This application is a 35 USC 371 application of PCT/DE 03/00013 filed on Jan. 7, 2003.
This invention relates to an improved system for pressure-modulated shaping of the course of iniection of fuel into the combustion chamber of a self-igniting internal combustion engine. The term “course of injection” means the course of the fuel quantity, injected into the combustion chamber, as a function of the crankshaft or camshaft angle. The essential variables are the duration of injection and the injection quantity. These represent the course of injection in degrees of crankshaft angle, camshaft angle, or milliseconds, during which the injection valves are opened and fuel reaches the interior of the combustion chamber.
German Patent Disclosure DE 198 37 332 A1 relates to a control unit for controlling the pressure buildup in a pump unit. The control unit has a control valve and a valve actuating unit communicating with it. The control valve is embodied as an inward-opening valve in terms of the flow direction and has a valve body, disposed axially displaceably in a housing of the control unit, that when the control valve is closed it is seated from the inside on a valve seat of the control valve. A throttle assembly is provided, by which the flow through the control valve, when the control valve is opened by a short stroke h, is throttled. With the control valve opened by this stroke length, the valve seat is open as it has been, but a further valve seat is closed, so that the pumped medium has to flow through the control valve via the throttle bores. Because of the thus-throttled flow through the control valve, a lesser pressure is built up in a high-pressure region of the system. Conversely, when the control valve is completely closed, both the first valve seat and the further valve seat are closed, thus disconnecting the bypass connection. The result is the buildup of a high pressure from the pump unit to the low-pressure region of the system in the high-pressure region of the system.
German Patent Disclosure DE 42 38 727 A1 refers to a magnet valve. The magnet valve serves to control the passage through a connection between a high-pressure chamber, which is at least intermittently brought to high fluid pressure, and in particular a pump work chamber of a fuel injection pump, and a low-pressure chamber. A valve body inserted into a valve housing and a bore in the valve body are provided; a valve closing member in the form of a piston is displaceable in this bore by an electromagnet, counter to the force of a restoring spring. The piston, beginning at a circular-cylindrical jacket face, tapers along a conical face to a reduced diameter; with a conical high-pressure chamber surrounding the circular-cylindrical jacket face of the piston, the conical face cooperates with a communicating valve seat on the valve body, which seat surrounds the reduced diameter of the piston. The cone angle of this seat is smaller than the cone angle of the conical face of the piston, and so the piston cooperates with the valve seat via a sealing edge created at the transition between its cylindrical jacket face and the conical face. In the overflow direction from the high-pressure chamber to the low-pressure chamber, the sealing edge is followed by a throttle restriction that becomes operative at the onset of the opening stroke. The throttle restriction is formed by a throttling segment in the area of overlap between the polygonal face of the piston and the valve seat face; the angle of the conical face of the piston is slightly greater, preferably 0.5 to 1° greater, than the angle of the valve seat face, so that the flow cross section between the conical face of the piston and the valve seat face decreases steadily over the entire circumference in the overflow direction to the low-pressure chamber at the onset of the opening stroke. Because of the high flow velocities of the fuels between the injection phases—whether they are the preinjection, main injection or postinjection phases—with this embodiment, cavitation damage can be prevented.
According to the present invention it is possible to control not only the control parameters of the injection onset, injection quantity, injection pressure, and number of injections, which in this connection are considered to be conventional control parameters of a common rail injection system, but also the first phase of the injection event (the so-called “boot phase”) in terms of the length and the pressure level. Depending on the rpm and the load on the self-igniting internal combustion engine, NOx emissions can be affected quite favorably by means of the variation of the boot phase. The boot phase preceding the main injection serves to condition the mixture, to be converted during the main injection, in terms of an optimal or in other words as complete as possible combustion, with an optimal exhaust gas composition.
The possibility of influencing the boot phase in terms of its duration, independently of the control parameters of injection onset, injection quantity and injection pressure and so forth, makes it possible to adapt the course of injection to the fuel used during the boot phase as well. In stationary Diesel engines, or Diesel engines for driving ships, heavy oil is often used as fuel, whose atomization behavior compared to Diesel oil, which is injected into the combustion chambers of passenger car Diesel engines, is substantially poorer. Preparing the mixture by means of a controlled injection of fuel makes better preparation of the compressed mixture possible in a way that is independent of the fuel quality, so that during the combustion phase in the combustion chamber, favorable conditions are established in terms of emissions. Especially advantageously, the more-favorable NOx emissions can thus be attained for the same fuel consumption of the engines. This concept also makes it possible for multiple injections (preinjection phases) for the sake of preheating the mixture and a postinjection phase for reducing the smoke value to be combined with shaping of the course of injection.
The proposed invention moreover takes the use of heavy oil as a fuel for Diesel engines into account by providing that the actuating devices, such as magnet coils of electromagnets or piezoelectric actuators with hydraulic boosters, are separated from the fuel by diaphragms. The diaphragms for instance shield the armature plates and magnets from the fuel, which to improve its flow properties may be heated to temperatures of up to 140° C. and more.
