, and especially on large diesel engines such as class 8 truck engines, can often be much hotter than the head of the engine to which they are attached. As a result, an exhaust manifold can often experience greater thermal expansion than the head, and must be therefore be formed into two or three sections that fit together with sealable slip joints having opposing cylindrical surfaces that slide relative to each other in order to accommodate the thermally-induced growth and shrinkage.
These slip joints can be problematic to keep sealed because of the general lack of a sliding seal mechanism that has durability at such high temperatures. For example, many slip-joints have straight, smooth bores that are machined to close tolerance and initially leak exhaust gasses until they become clogged with carbon build-up. As such, these slip joints never completely seal, but can offer at least some resistance to escaping gases. Another type of exhaust manifold slip joint includes multiple bushings or “C” ring seals that are similar to piston rings, and that are generally mounted within grooves formed into the inner or male cylindrical surface, and with the outer surfaces of the rings being in close proximity to the outer or female cylindrical surface. As the high-temperature environment precludes any liquid sealing lubrication along the opposite surface, these slip joints are subject to leakage as well as galling or binding at the outer edges of the rings if the rings become cocked within their grooves or if the opposing cylindrical surfaces become laterally or angularly misaligned.
Consequently, a need exists for a slip joint that can provide improved sealing while maintaining free movement between the opposing cylindrical surfaces of the joint to accommodate the thermally-induced growth and shrinkage between the parts of the exhaust manifold. The slip joint should also accommodate nominal amounts of lateral or angular misalignment between the different sections of the exhaust manifold. It is toward such a slip joint that the present disclosure is directed.
In accordance with one embodiment of the present disclosure, a sleeve for sealing an annular gap between the opposed co-axial surfaces of a slip joint generally includes a tubular body formed from a metallic material and having a first end, a second end, a center section between the first and second ends, and a longitudinal cross-sectional profile formed with a plurality of bendable curves. The sleeve is shaped so that two or more bendable curves contact each opposed coaxial surface to form two or more circumferential lines of contact with each opposed coaxial surface. The sleeve also includes an undercoat layer comprising a self-protective oxide coating and that covers substantially all of the surface area of the tubular body, and an overcoat layer that covers the undercoat layer at least about the lines of contact, and which is configured to provide lubricity to the contact surfaces when the sleeve is exposed to temperatures greater than about 600° C. In one aspect, the sleeve is shaped so that a non-flexed distance between opposing circumferential lines of contact, as measured perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the tubular body, is between about 6% and about 14% greater than an average distance between the opposed coaxial surfaces.
Another embodiment of the sleeve includes a tubular body having a first rolled end, a second rolled end, and a center section between the first and second rolled ends. The first and second rolled ends form inwardly opposing arcs, with each arc having an arc length that is greater than or about 230 degrees to form circumferential lines of contact with each opposed coaxial surface, and an arc diameter in a non-flexed condition that is about 10% or greater than an average distance between the opposed coaxial surfaces. In addition, the center section is spaced from a nearest slip joint surface by at least 10% of the average distance between the opposed coaxial surfaces upon installation of the sleeve into the annular gap.
Yet another embodiment of the sleeve includes a tubular body formed from a metallic material and having a first end, a second end, and a center section between the first and second ends, with the center section having a bendable wave-shaped profile that includes a plurality of alternating peaks that alternately contact the opposed co-axial surfaces. At least two peaks contact each opposed coaxial surface to form at least two circumferential lines of contact with each opposed coaxial surface. The sleeve also includes an undercoat layer comprising a self-protective oxide coating that covers substantially all of the surface area of the tubular body, and an overcoat layer that covers the undercoat layer at least on each of the peaks of the wave-shaped profile, and which is configured to provide lubricity to the contact surfaces when the sleeve is exposed to temperatures greater than about 600° C. In one aspect the sleeve includes a non-flexed amplitude, as measured between the lines of contact of adjacent opposing peaks, that is about 10% or greater than an average distance between the opposed coaxial surfaces.
