1. Field of the Invention
This disclosure relates to improved internal combustion engine with a Otto cycle, wherein water is injected into the combustion camber during the power stroke. The burning air-fuel mixture evaporates the water into steam, thereby creating extra pressure to push the piston.
2. Description of Related Art
Over the past one hundred years, Internal Combustion Engine (“ICE” or “IC engine”) has been the major power source for motorized vehicles. A typical IC engine comprises of a plurality of piston-and-cylinder assembles. An air-fuel mixture is forced into the cylinder during the intake stroke cycle, compressed and subsequently ignited and generates high pressure to produce motion energy and waste heat. Due to the enormous amount of waste heat is generated during this process. The efficiency of an ICE is relatively low, typically around 20%.
There have been many attempts to convert the waste heat into mechanical energy, examples of which include the six-stroke cycle IC engine, which injects water into the combustion camber to create an extra power stroke. However, the water injection's effectiveness is very limited and the horse power of the separate water injection cycle is much smaller than fuel combustion cycle, thereby creating an unstable imbalance motion in power-train system. Other attempts to have multiple companion cylinders or turbines to recover waster heat have had limited success since the extra equipment and weight would, ironically, lower the overall efficiency of the vehicle.
Other conventional methods and devices try to introduce water during the compression stroke, which requires dramatic, if not impossible, water pressure from the water pump. It would cause detonation since the combined pressure generated by fuel combustion and water evaporation would be too much in too short period for the piston and power-train system to absorb. Others have tried to inject water even when the engine is cold, which causes inefficient combustion and poor performance. In order to put water injection into practical uses, other conditions also need to be considered when applying the technique, such as recovery strategy when water is frozen or not available.
Recent attempts have been made in the automotive industries to incorporate alternative power source such as electric motor, known as hybrid vehicle. These types of vehicles convert wasted mechanical work during brake or deceleration into electricity for later driving. It improves the so called city mileage per gallon (MPG) significantly. However, it does not address the fundamental wasted heat issue in IC engines. The actual efficiencies of the IC engines in hybrid vehicles do not improve at all.
Holden teaches combined fuel water injector for internal combustion engine in U.S. Pat. No. 7,367,306. It requires significant modification of existing fuel injector which is a critical and expensive part of a vehicle. Because injector space constraint, it is often difficult to retrofit into existing vehicle. It also lacks a feedback mechanism to adjust water injection amount to optimize the efficiency of the engine.
Most recently, Orlosky teaches direct injection of water into combustion engine during the combustion stroke after all or the majority of fuel has burned. This method is less effective because there is little time and the water temperature is too low to evaporate at high speed operation (i.e. 3000 RPM) and it does little to control the extremely high fuel burning temperature which causes NOx emission. It also requires enormous sensing devices and significant modification to make it impractical and expensive to retrofit into existing vehicles.
One aspect of this disclosure is to improve the existing vehicle or new vehicle's fuel efficiency by reducing fuel injection amount and supplementing the power stroke by injecting water during the air-fuel mixture ignition cycle if the engine is reaching a high temperature limit. The waste heat is recovered by evaporating the water into pressurized steam mass to generate mechanical work.
A water injection control system monitors the engine temperature, water tank level, fuel injection timing and duration, and spark plug ignition timing. A fuel-injection intercept circuit shortens the fuel injection cycle if water is available and engine temperature reaches predetermined limit, which in an illustrative embodiment is about 120° F. This temperature is maintained for maximized efficiency. The water injection starts at the same time as the ignition. The injection slows down the burning process, which reduces the peak temperature to avoid NOx formation and delay the peak pressure build up so that more useful work can transfer to the crankshaft. It also causes a more controlled and stable flame front. The hydrogen and carbon from hydrocarbon fuel to combine with oxygen has to work around the present water to form OH radicals and CO instead of to form H2O and CO2 directly. By slowing this early combustion process, the potential for the mixture to burn too fast and contribute to knock is suppressed. Knocking(detonation) is one of the obstacles to increase engine horse power performance given the same engine size.
Water supply is self-contained in one aspect of the present disclosure. The water is collected through fuel burning exhaust gas, vapor of water injection and by-product of Air-conditioning system. A water collection tank is located in the lower level of the vehicle. It has pipes connected to the end of the exhaust muffler and also pipes connected to Air-conditioning system. Since the engine temperature is controlled at much lower level than traditional internal combustion engine, the exhaust gas quickly cools down below 212° F. boiling point temperature while it travels through the exhaust system, the catalytic converter and the muffler. A significant amount of water can be collected at the end of the exhaust muffler.
