The present disclosure relates to a spark plug for internal combustion engine used in an engine of an automobile and others, and a method for manufacturing the same.
There has been conventionally known a configuration of a spark plug in which a convex portion is provided on an opposed surface of a ground electrode as a surface on a center electrode side by forming a convexity on part of a base material of the ground electrode to protrude toward the center electrode.
The present disclosure is a spark plug that includes: a cylindrical mounting bracket attachable to an internal combustion engine; a center electrode that is held by the mounting bracket in an insulated manner and has a first end portion exposed and extended from a first end portion of the mounting bracket; a slant-shape ground electrode that has a first end side joined to the first end portion of the mounting bracket, has a surface of a second end side extending to be opposed to the first end portion of the center electrode, and has an extension direction inclined with respect to the center electrode; a convex portion that protrudes from a base material of the ground electrode on the surface of the ground electrode facing the center electrode, inclines to the center electrode side with respect to a protrusion direction, and has a convex portion opposed surface opposed to an end surface of the center electrode; and a precious metal layer that is formed on at least the convex portion opposed surface out of surfaces of the convex portion.
In the accompanying drawings:
According to the known configuration of a spark plug, a precious metal layer can be provided on a discharge surface as a tip surface of the convex portion by welding a precious metal chip to a portion of the base material of the ground electrode where the discharge surface as the tip surface of the convex portion is to be formed to form a fuse solidification portion by fusing with the base material, and then forming the convex portion by extrusion molding. In addition to the tip surface, a precious metal layer can be provided by the same processing method on the side surfaces and corners between the tip surface and the side surfaces of the convex portion. Covering most of the convex portion with a precious metal layer makes it possible to suppress the corners from wearing that are likely to be worn due to discharge and avoid defects such as oxidation, cracking, and peeling of the fuse solidification portion.
In recent years, there has been known a slant-ground plug structure in which a ground electrode is inclined at an acute angle with respect to a center electrode. In the case of applying a known configuration of a ground electrode with a concave portion to slant grounding, the center electrode and the ground electrode are obliquely opposed to each other. When a spark plug is discharged in this positional relationship between the electrodes, the center electrode greatly suffers uneven wear in particular. Accordingly, a spark discharge gap is early extended between the center electrode and the ground electrode, which may lead to a higher required voltage.
An object of the present disclosure is to provide a spark plug that preferably suppresses uneven wear on a center electrode in a configuration using a slant-shape ground electrode.
The present disclosure is a spark plug that includes: a cylindrical mounting bracket attachable to an internal combustion engine; a center electrode that is held by the mounting bracket in an insulated manner and has first end portion exposed and extended from first end portion of the mounting bracket; a slant-shape ground electrode that has first end side joined to the first end portion of the mounting bracket, has a surface of the second end side extending opposed to the first end portion of the center electrode, and has an extension direction inclined with respect to the center electrode; a convex portion that protrudes from a base material of the ground electrode on the surface of the ground electrode facing the center electrode, inclines toward the center electrode with respect to a protrusion direction, and has a convex portion opposed surface opposed to an end surface of the center electrode; and a precious metal layer that is formed on at least the convex portion opposed surface out of surfaces of the convex portion.
According to this configuration, even when the base material of the slant-shape ground electrode is inclined with respect to the center electrode, by providing the convex portion on the ground electrode so as to have the convex portion opposed surface inclined to the center electrode side, the convex portion opposed surface of the convex portion of the ground electrode can be easily made to face the end surface of the center electrode. Accordingly, it is possible to avoid uneven wear on the center electrode that is likely to occur when the end surfaces of the center electrode and the ground electrode are obliquely opposed to each other in the spark discharge gap between the center electrode and the ground electrode.
According to the present disclosure, it is possible to provide a spark plug that preferably suppresses uneven wear on the center electrode in a configuration using the slant-shape ground electrode, and a method for manufacturing the same.