Another embodiment of the disclosure comprises a high temperature slip joint for a separable exhaust manifold that includes a substantially smooth outer cylindrical surface formed on a first section of the exhaust manifold, a substantially smooth inner cylindrical surface formed on a second section of the exhaust manifold, with at least a portion of the inner cylindrical surface being radially spaced from the outer cylindrical surface when the first and second sections of the exhaust manifold are coupled to an engine. The slip joint further includes a sealing sleeve disposed between the outer cylindrical surface and the inner cylindrical surface, which sealing sleeve generally comprises a tubular body formed from a metallic material and having a longitudinal cross-sectional profile that includes a plurality of bendable curves or peaks. Two or more of the bendable curves contact each of the inner and outer cylindrical surfaces, respectively, to form two or more circumferential lines of contact on each surface that operate to establish a slidable seal which restricts the passage of hot exhaust gases between the inside of the exhaust manifold and ambience.
The sleeve also includes an undercoat layer comprising a self-protective oxide coating that covers substantially all of the surface area of the tubular body, and an overcoat layer on the undercoat layer that is configured to provide lubricity to the surfaces that contact outer and inner cylindrical surfaces when the slip joint is exposed to temperatures greater than about 600° C.
The invention will be better understood upon review of the detailed description set forth below taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing figures, which are briefly described as follows.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate and understand that, according to common practice, various features of the drawings discussed below are not necessarily drawn to scale, and that dimensions of various features and elements of the drawings may be expanded or reduced to more clearly illustrate the embodiments of the present invention described herein.
Referring now in more detail to the drawing figures, wherein like parts are identified with like reference numerals throughout the several views,
As further shown in the close-up view of
In accordance with a representative embodiment of the present disclosure, illustrated in
As shown in
As shown in
With reference to
As described above, the tubular body or substrate 142 of the sealing sleeve 140 can be formed from a stiff but bendable metallic material, such as a stainless steel alloy, an, and a high-nickel alloy, that maintains its bulk material properties at high temperatures greater than 600° C. While stainless steel alloys, and especially ferric stainless steel alloys, may be considered a preferred embodiment, the substrate may also be formed from other high temperature-resistant metals, such as an Inconel alloy or alloys having a high-aluminum, high-nickel or high-titanium content.
The tubular body or substrate 142 includes an upper surface, a lower surface, and edges at both ends, and in one aspect can be seamless or formed with a seamless construction. Generally, substantially all of the surface area of the substrate 142, including both the upper and lower surfaces and the end edges, is covered with a first layer or undercoat 143 comprising a self-protective oxide coating that provides protection from oxidation corrosion at high temperatures. As discussed in more detail below, the self-protective oxide coating 143 can be formed through the application of a plurality of nanoparticles to the surfaces of the substrate 142, which is then heated to a first elevated temperature and for a predetermined period of time to form the self-protective oxide coating 143.
After the formation of the self-protective oxide coating 143, a low-friction second layer or overcoat 145 can be applied to the undercoat layer 143 to provide lubricity to the contact surfaces of the sealing sleeve 140 even when the sealing sleeve is exposed to the elevated temperatures experienced by the exhaust manifold, which can often reach and exceed 600° C. In one aspect the low-friction overcoat 145 can comprise boron nitride.
Further to the above, the first layer or undercoat 143 can comprise a protective coating that is formed from a plurality of nanoparticles that have been applied in a solution or suspension (more accurately referred to hereinafter as a “nanoparticle suspension”, or “suspension”) to the surfaces (and edges) of the tubular body or substrate 142. The suspension can be rolled, sprayed or brushed onto the substrate, or the substrate 142 can be dip coated into the suspension. In one aspect, a single application of the nanoparticle suspension can generally be sufficient to deposit the desired amount of nanoparticles onto the surfaces of the substrate 142. However, in other aspects the nanoparticle suspension can be applied and dried multiple times until the materials deposited onto the surface of the substrate have reach their desired coverage and concentration, with the substrate being air dried at ambient temperature or heat dried at a temperature that is generally less than 100° C. The substrate 142 and the applied nanoparticles can then be heated together to a first elevated temperature and for a predetermined period of time to form the protective undercoat 143 that resists the severe oxidation corrosion that would otherwise occur on the surfaces of the tubular body or substrate 142.
