This disclosure generally relates to spark plugs and, in particular, to a multi-layer sparking component for a ground electrode.
Spark plugs can be used to initiate combustion in internal combustion engines. Spark plugs typically ignite a gas, such as an air/fuel mixture, in an engine cylinder or combustion chamber by producing a spark across a spark gap defined between two or more electrodes. Ignition of the gas by the spark causes a combustion reaction in the engine cylinder that causes the power stroke of the engine. The high temperatures, high electrical voltages, rapid repetition of combustion reactions, and the presence of corrosive materials in the combustion gases can create a harsh environment in which the spark plug functions. This harsh environment can contribute to erosion and corrosion of the electrodes and can negatively affect the performance of the spark plug over time, potentially leading to a misfire or some other undesirable condition.
To reduce erosion and corrosion of the spark plug electrodes, various types of noble metals and their alloys—such as those made from platinum and iridium—have been used. These materials, however, can be costly. Thus, spark plug manufacturers sometimes attempt to minimize the amount of precious metals used with an electrode by using such materials only at a firing tip of the electrodes where a spark jumps across a spark gap.
According to one embodiment, a spark plug has a metal shell, an insulator, a center electrode, a ground electrode, and a multi-layer sparking component. The metal shell has an axial bore, and the insulator is partly or more disposed within the shell's axial bore. The insulator also has an axial bore, and the center electrode is partly or more disposed within the insulator's axial bore. The ground electrode is attached to the metal shell. The multi-layer sparking component is attached to the ground electrode and has a precious metal layer and a base metal layer. A portion of the multi-layer sparking component overhangs a distal end surface of the ground electrode.
According to another embodiment, a spark plug has a metal shell, an insulator, a center electrode, a ground electrode, and a pre-manufactured multi-layer sparking component. The metal shell has an axial bore, and the insulator is partly or more disposed within the shell's axial bore. The insulator also has an axial bore, and the center electrode is partly or more disposed within the insulator's axial bore. The ground electrode is attached to the metal shell. The pre-manufactured multi-layer sparking component is formed from a bi-metal ribbon before the pre-manufactured multi-layer sparking component is attached to the ground electrode. The pre-manufactured multi-layer sparking component includes a precious metal layer and a base metal layer. The precious metal layer has a greatest width dimension across its sparking surface that is several times or more larger than a greatest thickness dimension of the precious metal layer. Likewise, the base metal layer has a greatest width dimension across its bottom surface that is several times or more larger than a greatest thickness dimension of the base metal layer. The greatest thickness dimension of the precious metal layer is less than or equal to the greatest thickness dimension of the base metal layer.
According to yet another embodiment, a method of manufacturing a spark plug includes several steps. One step involves providing a metal shell, an insulator, a center electrode, and a ground electrode. Another step involves providing a pre-manufactured bi-metal ribbon. The pre-manufactured bi-metal ribbon includes a precious metal layer and a base metal layer that are joined together. Yet another step involves severing the pre-manufactured bi-metal ribbon into an individual multi-layer sparking component. The precious metal and base metal layers of the multi-layer sparking component are both thin layers. And another step involves attaching the multi-layer sparking component to the ground electrode. The base metal layer is attached directly to the ground electrode, and a portion of the multi-layer sparking component overhangs the distal end surface of the ground electrode.
Preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the appended drawings, wherein like designations denote like elements, and wherein:
There is disclosed a spark plug having a multi-layer sparking component attached at a firing end of a ground electrode. The multi-layer sparking component includes a thin precious metal layer formed overtop a base metal layer and, according to some of the embodiments, overhangs the end of the ground electrode. The precious metal and base metal layers may be pre-manufactured as a bi-metal ribbon, sheet, and/or laminate before the multi-layer sparking component is attached to the ground electrode. This enables the sparking component to increase the amount of precious metal sparking area at the spark gap, yet do so with lower precious metal costs since only the thin upper layer is made from the more expensive precious metal material. Moreover, because the precious metal and base metal layers are pre-manufactured, the adhesion between these layers is improved and the base metal layer provides better weldability to the ground electrode. By having the multi-layer sparking component overhang the end of the ground electrode, there is a reduced amount of electrode mass at the firing end which can improve the thermal characteristics of the ground electrode and encourage ignitability and flame kernel growth. The multi-layer sparking component and ground electrode configuration described herein may be used in a wide array of spark plugs and other ignition devices including automotive spark plugs, industrial plugs, aviation igniters, glow plugs, or any other device that is used to ignite an air/fuel mixture in an engine. This includes, but is certainly not limited to, the exemplary embodiments that are shown in the drawings and are described below.