An embodiment will be described below with reference to the attached drawings. For easy understanding of the description, identical components in the drawings are given identical reference signs as much as possible and duplicated descriptions thereof will be omitted.
[Embodiment]
A configuration of a spark plug 100 according to the present embodiment will be described with reference to
As illustrated in
A center electrode 30 is fixed to an axial hole 22 of the insulator 20 and is held with respect to the mounting bracket 10 in an insulated manner. The center electrode 30 is a columnar body in which an inner material is formed of a metallic material such as Cu excellent in heat conductivity and an outer material is formed of a metallic material such as a Ni-base alloy excellent in heat resistance and corrosion resistance. As illustrated in
On the other hand, a ground electrode 40 has a pillar shape (for example, prismatic shape) that is fixed at a first end portion 41 by welding to the first end portion 11 of the mounting bracket 10, bent in the middle, and extended on the side of a second end portion 42 toward the first end portion 31 of the center electrode 30 to form an acute angle with an axis 33 of the center electrode.
That is, as illustrated in
The axis 44 of the ground electrode 40 toward the ground electrode other end surface 43 is an axis that extends toward the substantial ground electrode other end surface 43 of the ground electrode 40 is projected onto a virtual plane when assuming a plane including the center of gravity of a cross section of a joint portion (welded portion) between the ground electrode 40 and the mounting bracket 10 and the axis 33 of the center electrode as the virtual plane. The virtual plane is a plane parallel to the face of
A center electrode-side chip 50 made of a precious metal or the like and extending in the same direction as the axis 33 of the center electrode is joined to the first end portion 31 of the center electrode 30 by laser welding, resistance welding, or the like. That is, in the present embodiment, the axis 33 of the center electrode is also an axis 52 of the center electrode-side chip 50. In this example, the axis 33 of the central axis aligns with the axis 52 of the center electrode-side chip. However, these axes may not align with each other but may extend in the same direction, that is, may be in a parallel relationship.
On the other hand, a convex portion 46 is formed on a surface 45 of the ground electrode 40 on the second end portion 42 side opposed to the center electrode 30 (hereinafter, called “opposed surface 45”) to protrude from the base material of the ground electrode 40 toward the center electrode 30. The cross section of the convex portion orthogonal to the protrusion direction (the direction of the axis 61) of the convex portion 46 is circular in shape, for example. The convex portion 46 includes a convex portion opposed surface 46A that is formed to be inclined toward the center electrode 30 with respect to a protrusion direction. In other words, as illustrated in
The convex portion 46 and the precious metal layer 60 extend toward a tip surface 51 of the center electrode-side chip 50 such that the convex portion opposed surface 46A and the tip surface 51 of the center electrode-side chip 50 are opposed to each other with a discharge gap therebetween. Hereinafter, as illustrated in
A concave portion 47 is formed on a surface of the ground electrode 40 opposite to the opposed surface 45 to range from this surface toward the opposed surface 45. The base material of the ground electrode 40 is partially recessed along with the formation of the convex portion 46. The concave portion 47 has a bottom surface 47A perpendicular to a recessing direction. The recessing direction is identical to the protrusion direction of the convex portion 46. The concave portion 47 is formed to have the same circular shape as that of the convex portion 46 as seen from the recessing direction, for example. Hereinafter, the axial core of the concave portion 47 along the recessing direction will be expressed as “center axis 48 of the concave portion 47 of the ground electrode 40” as illustrated in
The axis 52 of the center electrode-side chip 50 and the axis 61 of the convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 are in a crossing or distorted positional relationship. Specifically, a crossing angle β between the axis 52 of the center electrode-side chip and the axis 61 of the convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 (in the case where the axes are distorted, the crossing angle is as indicated by β in
The center electrode-side chip 50 may be formed in a columnar or disc shape but is preferably formed in a columnar shape.
The material for the center electrode-side chip 50 and the precious metal layer 60 of the ground electrode 40 can be any one of alloys such as Pt (platinum)-Ir (iridium), Pt—Rh (rhodium), Pt—Ni (nickel), Ir—Rh, Ir—Y (yttrium), and others.