In one aspect, the average size of the nanoparticles can be 50 nanometers or less. In other aspects, the average size of the nanoparticles can be 20 nanometers or less, or even 10 nanometers or less. Furthermore, the nanoparticles can generally be oxides of an element, including but not limited to cerium oxide nanoparticles, titanium oxide nanoparticles, aluminum oxide nanoparticles, silicon oxide nanoparticles, scandium oxide nanoparticles, yttrium oxide nanoparticles, zirconium oxide nanoparticles, niobium oxide nanoparticles, hafnium oxide nanoparticles, tantalum oxide nanoparticles, and thorium oxide.
In one embodiment of the present disclosure, the individual nanoparticles can be broadly scattered or dispersed over the surfaces of the tubular body or substrate 142, without forming a continuous layer. The dispersed and scattered nanoparticles can then interact with the base alloy material of the substrate 142 during heating to the first elevated temperature to form the thin, self-protective oxide coating 143. The oxide coating 143 grows or forms to cover the surfaces of the substrate substantially completely, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,197,613, which issued on Jun. 12, 2012. This patent is incorporated by reference in its entirely herein and for all purposes.
Without being bound to any particular mechanism or theory, it is contemplated that the nanoparticles that are scattered and dispersed over the surface of the substrate serve as nucleation sites for the development and growth of a fine-grained, uniform, and stable thermal oxide coating 143 that forms as a result of oxidation of the base alloy during the heating process. In one aspect, the first elevated temperature can be greater than or about 600° C. and for a period ranging from about one minute to about forty-eight hours. In yet another aspect, the first elevated temperature can be greater than or about 800° C. and for a period ranging from about one minute to about forty-eight hours.
Alternatively, through experimentation and practice it has been discovered that it may also be possible to form the self-protective oxide coating at temperatures far below those elevated temperatures that were previously considered. For instance, and again without being bound to any particular mechanism or theory, it is also contemplated that the substrate may only require heating to a temperature as low as 200° C., or even to temperatures as low as 80° C. to 100° C., to form the thin, self-protective oxide coating 143. Thus, in one representative embodiment the first elevated temperature for forming the self-protective oxide coating, or undercoat layer, can range between about 80° C. and about 600° C., while in another embodiment the first elevated temperature can range between about 80° C. and about 200° C., and in yet another embodiment the first elevated temperature can range between about 80° C. and about 100° C. In the above embodiments, the substrate coated in the nanoparticle solution can be maintained at the first elevated temperature for a period of time ranging from about five minutes to about thirty minutes, with a preferred period of time being nearer the shorter end of the range, or about five minutes, so as to reduce the time and cost needed to form the self-protective oxide coating during manufacturing.
The suspension of nanoparticles used to form the first layer or undercoat 143 can include the nanoparticles suspended in a volatile carrier fluid, such as toluene, that can be readily evaporated at room temperature to deposit the nanoparticles onto the surfaces of the substrate 142. In this embodiment the carrier fluid can simply evaporate or burn off during the heating step that forms the protective undercoat.
In other embodiments the carrier fluid can comprise a mixture of water and a surfactant, such as soap, that can leave a residue on the substrate during the heating step used to create the protective undercoat. As the surfactant residue can affect the bonding between the protective undercoat layer and the lubricious overcoat layer, the residue can be removed from the substrate by washing the substrate to remove the residue prior to applying the second layer or overcoat 145 over the undercoat 143. In one aspect, the substrate can be washed in an ultra-sonic parts washer filled with clean water or other cleanser, and then dried prior to the application of the overcoat 145.
