This invention pertains to enhancing the efficiency of an internal combustion engine by rapid heating of circulating engine oil though preferential circulation of previously-heated oil. Mixing of the previously-heated oil and cold oil in the engine sump is discouraged through the use of a selectively-permeable screen which only promotes mixing when the sump oil attains a preselected viscosity.
The text of this background section is to prepare the reader for understanding practices described in this disclosure. The text is not presented with a consideration of whether it discloses prior art.
Multi-cylinder, reciprocating piston, internal combustion engines for automotive vehicles typically contain an oil circulation system for lubrication of valves, cylinder walls, pistons, connecting rods, cranking mechanisms, and the like. Generally, a predetermined quantity of lubricating oil (e.g., four to six quarts) is stored in bucket-like sump container attached to the engine below the cranking mechanism. When the engine is operating, an oil pumping mechanism, often driven off the engine, draws lubrication oil from the sump container and pumps it upwardly over all moving engine parts. The oil is drawn through an oil pick-up or inlet tube positioned below the surface of the sump oil. The oil flows in an oil circulation path, as intended and provided, over engine parts requiring lubrication. As it completes its flow, the oil drains downwardly back into the sump container. Typically, less than half of the stored volume of oil is in circulation at any moment of engine operation. In this way an adequate supply of oil is assured despite irregular motion of the vehicle, or leakage of the oil or burning of some of the oil as it is exposed on cylinder walls.
The oil is heated during engine operation, often to temperatures of about 90° C. to about 110° C. and at this temperature the oil has a viscosity and flow properties well suited for lubrication of engine surfaces. But when engine operation has ceased, the stored and now quiescent oil is cooled to the ambient temperature in which the vehicle is situated. Since this temperature may be well less than about 30° C., temperature-dependent properties of the oil are often less than desired for engine operation. So the oil may be relatively cold and viscous as its circulation is commenced immediately following an engine cold start. Sometimes vehicles intended for cold climates have special oil heaters located in the sump container for keeping the oil at a desired temperature between intermittent usages of the engine. Most vehicles do not have such an oil heater. But there is a need to reheat the circulating oil for better engine operation and less engine wear. A difficulty is that the total volume of oil is considerably larger than the amount being circulated and heated by the engine at any operating moment.
In accordance with practices of this invention, the oil storage volume in the sump container is divided into two volumes using a separator which may be a thin metal sheet with many small holes or small mesh metal screen member. The size of the small holes in the sheet or the mesh openings in the screen are determined to impede flow-through by a cold viscous oil but to permit passage of the same oil heated for engine operation.
The sheet or screen separator member is shaped, located, and fixed in the sump container to catch and contain circulated, returning engine oil from a started and operating engine and direct it to an oil pick-up in the sump for continued circulation. The cold oil-retaining separator member is also shaped and located to enclose a volume of oil from the total stored oil volume, the enclosed volume lying between the separator and the sump walls and bottom. The circulating oil is drawn from and returned to the free volume defined by the separator. The remaining portion of the oil in the sump container volume is outside the circulated oil volume and contained within the screen member enclosed volume. For example, in a five or six quart oil capacity engine, the circulating volume of oil within the separator defined space may be about one and one-half quarts, or about 25 to 30% of the total oil volume, with the remaining cold oil contained within the enclosed volume.
Thus, immediately following an engine cold-start, a selected portion of the oil from the overall sump container volume is pumped upwardly into the oil circulation paths through the engine, and this volume of circulating oil is drained back into the free storage volume defined within the screen or sheet member. This smaller portion of oil is determined for adequate lubrication of the parts of the engine. But this smaller portion is also more rapidly heated by engine operation from the stored oil's ambient temperature to its preferred operation temperature, somewhat above 90° C.
So, during a period of a few minutes following an engine cold start, the total oil volume within the sump container has been divided by the screen or sheet member into two portions. The smaller free portion contained within an upper and central volume (with respect to the return drain path of the circulated oil) is being heated as it is circulated through the engine. The larger oil volume contained within the sump vessel, but temporarily and partially excluded from circulation by the separator member, is cooler. But the separation of the warming circulating oil from the excluded outer oil volume in the sump container is temporary.
The screen or shell member is formed of a metal or other suitable thermally conductive material so that heat is transferred through the member from the engine heated oil to the temporarily non-circulated oil. Further, the small screen or sheet openings of the separator become less resistant to oil flow as the oil is heated. The screen mesh opening or sheet perforations are sized to permit easy passage of heated oil (e.g., at 60° C. or higher) while slowing and impeding passage of colder oil through the perforations. It is in this way that the perforated sheet or screen member temporarily excludes much of the cold oil from the enclosed volume defined by the shell member. But some circulated and warming oil can enter the enclosed volume as it is returned to the circulating oil volume. As engine operation continues, oil flow through the perforations in the sheet member permits heating of the total oil volume, and the temporarily separated oil volumes are, in effect, recombined by easy flow of heated oil through the perforations in the separator shell member.
