This disclosure relates to single piece piston bodies for internal combustion engines.
Pistons for internal combustion engines such as heavy duty compression ignition engines are complex products subject to a wide range of duty requirements. Such pistons operate in extremely harsh environments whilst having to produce good performance, emissions and durability characteristics over a wide range of loads, speeds, ambient conditions and with fuels the specification of which can vary dramatically. In a field where so many variables have significant impact on development, numerous piston designs have seen the light of day, as rarely will an off-the-shelf piston be suitable for a new or modified engine system. Furthermore, the piston can be designed from a very extensive set of design variables whereby a suitable combination of variables goes far beyond simple design selection but requires significant inventive efforts, research and development. Hence, not withstanding the prior art field for pistons already being very extensive, improvements can still be made, as new or modified engine systems tend to pose unique problem sets, requiring unique solutions.
One piston known in the prior art is an articulated piston, i.e. the upper portion (crown) and the lower portion (skirt) are only held together via the wrist pin, whereby the crown may be a steel component and the skirt may be made from aluminium. One such piston, for example a Ferrotherm® piston from Mahle® includes four axial drain passages between the oil ring groove and a lower open space. The four axial drain holes are distributed uniformly around the circumference of the oil ring groove, i.e. all drain passages are spaced 90 degrees apart from each other, with two passages being positioned over the central axis of the wrist pin bores and two passages being positioned centrally over the skirt walls. The four holes allows substantially uniform drainage of oil from all around the oil ring groove thereby lubricating the skirt walls.
Another piston known in the art is a single piece piston having only two axial drain passages arranged at 180 degrees angles relative to each other, they being located over the central axis of the wrist pin bores. One example of this piston is the Monotherm® piston manufactured by Mahle®.
Both the articulated and single piece pistons have been successful in many applications, however, it was found that in some applications these pistons may be unsuitable because of a lack of durability, excessive carbon built-up on the crown, lack of performance and excessive oil consumption and manufacturability issues.
Hence it is an object of the current disclosure to provide an improved piston design addressing at least some of the aforementioned disadvantages.
In a first aspect there is disclosed a single-piece piston body for an internal combustion engine comprising a crown portion having a circumferential ring belt including an oil ring groove configured to accommodate an oil control ring. It further comprises a skirt portion having a first skirt wall disposed on the major thrust side and a second skirt wall disposed on the minor thrust side of the piston, and two box walls that connect the skirt walls and which are set back with respect to the ring belt. The single piece piston body is further provided with a first plurality and a second plurality of axial drain passages extending from the oil ring groove to the bottom of the crown portion, the first and second pluralities of axial drain passages being substantially centered at opposite box sides of the piston and each plurality of axial drain passages spanning an arcuate portion of about 45-75 degrees.
In a further aspect there is disclosed a piston assembly for an internal combustion engine comprising a single-piece piston body for an internal combustion engine including a crown portion a circumferential ring belt including an oil ring groove configured to accommodate an oil control ring, the crown portion at least partially defining an annular cooling gallery. The single piece piston body further includes a skirt portion having first and second skirt walls connected by first and second box walls, the first and second box walls being set closer to the longitudinal centerline of the piston body relative to the skirt walls thereby creating first and second external cavities below the crown portion. A first plurality of axial drain passages fluidly connects the oil ring groove with the first external cavity and a second plurality of axial drain passages fluidly connects the oil ring groove with the second external cavity, each plurality of axial drain passages spanning an arcuate portion of no more than about 75 degrees with the arcuate portions being substantially centered in those portions of the crown that span the box sides of the piston. The piston assembly further includes a cover plate at least partially covering the cooling gallery, the cover plate being provided with a plurality of openings corresponding to the axial drain passages.
In yet a further aspect there is disclosed a single-piece piston body for an internal combustion engine, comprising a crown portion having a circumferential ring belt including an oil ring groove configured to accommodate an oil control ring. The piston body further includes a skirt portion having a first skirt wall disposed on the major thrust side and a second skirt wall disposed on the minor thrust side of the piston and two box walls that connect the skirt walls and which are set back with respect to the ring belt. A first plurality of axial drain passages including a primary and at least two auxiliary drain passages and a second plurality of axial drain passages including a primary and at least two auxiliary drain passages extend from the oil ring groove to the bottom of the crown portion, none of the axial drain passages being located at the skirt wall sides of the piston body.
Reference will now be made in detail to specific embodiments or features, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Generally, the same or corresponding reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or corresponding parts. It should be appreciated that the terms “upper,” “lower,” “top,” “bottom,” “up,” “down,” and other terms related to orientation are being used solely to facilitate the description of the objects as they are depicted in the figures and should not be viewed as limiting the scope of this description to the orientations associated with each of these terms. It should further be understood that where in this description the term “about” is used in relation to a value, the term “about” is defined as plus or minus (+/−) 10% of the value as disclosed.
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During operation, the piston is customarily cooled by receiving oil from at least one or two engine oil spray nozzles (not shown) commonly mounted in the engine crankcase and configured to spray oil to the underside of the piston 10 and deep into the internal cavity 49. The piston body 12 may be provided with a number of cooling passages 52 (
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From operating and testing it was found that the articulated pistons with the 4 drain back holes at 90 degrees spacings as used until then were not well suited for certain applications of long stroke diesel engines. It was similarly found that a single piece piston having only two axial drain passages arranged at 180 degrees angles relative to each other was also not suited for those applications. It was found that the piston not always performed satisfactorily or lasted for a suitable duration of length. For example, on multiple pistons excessive carbon deposits had built up on the top land at low hours of operation. Carbon deposits may be particularly damaging to the engine as the deposit may cause bore polishing thereby deteriorating the performance of the engine and eventually necessitating a premature engine overhaul. Furthermore, it was observed that ring projection was excessive after low hours of operation. Carbon deposits built up in the ring grooves, particularly behind the rings in the first and second compression ring grooves, and pushed the rings outwards. As a result, the projecting rings were forced hard up against the cylinder bore or liner, causing premature wear or failure of the rings and bore/liner. Lastly it was observed that the oil consumption was excessive after low hours of operation. Oil consumption performance especially deteriorated at engine operation outside the rated load and speed range.
Compared to the articulated pistons with the 4 drain back holes at 90 degrees spacings, the following combination of features was surprisingly found to provide good results regarding, performance, durability and manufacturability. Rather than using the articulated piston it was found that a single piece piston body 12 having a steel skirt portion 16 rather than an aluminium skirt was more durable. The performance of the four drain passage design of the articulated piston, where the passages are uniformly arranged at 90 degree intervals to provide a uniform drain system all around the oil ring groove, was appealing but caused manufacturability issues for the proposed single piece steel piston body 12. In contrast to the poor performance of the articulated piston, the piston body 12 is provided improved performance when the first and second pluralities of axial drain passages 56 and 58 were substantially centered within the opposite box sides B1 and B2 of the piston body 12 and each plurality of axial drain passages 56 and 58 spans an arcuate portion with an angular width of about 45-75 degrees and preferably about 60 degrees. The arcuate width is measured as the angle between the centerlines of the two most extreme axial drain passages, e.g. in
Idustrial Applicability
A single piece piston body 12 as disclosed can be used in an internal combustion engine and is particularly, but not exclusively, suited for use in a long stroke diesel engine. The disclosed design provides an improvement over the prior art, especially with regards to performance, durability and manufacturability.
Although the preferred embodiments of this disclosure have been described herein, improvements and modifications may be incorporated without departing from the scope from the following claims.
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20110114054 A1 | May 2011 | US |
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61176648 | May 2009 | US |