Further, the material for the center electrode-side chip 50 and the precious metal layer 60 of the ground electrode 40 may be an alloy in which Pt as the main ingredient is mixed with at least one of Ir, Ni, Rh, W, Pd, Ru, and Os. More specifically, the material may be an alloy in which Pt as the main ingredient is mixed with at least one of Ir of 50 weight % or less, Ni of 40 weight % or less, Rh of 50 weight % or less, W of 30 weight % or less, Pd of 40 weight % or less, Ru of 30 weight % or less, and Os of 20 weight % or less.
Further, the material for the center electrode-side chip 50 and the precious metal layer 60 of the ground electrode 40 may be an alloy in which Ir as the main ingredient is mixed with at least one of Rh, Ni, W, Pd, Ru, and Os. More specifically, the material may be an alloy in which Ir as the main ingredient is mixed with at least one of Rh of 50 weight % or less, Pt of 50 weight % or less, Ni of 40 weight % or less, W of 30 weight % or less, Pd of 40 weight % or less, Ru of 30 weight % or less, and Os of 20 weight % or less.
In the thus configured spark plug 100, electric discharge takes place in a discharge gap formed between the tip surface 51 of the center electrode-side chip 50 and the precious metal layer 60 of the ground electrode 40 to ignite the fuel-air mixture in the combustion chamber. After the ignition, a flame kernel formed in the discharge gap grows to cause combustion in the combustion chamber.
Next, a method for manufacturing the convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 and the precious metal layer 60 will be described with reference to
First, a precious metal chip 60A as a raw material of the precious metal layer 60 is placed at a position where the convex portion 46 is to be formed on the opposed surface 45 of the base material of the ground electrode 40, and the entire precious metal in the precious metal chip 60A and part of the base material of the ground electrode 40 are fused together by resistance welding or arc welding to form a fuse solidification portion. In arc welding, the metal ratio in the surface (discharge surface) of the fuse solidification portion and its vicinity is preferably 70% or more, and the metal ratio in the base material and its vicinity is preferably 50% or less. Examples of arc welding include plasma arc welding, shielded arc welding, submerged arc welding, inert gas welding, MAG welding (including CO2 gas arc welding), and self-shielded arc welding, and others. This fusion processing can also be expressed as processing for bonding the precious metal layer 60 to one surface of the ground electrode 40 (the opposed surface 45) (bonding step).
Then, as illustrated in
In the present embodiment, the precious metal chip 60A is an approximately circular plate material. A diameter φ1 of the precious metal chip 60A is preferably larger than the diameter of the convex portion cavity 101 (that is, the maximum diameter of the molded convex portion 46), and the thickness t1 of the precious metal chip 60A is preferably larger than or identical to the maximum thickness t2 of the molded precious metal layer 60.
A pressing jig 103 has an approximately columnar shape, for example. The pressing jig 103 is configured such that a diameter φ2 thereof is larger than the diameter φ1 of the precious metal chip 60A and the maximum diameter of the molded convex portion 46 so that the base material is prone to protrude toward the deepest portion of the convex portion cavity 101.
The metal die 102 and the pressing jig 103 are used to perform cold-hammer forging on the flat plate-shaped ground electrode 5 to form the convex portion 46 (convex portion forming step). Specifically, as illustrated in
Consequently, as illustrated in
Next, advantageous effects of the spark plug 100 according to the present embodiment will be described.
The spark plug 100 of the present embodiment includes: the cylindrical mounting bracket 10 attachable to an internal combustion engine; the center electrode 30 that is held by the mounting bracket 10 in an insulated manner and has the first end portion 31 exposed and extended from the first end portion 11 of the mounting bracket 10; the slant-shape ground electrode 40 that has the first end side joined to the first end portion 11 of the mounting bracket 10, has the surface 45 of the second end side extended to be opposed to the first end portion 31 of the center electrode 30, and has the extension direction inclined with respect to the center electrode 30; the convex portion 46 that protrudes from the base material of the ground electrode 40 on the surface 45 of the ground electrode 40 toward the center electrode 30, inclines toward the center electrode 30 with respect to the protrusion direction, and has the convex portion opposed surface 46A opposed to the end surface of the center electrode 30 (the tip surface 51 of the center electrode-side chip 50); and the precious metal layer 60 that is formed on the entire surface of the convex portion 46.