Thus, the openings in the screen or sheet are sized to permit a slow flow of relatively cold oil and to permit easy flow of hot oil. As described the function of the screen or perforated sheet is simply to permit the recirculation of a loosely confined portion of the total oil volume to hasten heating of the oil following an engine cold start. But the goal is to continually heat and circulate all of the stored oil during continued engine operation so that the screen or sheet presents only a modest resistance to flow of heated oil. The sheet serves its task mainly following an engine cold-start and reduces the time required to heat some oil to its effective lubricating temperature. Thereafter, during continued engine operation, the rest of the stored oil is heated. But the duration of the cold start period with less effective lubrication is reduced.
Lubricating oils in internal combustion engines, in common with most liquids, become less viscous as their temperature increases. Although such oils commonly include, as part of a more extensive additive package, a viscosity modifier, this will only reduce, not eliminate, the extent of the viscosity reduction. Hence an oil formulated to develop an appropriate viscosity for effective lubrication at normal engine operating temperatures of 90-110° C. or so will exhibit a higher viscosity as the engine, and its lubricating oil, is warming to its steady-state operating temperature after a cold start. This higher viscosity results in increased friction and reduced vehicle fuel economy during the 800-1200 seconds or so required for the engine to reach its operating temperature. It is an object of this invention to mitigate the negative impact of cold starts on vehicle fuel economy.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is shown in
In an embodiment the oil in oil pan 12 is sequestered into two layers 28 and 30 by separator 32. Separator 32 is a generally planar and horizontally mounted below the oil surface indicated by oil level 16. Separator 32 has an opening surrounding oil pick-up 14 allowing upper oil layer 30 free access to pick-up 14. The opening is bounded by a downwardly extending flange 40 extending to inner bottom surface 36 of oil pan 12. It is intended that separator 32 seal against the surfaces of oil pan 12 wherever the perimeter edges or flange edges of the separator contact the oil pan to prevent passage of oil from one volume to the other at the oil pan interior surfaces. Lower oil layer 28 is contained between the inner surface 34 of separator 32 and the inner bottom surface 36 and the sidewalls 38 of oil pan 12. It will be appreciated that the respective volumes of upper oil layer 30 and lower oil layer 28 may not be readily estimated from this figure since the lateral extent of the oil pan, shown in the section, is much less than its longitudinal extent. Thus the volume of oil accessible to oil pick-up 14 is disproportionately emphasized in lateral section.
Separator 32 comprises a plurality of openings in a thin sheet or a fine mesh screen. Commonly such a sheet would be metal, but any material which may be fabricated as a thin sheet and not react with hot oil or any of the fuel or water-based or other impurities in the oil pan would be suitable. However it is preferred that the separator possess good thermal conductivity to promote heat flow from heated oil on one side of the separator to colder oil on the other side. Thus metallic separators may be commonly used. Such separators may be fabricated of those metals and alloys, optionally coated, currently in use for oil pans since these have clearly demonstrated durability in an engine oil environment.
An exemplary arrangement of orifices in a sheet is shown in
Referring to
The area density of orifices should be sufficient to enable an oil flow rate substantially equal to or greater than the oil flow rate through the engine. As an example, an array of orifices 200 micrometers in diameter arranged as shown in
The flow characteristics of the interface may be enhanced by shaping the exit geometry of the orifice. The calculated results referred to above were representative of the orifice of
Increasing the sheet thickness to between two and three times the orifice dimension as shown in
Yet further modification of the orifice, while maintaining the same exit diameter, is shown in
The straight-sided orifices of
The influence of separator 32 on the oil flow paths in the oil pan 12 may be appreciated by consideration of
As illustrated in
When all oil, in both the upper and lower oil layers, achieves a temperature above about 60° C. or so, rendering separator 32 fully permeable to all of the oil, the flow will be as shown in
The effectiveness of this approach is shown in
The relative partitioning of the total oil volume may depend on the specifics of a particular engine but the volume should be informed by the need to not starve the engine of oil during warm-up, particularly during the first 10-20 seconds after start-up. During this initial period the gravitational return flow of the still-cool, viscous oil to the sump may be delayed resulting in an initial circulating oil volume which is greater than would occur at steady-state.
The volume of oil participating in engine lubrication should also be informed by its ability to temporarily accept and hold contaminants, such as water and unburned fuel, from the combustion chamber, which blow by the piston rings. Such contaminants may exist as vapors in a hot engine and be eliminated by the positive crankcase ventilation system of the engine. In cold engine and during warm-up they will condense and temporarily dissolve and be dispersed in the cold oil. Thus another constraint on the oil volume partition effected by the separator is that the circulating oil volume be sufficient to accommodate the oil contaminants produced on cold start without prejudicing its lubricating properties. All of these requirements may be met if the sump is so partitioned as to enable an initial circulating oil flow of at least one and one-half quarts. This will correspond to about 25 to 30% of the total oil volume in a conventional engine whose normal oil requirement is for five or six quarts.
While preferred embodiments of the invention have been described as illustrations, these illustrations are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
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