Referring to
The center electrode 12 and/or the ground electrode 18 may include a nickel-based external cladding layer and a copper-based internal heat conducting core. Some non-limiting examples of nickel-based materials (i.e., pure nickel or nickel alloys) that may be used with the center electrode 12 and/or the ground electrode 18 include alloys composed of nickel (Ni), chromium (Cr), iron (Fe), aluminum (Al), manganese (Mn), silicon (Si), and any suitable alloy or combination thereof, including the Ni-based alloys commonly referred to as Inconel® 600 and 601. The internal heat conducting core may be made of pure copper (Cu), Cu alloys, or some other material with suitable thermal conductivity. Of course, other materials and configurations are certainly possible, including center and/or ground electrodes that have more than one internal heat conducting core or no internal heat conducting core at all. As used herein, the term “spark plug electrode” broadly includes any spark plug center electrode, ground electrode, or a component thereof.
As shown more clearly in the enlarged view of the firing end of
According to the embodiment shown in
The base metal layer 36 acts as a backing or substrate for the multi-layer sparking component 28 in order to provide it with strength and rigidity and is preferably made of a material, like a nickel-based material, that provides improved weldability to the ground electrode 18. Some non-limiting examples of nickel-based materials that may be used for the base metal layer 36 include materials composed of nickel (Ni), chromium (Cr), iron (Fe), aluminum (Al), manganese (Mn), silicon (Si), and any suitable alloy or combination thereof, including the Ni-based alloys commonly referred to as Inconel® 600 and 601. In some embodiments, the base metal layer 36 is made from the same nickel-based alloy as the ground electrode 18; in other embodiments, the base metal layer 36 is made from a different nickel-based alloy, such as one having nickel and one or more precious metals. Providing a thicker base metal layer 36 gives the multi-layer sparking component 28 structural integrity, provides a suitably weldable mass for attachment of the sparking component to the ground electrode 18, and minimizes the cost of the sparking component as nickel-based alloys are typically much less expensive than precious metal alloys.
Like the precious metal layer 34, the base metal layer 36 is thin in the sense that its greatest width dimension across a bottom surface 38 is several times or more larger than its greatest thickness dimension through the base metal layer (thickness dimension is orthogonal to bottom surface). The base metal layer 36 may have a thickness ranging from about 0.05 mm to 0.75 mm, for example. In one exemplary, non-limiting embodiment, the base metal layer 36 is made from a nickel-based alloy like Inconel® 601 and has a thickness that is less than about 0.75 mm, but is at least two times greater than the thickness of the precious metal layer 34. In another exemplary, non-limiting embodiment, the thickness of the precious metal layer 34 is less than or equal to the thickness of the base metal layer 36. The thickness of the precious metal layer 34 compared to the base metal layer 36 may depend on the application; for instance, automotive applications tend to call for thinner precious metal layers, while industrial applications tend to call for thicker precious metal layers. Moreover, the thickness of the precious metal layer 34 may be dictated by the desired or demanded durability of the multi-layer sparking component 28 when in use. In other words, the precious metal layer 34 can be thickened for greater durability or thinned where a high degree of durability is unnecessary.
To form the multi-layer sparking component 28, the precious metal layer 34 is joined to the base metal layer 36 according to a pre-manufacturing process prior to its attachment to the ground electrode 18. “Pre-manufacturing,” “pre-manufactured,” and their other forms, as used herein, broadly refer to instances where the thin precious metal layer is joined to the underlying base metal layer to form a multi-layer ribbon, sheet, and/or laminate during a manufacturing process that is separate from and before attachment of the multi-layer sparking component to the spark plug electrode. The multi-layer sparking component 28 may be formed by being cut, punched, stamped, and/or otherwise obtained from the pre-manufactured multi-layer ribbon. In some non-limiting examples, the precious metal layer 34 is joined to the base metal layer 36 via a process that includes one or more of the following processes: cladding, rolling, electrodeposition, laminating, welding, hot stamping, hot forming, etc. such that one or more intermetallic layers may be formed at the interface of the two layers. For instance, the multi-layer sparking component 28 may be made by a process that uses cladding to add the precious metal layer 34 to the base metal layer 36, rolling under high pressure to join the layers together in the form of a multi-layer ribbon, and then stamping the individual sparking components 28 from the rolled multi-layer ribbon. The cladding and rolling processes produce a cladded joint at the interface or boundary of the precious metal layer 34 and the base metal layer 36 that securely joins them together.