According to this configuration, even when the base material of the slant-shape ground electrode 40 is inclined with respect to the center electrode 30, providing the convex portion 46 on the ground electrode 40 to have the convex portion opposed surface 46A inclined toward the center electrode 30 makes it easy to oppose the convex portion opposed surface 46A of the convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 to the end surface (the tip surface 51 of the center electrode-side chip 50) of the center electrode 30. Accordingly, it is possible to avoid uneven wear on the center electrode 30 that is likely to occur when the end surfaces of the center electrode 30 and the ground electrode 40 are obliquely opposed to each other in the spark discharge gap between the center electrode 30 and the ground electrode 40. As a result, it is possible to preferably suppress uneven wear on the center electrode 30 in a configuration with the slant-shape ground electrode 40. Suppressing the occurrence of uneven wear on the electrode makes it possible to lengthen the consumable life of the spark plug 100. Further, the entire convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 is not formed of a precious metal but the precious metal layer 60 is formed on the surface of the convex portion 46, which reduces the necessary amount of the precious metal to allow low-cost manufacture of the spark plug 100.
In the spark plug 100 of the present embodiment, the convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 is formed such that the convex portion opposed surface 46A is perpendicular to the axis direction of the center electrode 30.
According to this configuration, the convex portion opposed surface 46A of the ground electrode 40 is arranged to face the end surface of the center electrode 30, that is, the tip surface 51 of the center electrode-side chip 50. Accordingly, the convex portion opposed surface 46A and the tip surface 51 can be entirely at the same distance to further suppress the occurrence of uneven wear on the center electrode 30.
In the spark plug 100 of the present embodiment, the convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 is formed by protruding part of the base material of the ground electrode 40 by extrusion molding, and the precious metal layer 60 is welded to the surface 45 of the ground electrode 40 and then formed on the entire surface of the convex portion 46 by extrusion molding.
According to this configuration, the shape of the ground electrode 40 can be easily formed and the precious metal layer 60 can be easily formed on the surface of the convex portion 46. In addition, the formation of the convex portion 46 and the formation of the precious metal layer 60 can be performed simultaneously by one extrusion molding to decrease the number of manufacturing steps and improve the manufacturing efficiency.
The spark plug 100 of the present embodiment includes the concave portion 47 that is formed by recessing part of the base material of the ground electrode 40 along with the formation of the convex portion 46, on the surface of the ground electrode 40 opposite to the surface 45, and has the bottom surface 47A perpendicular to the recessing direction.
According to this configuration, the depth of the concave portion 47 is uniform, and the thickness of the base material between the bottom surface 47A of the concave portion 47 and the surface 45 of the ground electrode 40 is uniform. This makes it possible to suppress thinning and strength decrease of the base material at the second end portion of the ground electrode 40 due to the molding of the convex portion 46 and the concave portion 47.
In the spark plug 100 of the present embodiment, the center axis 48 of the concave portion 47 in the recessing direction is shifted to the second end side of the ground electrode 40 (the ground electrode other end surface 43 side) with respect to the center axis 61 of the convex portion 46 as seen in the protruding direction.
