The present invention relates to the field of engine building, in particular to internal combustion engines with rotating working bodies, and in particular to a rotary vane internal combustion engine (ICE), which can be used in water, air and land transport machines, as well as in a stationary power plant.
Known rotary-piston ICE Wankel, containing a trihedral rotor (piston) with an arched lateral surface, rotating on an eccentric shaft, a housing (stator), acting as a cylinder with a working surface made in the form of an epitrochoid. The kinematic connection of the rotor with the stator is carried out using gearing. End and radial seals are made in the form of spring-loaded plates located in the corresponding grooves at the ends of the rotor and at the vertices of its triangle (The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (GSE), 1971, v. 4, p. 289-290) (1). For one revolution of the rotor, 3 complete duty cycles are carried out, the eccentric shaft performs 3 turns.
The Wankel engine is simple in design and has proven effective in practical applications. However, the Wankel engine also has a number of significant drawbacks, the main of which are low manufacturability, non-repairability, low reliability of mechanical and radial seals and incomplete combustion of fuel due to the non-optimal shape of the combustion chamber.
Known rotary ICE according to the patent of the Russian Federation for the invention No. 2416032 (published 10 Nov. 2010) (2). This engine contains a housing (stator) with an elliptical working surface, a cylindrical rotor, in the longitudinal grooves of which are placed vanes that are moved in the radial direction by rollers mounted on the vanes which roll on profiled grooves made in the side walls of the stator. End and radial seals are provided with split U-shaped plates placed in the grooves of the vanes and spring-loaded rings placed in the bores of the side walls. In each working chamber of the engine (2), a four-cycle cycle is performed for one full revolution of the rotor with the shaft, i.e. the number of working strokes per one revolution of the shaft is determined by the number of working chambers, which can be from six to twenty-four.
The engine according to the patent (2) repeats the main disadvantages of the Wankel engine, namely the low manufacturability, low reliability of the seals, and the non-optimal shape of the combustion chamber. In addition, this engine is excessively cumbersome in design.
Also known a six-stroke rotary-vane internal combustion engine (patent of the Russian Federation, number 2619672, published on May 17, 2017) (3) taken as a prototype engine. Said engine has a stator with inlet and outlet ports, respective holes for spark plugs, and working chambers comprise an air-fuel intake and compression, and expansion and exhaust of combustion products working chambers; a cylindrical rotor rigidly fastened to the shaft, with combustion chambers alternating with vane grooves made in the cylindrical surface and vanes fitted in the vane grooves; the side walls; and the front and rear bearing shields.
The known engine provides a reliable solution to the issues of hermetically sealing the rotor and the side walls of working chambers of the engine and of gas emissions outside the working space of the engine. However, the sealing does not exclude some inter-chamber penetration of air-fluid mixture or combustion products.
The task of this invention is to create an engine with hermetically sealed working space preventing both air-fluid mixture emissions outside the working space and its inter-chamber penetration.
The task is to be accomplished through the six-stroke rotary-vane ICE comprising a stator with at least one inlet and at least one outlet, a respective hole for at least one spark plug, and working chambers comprise of an air-fuel intake and compression, and of expansion and exhaust of combustion products working chamber; a cylindrical rotor rigidly fastened to a shaft with combustion chambers alternating with vane grooves made in the cylindrical surface and vanes fitted in the vane grooves; side walls; front and rear bearing shields. The whole working space of the engine is bound by parts rigidly and hermetically fastened to the stator. Composite prismatic pieces are placed into end grooves on both sides of the rotor, while the ends of said composite prismatic pieces are pushed by a first spring against the adjacent vanes and one of the longer sides of the composite prismatic pieces is pushed by a second spring against the side walls.
Thus, said prismatic pieces are spring-loaded pushed apart in opposite directions sealing elements preventing inter-chamber penetration of gases through a seam between the rotor and the side walls.
Preferably, combustion chambers are designed as hemispherical recesses between the vane grooves of the rotor, the working chambers of the stator are designed as cylindrical bores with the axes parallel to the axis of the stator, evenly spaced along the inner surface of the stator. Each vane comprises separate vane plates in a free relative movement. Each vane plate is made of two parts pulled apart by a spring in axial direction. The number of vanes is a multiple of the number of the working chambers of air-fuel intake.