Pre-manufacturing processes can be advantageous for a variety of reasons over other methods where an individual piece of precious metal is simply welded to an individual intermediate component and then the combined welded assembly is attached to the ground electrode. For example, the pre-manufacturing process may take place in a controlled environment where appropriate levels of heat, pressure, etc., can be applied to the different metal layers so that a stronger inter-layer bond is created. It has been found that the pre-manufacturing process also facilitates the subsequent attachment between the sparking component 28 and ground electrode 18 since the precious metal layer 34 and base metal layer 36 can be pre-manufactured in a cleaner and more controlled manufacturing environment than is available in a typical larger spark plug manufacturing operation. This can admit cleaner surface conditions of the sparking component 28 and minimize physical variation in a single sparking component, as well as variation among different and discrete sparking components. And parts with cleaner surface conditions and greater uniformity generally ease subsequent manufacturing processes like welding. In one embodiment, the precious metal layer 34 and base metal layer 36 are pre-manufactured into a multi-layer ribbon, sheet, and/or laminate having a thickness dimension Z from about 0.1 mm to 1.15 mm, from which the individual sparking components 28 are then cut, punched, or stamped. The size and shape of the pre-manufactured sheets may vary depending on the particular application in which they are being used, and are oftentimes provided by a precious metal supplier. In some embodiments, the thickness dimension Z′ of the ground electrode 18 is at least four times greater than the thickness dimension Z of the multi-layer sparking component 28. Still further, the precious metal layer 34 can be joined to the base metal layer 36 by welding processes involving electron beam welding or resistance welding, as it is not necessary for the multi-layer sparking component to be pre-manufactured. In the case of resistance welding, multiple resistance welds can be executed (e.g., two or three welds) to help produce a proper joint.
Referring back to the embodiments of
Turning now to the embodiment in
In
Of course, the preceding embodiments are just some of the examples of suitable multi-layer sparking component designs and the present invention is not intended to be limited thereto. For example, the various multi-layer sparking components do not have to be rectangular in shape, as they could be square, circular, oval, polygonal, or curvilinear, to cite a few possibilities. Moreover, the amount or degree to which the various multi-layer sparking components overhang the end of the ground electrode could vary and, in some instances, could be more cantilevered than that illustrated in the drawings or could not overhang the distal end of the ground electrode at all. Another possible variation involves the number of layers in the multi-layer sparking component. The sparking component may include three or more individual layers pre-manufactured into a multi-layer ribbon, sheet and/or laminate—for example, a base metal layer (Inconel 601), a first precious metal layer (Pt-30Ni) and a second precious metal layer (Pt-10Ni). This could include adhesive or other intermediary layers in between precious metal and base metal layers. It is also possible for the various multi-layer sparking components to be attached to a center electrode as opposed to being limited to a ground electrode.
In manufacturing, a spark plug having the above-described multi-layer sparking component could be produced according to a number of processes, including the following. First, the multi-layer sparking component could be pre-manufactured into a multi-layer ribbon or sheet, as described above. From this pre-manufactured ribbon or sheet, the multi-layer sparking component could be cut out, punched out and/or stamped out so that an individual sparking component is formed that retains the inter-layer adhesion properties of the predecessor ribbon or sheet. The individual multi-layer sparking component could then be resistance welded to a spark gap facing surface or an end surface of the ground electrode, as also described above, in order to produce a resistance welding weldment between the base metal layer and the ground electrode. The base metal material is preferably chosen to create a solid weldment with the ground electrode material (e.g., if both metals are nickel-based materials they will have more similar rates of thermal expansion, etc.) so that additional laser welding may not be necessary. Eliminating a laser welding step can be beneficial as it reduces the cost and complexity of the manufacturing process. Still, the individual multi-layer sparking component could be solely laser welded to the spark-gap facing surface or end surface of the ground electrode without resistance welding, or could be both resistance welded for an initial temporary pre-attachment and laser welded for a subsequent permanent attachment. Whatever attachment technique employed, in the embodiments of FIGS. 2A-2C, 3A-3C, and 4A-4C, a surface-to-surface attachment results between the bottom surface 38 (
It is to be understood that the foregoing is a description of one or more preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention. The invention is not limited to the particular embodiment(s) disclosed herein, but rather is defined solely by the claims below. Furthermore, the statements contained in the foregoing description relate to particular embodiments and are not to be construed as limitations on the scope of the invention or on the definition of terms used in the claims, except where a term or phrase is expressly defined above. Various other embodiments and various changes and modifications to the disclosed embodiment(s) will become apparent to those skilled in the art. All such other embodiments, changes, and modifications are intended to come within the scope of the appended claims.
As used in this specification and claims, the terms “for example,” “e.g.,” “for instance,” “such as,” and “like,” and the verbs “comprising,” “having,” “including,” and their other verb forms, when used in conjunction with a listing of one or more components or other items, are each to be construed as open-ended, meaning that the listing is not to be considered as excluding other, additional components or items. Other terms are to be construed using their broadest reasonable meaning unless they are used in a context that requires a different interpretation.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/777,169, filed on Mar. 12, 2013, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61777169 | Mar 2013 | US |