The invention is described in further detail below in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
The control unit 6 that can be seen in
The control unit 6 includes a first valve 10 and a second valve 11. The first valve 10 is embodied as a 3/2-way valve, whose pressure chamber 28 is acted upon by fuel at high pressure via the high-pressure inlet 1. In comparison, the second valve 11 is embodied as a 2/2-way valve. The first valve 10 is controlled by the first actuating device 4, which in the view of
Below the first actuating device 4, a first hollow chamber 15 is embodied in the upper part 7 of the control unit 6 and serves to receive the armature plate 21 of the actuating assembly 21, 22. In the region above the parting joint of the upper part 7 and the middle part 8 of the control unit 6, the first hollow chamber 15 is sealed off from the entry of fuel by means of a flexible diaphragm element 17. When the control unit 6 is used with large Diesel engines, of the kind used for instance as stationary Diesel engines or for driving ships, heavy oil is used as fuel, which is preheated to temperatures of up to 140° C. and more in order to improve its flow properties. To protect the first actuating device 4—and analogously the second actuating device 5, which actuates the second valve 11—against damage and the entry of viscous fuel, the first hollow chamber 15 and analogously the second hollow chamber 16 of the second actuating device 5 are protected against the entrance of hot fuel by means of flexible diaphragm elements 17 in the region of the parting joint to the middle part 8 of the control unit 6.
The control quantity diverted upon pressure relief of the control chamber 24 of the first valve 10, which is preferably embodied as a 3/2-way valve, enters into the annular chamber surrounding the shaft 22 of the actuating assembly 21, 22 and flows from there into an overflow bore 25 extending horizontally in the middle part 8. From the horizontally extending overflow bore 25 in the middle part 8 of the control unit 6, both an overflow bore 26 extending in the vertical direction in the middle part 8 and an outflow line 34 branch off. Via the outflow line 34, the diverted fuel volume, flowing out of the control chamber 24, can be introduced into the pressureless outlet 3, from which the diverted fuel volume flows back into the fuel tank.
The first valve 10 includes a valve body 27, whose upper face end defines the control chamber 24. The control chamber 24 is furthermore defined by the lower part 9 of the control unit 6 and a portion of the lower face of the middle part 8 of the control unit 6 in which portion the outlet throttle 23 is accommodated that can be opened and closed by the closing element 20, configured spherically in this case. Furthermore, in the region surrounded by the annularly configured pressure chamber 28, the valve body 27 of the first valve 10 includes an inlet throttle restriction 30, which communicates with a longitudinal bore that discharges at the upper face end of the valve body 27. Via the high-pressure inlet 1, the inlet throttle restriction 30 and the aforementioned longitudinal bore, shown in dashed lines in
The second actuating device 5, likewise accommodated in the upper part 7 of the control unit 6 and likewise embodied as a magnet valve in the variant embodiment of
The pressure chamber 36 of the second valve 11, acted upon via the transverse bore 32, discharges into a high-pressure outlet 2, which is in communication with a nozzle chamber, not shown in
Both the first actuating device 4 and the second actuating device 5 are triggered by means of a triggering part 40, which communicates via triggering lines 14 with the magnet coils 13 of the first actuating device 4 and second actuating device 5, respectively.
The mode of operation of the variant embodiment shown in
The valve body 27 of the hydraulic 3/2-way valve 10 is controlled by means of the first actuating device 4, embodied as an electromagnet. The opening and closing of the valve body 27 is controlled by the pressure relief of the control chamber 24 via the first actuating device 4. The pressure drop or pressure rise is independent of the diameters of the inlet throttle restriction 30 in the lower part of the valve body 27 and of the design of the outlet throttle 23 above the control chamber 24. If no current is supplied to the magnet coil 13 of the first actuating device 4, the valve body 27, by movement of its conical seat 29 into the corresponding seat face inside the lower part 9 of the control unit 6, closes off the high-pressure inlet 1 via the transverse bore 32 to the pressure chamber 36 of the second valve 11. The high-pressure outlet 2 of the second valve 11, in this state, communicates with the pressureless outlet 3 below the first valve 10. By way of outlet 3, the control volume quantity diverted from the control chamber 24 in its pressure relief also flows to the low-pressure side of the control unit 6 via the horizontally extending overflow bore 25 or the outflow line 34. In this state, a nozzle needle of an injection device remains closed; see
The common rail 50 communicates with the tank 55 via a forward fuel flow 53 and includes a high-pressure fuel pump 52, which brings the fuel from the tank 55 to an arbitrary pressure level, for instance between 600 and 1800 bar.