After the first layer or undercoat 143 has been formed over the surfaces of the tubular body or substrate 142 through the application and heating of nanoparticles, a second layer or overcoat 145 can be applied over the undercoat 143 to provide lubricity and sealability to the surfaces of the sealing sleeve 140 when the sealing sleeve is exposed to temperatures greater than about 600° C. In one aspect of the present disclosure, the anti-friction or lubricious overcoat 145 can comprise boron nitride, which can be applied over substantially all of the surface area of the undercoat 143, or which may be limited in application to the raised contact surfaces 149 of any bendable peaks or curves 146 which may be formed into the longitudinal cross-sectional profile of the substrate 142.
As with the nanoparticle solution, the overcoat 145 can be applied to the surfaces of the substrate 142 as a liquid, such as a solution comprising boron nitride, which can be rolled, sprayed or brushed onto the substrate, or into which the substrate 142 can be dip coated. After application, the liquid overcoat can then be heat dried at a second elevated temperature that can range, in one aspect, between about 80° C. and about 200° C. In another aspect, the second elevated temperature can range between about 80° C. and about 100° C. The substrate with the self-protective undercoat layer 143 that is coated, at least in part, with the overcoat layer can be maintained at the second elevated temperature for a period of time ranging from about five minutes to about thirty minutes, with a preferred period of time being nearer the shorter end of the range, or about five minutes, so as to reduce the time and cost needed to form the anti-friction or lubricious overcoat 145 during manufacturing. In general, a single application of the overcoat can be sufficient to form the lubricious overcoat 145 on top of the self-protective undercoat 143. However, multiple applications are also possible and considered to fall within the scope of the present disclosure.
Additional details for the selection of the substrate material 142 for the sealing sleeve 140, as well as the formation of the undercoat layer 143 comprising a self-protective oxide coating and the formation of the low-friction overcoat layer 145, can be found in co-owned and co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/175,286, filed Feb. 7, 2014, and claiming priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/761,726, filed Feb. 7, 2013, which applications are incorporated by reference for all purposes in their entirety herein.
As further indicated in
Another representative embodiment of the sealing sleeve 260 for a slip joint is illustrated in
Upon installation within the annular gap of the slip joint 250, as shown in the close-up views of
As shown in
Also shown in
The tubular body or substrate 262 of the sealing sleeve 260 can be formed from a stiff but bendable metallic material, such as a stainless steel alloy, an Inconel alloy, and a high-nickel alloy, that maintains its material properties at high temperatures. The substrate 262 can include an outer surface, an inner surface, and curled edges at the tips 278 of both arcs 270, and can be seamless or formed with a seamless construction. In one aspect substantially all of the surface area of the substrate 262, including both the outer and inner surfaces and the curled edges, can be covered with the undercoat layer 263 that provides the metallic material of the substrate 262 with protection from oxidation corrosion at high temperatures (
After the formation of the undercoat layer 263, a low-friction overcoat layer 265 can be applied to the undercoat layer 263 to provide lubricity to the contact surfaces 279 of the sealing sleeve 260 even when the sealing sleeve 260 is exposed to the elevated temperatures experienced by the exhaust manifold, which can often reach and exceed 600° C. In another aspect, the low-friction overcoat layer 625 can comprise boron nitride which can be applied in liquid form and allowed to dry.
As indicated in
The non-flexed arc diameter 267 can be between about 6% and about 14% greater than an average distance between the opposed coaxial surfaces 224, 236 of the slip joint 250, as measured perpendicular to a longitudinal axis of the tubular body. In one aspect the non-flexed arc diameter 167 can be about 10% greater than the average distance between the opposed coaxial surfaces 224, 236.
Installation of the sealing sleeve 260 into the slip joint 250, as shown in
In one embodiment the non-flexed distance or arc diameter 167 (
The invention has been described in terms of preferred embodiments and methodologies considered by the inventors to represent the best mode of carrying out the invention. Nevertheless, it is contemplated that a wide variety of additions, deletions, and modification might well be made to the illustrated embodiments by those of skill in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, which is constrained only by the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/905,016, filed Nov. 15, 2013, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein, and for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61905016 | Nov 2013 | US |