This disclosure relates to valves coated with a wear-resistant thermal spray coating and internal combustion engines incorporating the same.
Internal combustion engines are used in many different applications. For example, intake valves of such engines are positioned in an intake port disposed between the air intake and the combustion chamber. During an air intake stroke, a cam or rocker arm pushes the intake valve open and allows the fuel mixture to enter the combustion chamber. Further, exhaust valves are positioned in an exhaust port disposed between the combustion chamber and an exhaust flow passage. During an exhaust stroke, the cam or rocker arm pushes the exhaust valve open and combustion gases are expelled from the chamber.
The seal that the valve makes with the port is important to engine performance and efficiency. If the valve leaks, the pressure in the combustion chamber decreases and the engine generates considerably less power. Engine manufacturers over the last few decades have dedicated substantial efforts in designing valves that can form a tight seal between the seat insert of the port and the seating face or the seat face of the fillet.
Both the seat insert and the seat face are important for the reliability of the valve. For example, it is well-known that corrosion or wear of either the seat insert or seat face can cause the valve to leak when the valve is closed, which results in “burn through.” To prevent burn through, the seat insert and the seat face on the valve fillet have been made with increasingly harder materials that are also corrosion resistant.
The seat face may be hardened by applying a hard cladding layer followed by machining to form the seat face with the desired dimensions. The hard cladding makes the seat face more wear-resistant. Hard cladding can also reduce the formation of dent marks. Examples of materials that are frequently used for seat face materials are metal alloys having cobalt and nickel. As an alternative to applying hard cladding to the seat face, hard cladding may also be applied to seat inserts. Because of the high cost, hard cladding is typically not applied to both the seat insert and the seat face. Regardless, in almost all cases, the advantages of using hard cladding for either the seat insert or the seat face may not be sufficient to offset the increase in price over softer metals such as iron-based alloys.
While hardened seat faces last longer, the means by which the seat faces are hardened is problematic. Specifically, plasma transferred arc (PTA) cladding, also known in the art as hard facing, is routinely used on valves in the engine manufacturing industry. Unfortunately, PTA cladding requires that the deposition of a thick layer and high heat input, which causes the base material of the valve to degrade because of microstructural degradation or from residual stress. As a result, there is an increased tendency for fatigue failures. To improve the durability of seat inserts disposed in the port, additional nitriding or thin-film coatings have been used. Nitriding is typically not an option for outlet or exhaust ports as the alloys used for the outlet ports are not responsive to nitriding.
Cobalt-based materials have been used to coat seat inserts as well as seat faces via PTA cladding. It is widely recognized in the art that if a cobalt-based material is used to coat the seat face, a cobalt material may be used to coat the seat insert for improved performance. In other words, it is widely recognized that cobalt based materials, when used as wear-resistant coatings, may be “self-mated,” or both parts that engage one another should be coated with cobalt-based materials. However, cobalt-based materials may be expensive and using a cobalt-based material to clad the seat face and/or to coat the seat insert may result in a costly assembly.
When wear occurs on the seat face or the seat insert of an automobile or truckvalve, the geometry and the gap between the stem and the rocker are no longer optimized, and therefore adjustments need to be made, which are referred to as lash adjustments. Performing lash adjustments manually requires a vehicle to be taken out of service, which is an expense and a nuisance to the operator. Some vehicles are equipped with hydraulic lash adjusters (HLA or lifters or tappets) that automatically adjust the gap between the stem tip and the rocker to maintain proper sealing and seating velocities. Heavy-duty diesel engines do not typically have HLA because of the high valve train loads. Therefore, lash adjustments for most heavy duty diesel engines must be made manually, thereby requiring the machine to be taken out of service.
Thus, there is a need for improved seat faces and as seat inserts that are cost-effective and that provide sufficient wear resistance to extend the time between lash resets.