The pressureless outlet 3 at the control unit 6 likewise communicates with the tank 55, via a return line 54, so that the fuel quantity diverted from the control chamber 24 of the first valve 10 can return to the fuel reservoir again. Subjection of the pressure chamber 36 of the second valve 11 to pressure causes high pressure to prevail at the high-pressure outlet 2 of the control unit 6, and in accordance with the further course of the high-pressure outlet 2 this pressure also prevails at the nozzle chamber 59 of the nozzle holder combination 56. Reference numeral 56 indicates a nozzle holder combination which includes a nozzle needle 58, which is subjected to a compression spring inside the nozzle holder combination 56. Depending on the pressure to which the nozzle chamber 59 is subjected, injection openings 57 disposed on the end toward the combustion chamber of the nozzle holder combination 56 are supplied with fuel or closed. Via a further pressureless outlet 60, the spring chamber of the nozzle holder combination 56 communicates with the return flow 54 to the fuel tank 55, so that excess fuel volume can likewise flow back into the tank 55. In the illustration in
The illustration in
The variant embodiment of the control unit 6 in split form is identified by reference numeral 80. In this variant embodiment, the control unit 80 includes two components, and the first valve 10 and the first actuating device 4 that actuates it are received in the upper part 7.1, the middle part 8.1, and the lower part 9.1. The common rail 50 communicates directly with the lower part 9.1 of the control unit 80. From the lower part 9.1 of the split control unit 80, that is, from the pressure chamber 28 of the first valve 10, a connecting line 81 branches off, by way of which the pressure chamber 36 of the second valve 11, which is contained in the second part of the split embodied control unit 80, is acted upon by fuel that is at high pressure.
The second valve 11, preferably embodied as a 2/2-way valve, is accommodated in the upper part 7.2, middle part 8.2, and lower part 9.2 of the variant embodiment of the control unit 80 in split form. The high-pressure outlet 2, which subjects the nozzle chamber 59 of the nozzle holder combination 56 to high pressure, branches off from the pressure chamber 36 of the second valve 11. In accordance with the stroke motion of the nozzle needle 58 counter to the spring prestressing, the injection openings 57 on the end toward the combustion chamber of the nozzle holder combination 56 are either subjected to fuel or closed. Reference numeral 60 indicates a pressureless outlet, by way of which excess fuel volume flows back into a tank, not shown here.
In the graph in
In comparison to the pressure level 89 prevailing during the main injection phase 90, in which the maximum level prevails, the injection pressure during the boot phases 86 proceeds at a lower pressure level 92. Within the boot phase, a small quantity of fuel comes to be injected into the combustion chamber; this serves essentially to improve the turbulence of the compressed air inside the combustion chamber, and its purpose is conditioning the air mixture to bring about an ensuing optimal combustion during the main injection phase 90. The course of the main injection phase 90 is characterized by a pressure maximum 89, a descending pressure edge 93 and a steeply rising pressure edge 94 at the onset of the main injection phase 90. The maximum pressure level 91 established during the main injection phase 90 is essentially equivalent to the pressure maximum 89 that is established inside the common rail 50.
Reference numeral 95 marks a first injection onset of the first valve 10, which is designed as a 3/2-way valve, while reference numeral 103 identifies the end of a first injection pressure course 98. The first injection onset 95 is tripped by the triggering instant, or time, of the electromagnet 13 that triggers the first valve 10. Depending on the triggering time, a second injection onset 96 and a third injection onset 97 can also be defined, as a result of which—while keeping the end of injection 103 unchanged—injection pressure courses 98, 99, 100 of various lengths can be achieved, and by means of them the quantity of fuel delivered to the combustion chamber of an internal combustion engine is determined.
The pressure level that is reached upon triggering of the first valve 10 by the electromagnet 13 is identified by reference numeral 101.
If as in
In
During the preinjection 108, the first valve 10, embodied as a 3/2-way valve, is briefly opened for the duration 112 and is then closed again, as a result of which a slight quantity of fuel for preconditioning is injected into the combustion chamber of the engine. At the time marked by reference numeral 95, the 3/2-way valve opens for the duration of the main injection phase 113 and closes again at time 103. During the postinjection phase 109, the 3/2-way valve, that is, the first valve 10, is opened for the duration 114. The 2/2-way valve, that is, the second valve 11, is opened at time 116 and not closed again until time 117, times that are shifted relative to the opening time 95 and closing time 103 of the first valve 10; in the shifted opening duration course of the 2/2-way valve 115 shown in
As a result of the shift in the opening and closing times 116 and 117, respectively, of the 2/2-way valve, that is, the second valve 11, boot rate shaping can be achieved; that is, the course of the injection pressure, and thus the injection quantity, can both be shaped in accordance with predetermined conditions and criteria. From the curve courses shown in
The foregoing relates to preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention, it being understood that other variants and embodiments thereof are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, the latter being defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 09 527 | Mar 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE03/00013 | 1/7/2003 | WO | 00 | 8/18/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO03/074865 | 9/12/2003 | WO | A |
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0 147 026 | Jul 1985 | EP |
1 199 467 | Apr 2002 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050115539 A1 | Jun 2005 | US |