It should be noted that this invention requires that the working surfaces of the major parts of the engine should be treated by translational and rotational motion machines to ensure the high manufacturability of the engine. Thus, the rotary-bladed ICE according to the invention implements a six-cycle duty cycle consisting of the strokes: intake of the air-fuel mixture, compression of the air-fuel mixture, combustion of the compressed air-fuel mixture, expansion of the combustion products, exhaust of the combustion products and cleaning, while, the combustion in time and space being separated from compression and expansion. The sixth cycle of work—cleaning—eliminates the mutual overflow of the air-fuel mixture into the exhaust gas discharge zone, and the exhaust gas into the air-intake mixture intake zone. The number of double (triple, quadruple, etc.) strokes per one revolution of the shaft is equal to the number of vanes in the vane grooves of the rotor. The invention also provides the ability to transfer the internal combustion engine to an economical mode of operation, while the number of working strokes per revolution of the rotor remains unchanged.
The invention is illustrated by drawings, where
The rotary-vane ICE contains a stator 1 (
An example of the ICE operation as designed by the inventor is given in
Each of the plates 13, 14, 15 is pressed through the insert 16 against side walls 7 and 8 in a checkerboard manner. The ends of each of the components 23 and 24 of the prismatic pieces are pressed by springs 25 against the vane plates 13, 15 (or vanes, being their constituent parts), and by springs 26 against the side walls 7 and 8. All the above parts as a whole provide hermetical sealing of the side walls. Once the engine starts the springs 18, 19 press the vanes against the working surface of the stator 1. When the rotor 12 rotates, the air-fuel mixture is sucked through inlet 2 into the space in the chambers 4 of air-fuel mixture intake formed behind the advancing vanes. This air-fuel mixture upon further rotation of the rotor is compressed by the next vane within the tapered space bound by the cylindrical surfaces of stator 1 and rotor 12, and the side walls 7 and 8.
At the final stage of compression the mixture is concentrated in a hemispherical recess 21 in the cylindrical surface of the rotor 12. At this point the spark plugs 6 ignite the mixture, which then is burned in an enclosed space before the front vanes following the rotation direction start extending into the opening space of the chamber 5 of combustion product expansion thus transmitting torque to the shaft 11. Following the rotation of the rotor the outlet 3 are opened behind the front vanes and exhaust from the chambers 5. The central part of cylindrical surface of the stator between the chambers 5 of combustion product expansion and exhaustion and the chambers 4 of air-fuel mixture intake and compression forces the exhaust gases out and prevents them from entering into the air-fuel mixture intake zone. Cooling lubricant is supplied through the openings 27 and 28 (oil, oil mist), cooling the working space and lubricating the wearing surfaces. Through the openings 29 and 30 the substance is exhausted for regeneration and temperature reduction. The synchronous movement of the vanes in the vane grooves of the rotor provides dynamic balance of the engine. Once a steady mode of the engine movement is reached the supply of fuel to one (or more) chambers of air-fuel intake and compression can be stopped by any known method provided that the air supply to the given chamber is still maintained. In this case, the engine continues to operate with reduced power output maintaining the same number of working strokes per one rotor rotation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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RU2017124969 | Jul 2017 | RU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/RU2018/000425 | 6/28/2018 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2019/013671 | 1/17/2019 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4168941 | Rettew | Sep 1979 | A |
8920147 | Guenther | Dec 2014 | B2 |
10920589 | Krivko | Feb 2021 | B2 |
20110165007 | Pekrul | Jul 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2386823 | Apr 2010 | RU |
2397327 | Aug 2010 | RU |
2416032 | Nov 2010 | RU |
2426898 | Aug 2011 | RU |
2619672 | May 2017 | RU |
Entry |
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International Search Report dated Oct. 25, 2018 from corresponding International (PCT) Patent Application No. PCT/RU2019/013671, 3 pages. |
Written Opinion dated Oct. 25, 2018 from corresponding International (PCT) Patent Application No. PCT/RU2019/013671, 3 pages. |
Article from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia (GSE, “Soviet Encyclopedia”), 1971, vol. 4, pp. 289-290, mentioned in the application PCT/RU2017/000316. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20200123901 A1 | Apr 2020 | US |