In the present embodiment, the shape of the convex portion 46 formed by extrusion molding is uneven with respect to the protruding direction. Specifically, the protrusion amount h2 of the convex portion 46 nearer the ground electrode other end surface 43 side than the axis 61 is larger than the protrusion amount h1 on the first end portion 41 side. When the center axis 61 of the convex portion 46 shaped as described above as seen in the protruding direction is identical to the axis of the direction of pressurization by the pressing jig 103, the flow of the metal extruded from the base material by extrusion molding becomes uneven, and thus sags may occur at the tip of the convex portion 46. In contrast to this, in the present embodiment, according to the foregoing configuration, the center axis 48 of the concave portion 47 is shifted to the ground electrode other end surface 43 side where the protrusion amount of the convex portion 46 is large to increase the amount of the metal extruded from the base material by extrusion molding on the ground electrode other end surface 43 rather than on the center axis 61 of the convex portion 46. This improves uneven state of flow of the metal extruded from the base material of the ground electrode 40. Therefore, the processing accuracy of the convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 can be improved.
In the spark plug 100 of the present embodiment, the convex portion 46 is columnar in shape and the cross section of the convex portion 46 is circular in shape. According to this configuration, the shape of the convex portion cavity 101 can be simplified to improve the ease of processing and reduce manufacturing costs.
Modification examples of the foregoing embodiment will be described with reference to
In the foregoing embodiment, the precious metal layer 60 is applied to the entire surface of the convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 as an example. However, the precious metal layer 60 at least needs to be applied to a part of the convex portion 46 including the tip and may not cover the entire surface of the convex portion. As in a spark plug 100A illustrated in
In the case of using the manufacturing method by which the precious metal layer 160 is bonded after extrusion molding, the concave portion 47 can be formed to reach the ground electrode other end surface 43 as in a spark plug 100B illustrated in
The present embodiment has been described so far with reference to specific examples. However, the present disclosure is not limited to these specific examples. These specific examples to which a design change is added as appropriate by a person skilled in the art would also fall within the scope of the present disclosure as far as they include the features of the present disclosure. The elements of the specific examples described above and their arrangements, conditions, and shapes are not limited to those exemplified above but can be modified as appropriate. The elements of the specific examples described above can be appropriately changed in combination without any technical inconsistency.
In the foregoing embodiment, the center axis 48 of the concave portion 47 of the ground electrode 40 is shifted toward the other end of the ground electrode 40 (the ground electrode other end surface 43) with respect to the axis 61 of the convex portion 46 as an example. Alternatively, these center axes 48 and 61 may align with each other, that is, the concave portion 47 may be coaxial with the convex portion 46.
In the foregoing embodiment, the convex portion opposed surface 46A of the convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 is perpendicular to the axis direction of the center electrode 30, and is arranged to face the end surface of the center electrode 30, that is, the tip surface 51 of the center electrode-side chip 50. However, the convex portion opposed surface 46A does not necessarily need to be perpendicular to the axis direction of the center electrode 30 but the convex portion opposed surface 46A and the tip surface 51 are opposed to each other such that the distances between the opposed portions are approximately identical.
In the foregoing embodiment, the convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 is columnar in shape as an example. Alternatively, the convex portion 46 may be formed in any other shape such as a polygonal prismatic shape including triangular prism, square prism, pentagonal prism, or hexagonal prism, or an arbitrary convex columnar shape or concave columnar shape, for example. The corners and sides of the foregoing shape may be rounded, and, out of the processed planes formed by the rounding processing, the plane opposed to the tip surface 51 of the center electrode-side chip 50 of the center electrode 30 may be set as convex portion opposed surface 46A. The convex portion 46 of the ground electrode 40 may have a pyramid shape such as triangular pyramid or square pyramid or a polyhedron shape such as mountain shape, and, out of the plurality of planes of the foregoing shape, the plane opposed to the tip surface 51 of the center electrode-side chip 50 of the center electrode 30 may be set as convex portion opposed surface 46A.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2016-200847 | Oct 2016 | JP | national |
This application is a continuation application of International Application No. PCT/JP2017/031430 filed Aug. 31, 2017 which designated the U.S. and claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2016-200847 filed on Oct. 12, 2016, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190237942 A1 | Aug 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2017/031430 | Aug 2017 | US |
Child | 16381099 | US |