In another embodiment, there is also a smaller, heated water supply tank located next to the exhaust manifold. This hot water makes evaporation quicker when it is injected into combustion chamber and it also resolves freezing issue in colder climate environment when air temperature is below freezing level.
Since the engine is running at much cooler level, the traditional cooling system could be much smaller or potentially eliminated. The exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) system can be simplified or even eliminated as well.
In certain embodiments disclosed in this disclosure, modifications are made to existing internal combustion engines by reducing half of the fuel and injecting small amount of water during the burning cycle. The water evaporates with the hot exhaust gas and creates additional pressure and drives the piston travel to the bottom dead center of the cylinder chamber.
With reference to
The engine cycle starts with intake stroke, wherein the piston 4 moves away from the cylinder head 5 creating vacuum, pulling fresh air from the intake manifold 6 through the open intake valve 7. The fuel injector 9 sprays combustible fuel into the combustion chamber. The air/fuel mixture is usually controlled at 14:1 ratio for complete burn.
In the next cycle, compression stroke starts where the piston moves toward the cylinder head compressing the air/fuel mixture. At the end or close to the end of compression stroke, water injection spark plug 10 creates an electrical arc to ignite the high pressure air/fuel mixture and also injects water at the same time.
Once the mixture starts burning and exploding, the power stroke starts at the top of the cylinder position. Since water is injected in the air-fuel mixture, the burning cycle is relatively cooler and slower instead of exploding at once as often happens in the conventional internal combustion engine. The maximum pressure occurs later and is maintained longer. It gives a significant advantage to the inventive embodiments as shown in
The exhaust stroke is similar to conventional internal combustion engine wherein the fuel exhaust gas and steam exit the combustion chamber through the exhaust value.
The exhaust steam mixture gas passes through catalytic converter and muffler, the temperature drops to below the boiling point at the end of the exhaust pipe. The water collector 17 collects the water into the lower water tank 16. Another water collector 26 collects water from the air-conditioning system when used in the warm climate areas.
The water pump 15 pumps water from the lower water tank 16 to upper water tank 14, wherein the water is heated by the exhaust manifold surface. The water pump 15 supplies water with high pressure (about 150 PSI) into the injection pipes, which is also heated by exhaust manifold surface 13 to the boiling point temperature. High pressure and the steam in the boiling water accelerate atomization of the boiling water when it exits the injection nozzle. The finer droplets quickly absorb the energy in the combustion chamber and evaporate.
The water injection controller 25 monitors engine temperature through thermometer 22, water level sensor 19, spark plug ignition timing sensor 27, fuel injection timing sensor 23 and duration. If the engine temperature reaches preset level, for example 120° F., the water pump 15 is turned on. The fuel injection intercept circuit 11 reduces the fuel injection amount. The water solenoid 12 is turned on when the spark plug fires, and lasts for a duration to provide adequate water injection amount, which is calculated based on the engine temperature and fuel injection amount. The more fuel is injected into the engine, the more water is needed. Typically, the higher the engine temperature, the more water is needed, and vice versa. In one embodiment, the fuel injection amount is approximately the same as the water injection amount by volume, but other fuel/water ratios can be used depending on the engine configuration and size. Since the steam combustion engine has higher efficiency (100% improvement), the fuel injection amount is reduced by 50% replaced by 50% water in the illustrative embodiment. In other words, instead of injecting two units of fuel, the steam combustion engine described in this embodiment injects 1 unit of fuel and 1 unit of water.
The water injection amount can be expressed as the following formula.
water volume=a×f+b×(Te−Tp)
where f is fuel volume, Te is engine temperature, Tp is desired engine temperature, a and b is the coefficient based on engine size and thermal dynamics.
Although the lowered engine temperature reduce the thermal volume of the exhaust gas by say 50%, the additional volume from the water vapor (1,600 times the water volume) creates much higher volume and pressure in the combustion chamber during the power stroke.
Applying the above-illustrated technique to new vehicle design instead of retrofitting an existing vehicle, the water injection algorithm can be integrated with the Engine Control Module (ECM) 25 found in most of the modern Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) as illustrated in
The above specification, examples and data provide a complete description of the manufacture and use of the composition of the invention. Since many embodiments of the invention can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, the invention resides in the claims hereinafter appended.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/100,758 filed Sep. 28, 2008, where this provisional application is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61100758 | Sep 2008 | US |