In one aspect, a valve for use in an internal combustion engine is disclosed. The valve may include a stem connected to a fillet that connects the stem to a seat face. The stem may be received in a port that accommodates a seat insert that engages the seat face when the valve is in a closed position. The seat insert may be fabricated from a non-cobalt-based alloy and the seat face may be coated with a cobalt-based alloy or a nickel-based alloy.
In another aspect, an internal combustion engine is disclosed. The engine may include a cylinder block that may include at least one combustion chamber. The engine may further include at least one passage in communication with to the at least one combustion chamber and defining a port configured to receive a valve. The valve may be positioned within the port for selectively opening and closing the port. The valve may include a stem connected to a fillet that connects the stem to a seat face. The seat face may be coated with a cobalt-based alloy or a nickel-based alloy. Further, in the case of an intake valve, the port may accommodate a seat insert. The seat insert may be fabricated from an iron-based alloy.
In yet another aspect, a method of improving the durability of an engine valve is disclosed. The method may include providing a valve that may include a stem connected to a fillet that connects the stem to a seat face. The method may further include providing an engine port for receiving the stem and the seat face when the valve is in a closed position. In the case of an intake valve, the port may accommodate an iron-based seat insert that engages the seat face when the valve is in the closed position. The method may further include thermal spray coating the seat face with a cobalt-based alloy.
Turning to
As noted above, it is widely recognized that seat faces and seat inserts or cobalt-based wear resistant coatings on seat faces and seat inserts perform well when they are “self-mated” or when both mating components (i.e., a seat insert and a seat face) are either made from the same cobalt-based alloy or similar cobalt-based alloys or coated with the same cobalt-based coating or similar cobalt-based coatings. However, surprisingly, it has been found that a cobalt-based alloy may be used for the coating 33 on the seat face 23 while the seat insert 32 may be fabricated from a non-cobalt-based alloy or a non-cobalt based alloy may be used for the coating 33 on the seat face 23 while the seat insert 32 may be fabricated from a non-cobalt-based alloy, such as an iron-based alloy. Further, it has been found that nickel chromium aluminum yttrium (NiCrAlY) may also be used for the coating 33 on the seat face 23 and still provide good wear resistance when the seat insert is fabricated from a cobalt-based alloy or a non-cobalt-based alloy such as an iron-based alloy. The seat face 23′ may also be coated with either a cobalt-based coating or a non-cobalt based alloy.
The data graphically illustrated in
At 800° C. operating temperature, the cobalt-based alloy, STELLITE® 1 exhibited the least amount of wear after 200 hours of operation. Similarly, at an operating temperature of 550° C. and after 200 hundred hours of operation, the STELLITE® 1, TRIBALOY® 400, TRIBALOY® 800 and the NiCrAlY (NI343) alloys all performed the best, when used with the cobalt-based insert (J3). The results for the NiCrAlY alloy are surprising because, as noted above, it is well known in the art that cobalt-based alloys show better wear results when the two wear surfaces are fabricated from the same alloy or the same type of alloy (i.e., both wear surfaces are fabricated from the same or different cobalt-based alloys or are “self-mated”).
In another test graphically illustrated in
Turning to
Finally, turning to
In contrast, a cladding process (PTA) was used to harden the seat face 23 in
Improved valves for internal combustion engines are provided. The valves may include a stem connected to a fillet. The fillet may be disposed between the stem and a seat face that is coated with a cobalt-based alloy or a NiCrAlY alloy. While cobalt-based seat face coatings in combination with readily available iron-based alloy seat inserts provide superior performance, NiCrAlY alloys may provide a lower cost alternative although the wear resistant properties of NiCrAlY alloys may be somewhat inferior to the cobalt-based alloys, particularly STELLITE® 1, TRIBALOY® 400 and TRIBALOY® 800. The seat inserts which engage the seat face disposed on the fillet may be made of readily-available iron based alloys as discussed above. The result is an improved valve that is both cost effective and provides excellent wear resistance.