The present invention concerns a thermostat device according to the preamble to claim 1 and a cooling system according to the preamble to claim 7.
A thermostat device comprising a temperature-dependent activating element with a wax body is often used to regulate the temperature of the cooling fluid in the cooling system that cools the combustion engine in a motor vehicle. The thermostat device conducts, in dependence upon the temperature of the cooling fluid, the cooling fluid flowing out from the combustion engine either to a radiator to be cooled before the cooling fluid is returned to the combustion engine or directly back to the combustion engine without passing through the radiator. In many motor vehicles the thermostat device is coupled into the cooling circuit of the cooling system between the cooling fluid outlet of the combustion engine and the cooling fluid inlet of the radiator. It has been shown to be advantageous to control the thermostat device in dependence upon the temperature of the cooling fluid that is conducted into the combustion engine instead of controlling the thermostat device in dependence upon the temperature of the cooling fluid that leaves the combustion engine. To enable such control without having to change the placement of the thermostat device in the cooling circuit, thermostat devices have been developed that are arranged so as to receive a controlling cooling fluid flow from a pilot line that diverts a part of the cooling fluid that is flowing toward the cooling fluid inlet of the combustion engine. Thermostat devices of the latter type are previously known from EP 2 037 097 A2 and EP 2 366 878 A2.
The object of the present invention is to provide a thermostat device of the type specified above with a new and advantageous design.
Said object is achieved according to the present invention by means of a thermostat device exhibiting the features defined in claim 1.
The thermostat device according to the invention comprises:
The valve rod is thus used in the thermostat device according to the invention to conduct the cooling fluid that is received from the pilot line to the second outlet duct. As a result, the thermostat device can be given a particularly compact and space-efficient design.
According to the invention, the valve rod extents through a wax body incorporated in the activating element in order to enable the transfer of heat to the wax body from cooling fluid that flows through said connecting duct inside the valve rod. Heating the wax body from within in this manner enables more efficient through-heating of the wax body under the action of the heat from the cooling fluid that flows through the connecting duct inside the valve rod compared to a thermostat device of the conventional type in which the wax body is heated from without.
A embodiment of the invention is characterized in that:
It thereby becomes possible to convert the expansion of the wax body into an axial displacement of the valve rod and the valve body in an effective and space-efficient manner.
Other advantageous features of the thermostat device according to the invention are described in the non-independent claims and the description that follows below.
The invention also concerns a cooling system exhibiting the features defined in claim 7.
The invention will be described below with the help of exemplary embodiments, and with reference to the attached drawings. The following are depicted:
A valve body 10 is displaceably arranged in the thermostat housing 2. This valve body 10 is axially displaceable between various positions for regulating the flow of cooling fluid from said inlet duct 3 to said outlet ducts 5a, 5b. The valve body 10 is secured on and displaceable together with an axially displaceable valve rod 11, which is displaceably disposed in the thermostat housing 2. A first valve seat 12a is arranged in the thermostat housing 2 between the inlet duct 3 and the first outlet duct 5a, and a second valve seat 12b is arranged in the thermostat housing 2 between the inlet duct 3 and the second outlet duct 5b. In the illustrated example, the first valve seat 12 is formed by an edge that extends around a first opening 13a that constitutes a flow passage between the inlet duct 3 and the first outlet duct 5a, while the second valve seat 12b is formed by an edge that extends around a second opening 13b that constitutes a flow passage between the inlet duct 3 and the second outlet duct 5b. The valve body 10 comprises a first valve member 10a which, in a first end position of the valve body, is receivable in the first valve seat 12a in order to close said first opening 13a and thereby prevent cooling fluid from flowing from the inlet duct 3 to the first outlet duct 5a. The valve body 10 further comprises a second valve member 10b which, in a second end position of the valve body, is receivable in the second valve seat 12b in order to close said second opening 13b and thereby prevent cooling fluid from flowing from the inlet duct 3 to the second outlet duct 5b. The two valve members 10a, 10b are arranged at a distance from one another viewed in the axial direction of the valve rod. When the first valve member 10a is located in its closed position in engagement with the first valve seat 12a, the second valve member 10b is located in an open position at a distance from the second valve seat 12b, as is illustrated in
The valve body 10 is displaceable from said first end position in the direction of said second end position under the action of an activating element 14 arranged in the thermostat housing 2, and against the action of the spring force from a spring device 15 acting on the valve body 10 or the valve rod 11. In the illustrated example the spring device 15 consists of a compression spring, one end of which bears against a support surface 16a inside the second outlet duct 5b and the other end of which bears against a support surface on the second valve member 10b. This compression spring surrounds an end 11b of the valve rod, which end is received in the second outlet duct 5b.
The thermostat device 1 further comprises an inlet opening 17 that is intended to receive cooling fluid from a pilot line in said cooling system. The activating element 14 is arranged so as to influence the displacement position of the valve rod 11 and the valve body 10 in dependence upon the temperature of the cooling fluid that is received from the pilot line via said inlet opening 17. The inlet opening 17 is connected to the second outlet duct 5b via a connecting duct 18 that extends in an axial direction through the valve rod 11. The cooling fluid received from the pilot line is always allowed to flow further to the second outlet duct 5b via the connecting duct 18 regardless of the position of the valve rod 11 and the valve body 10.
In the illustrated example the valve rod 11 is tubular and open at both ends, whereupon the connecting duct 18 is formed by the internal space that extends axially through the valve rod between the ends of the valve rod. The valve rod 11 is advantageously made of a metal material with high heat-conducting capacity.
In the illustrated example the activating element 14 comprises a wax body 20. The valve rod 11 extends through said wax body 20 to enable a transfer of heat to the wax body 20 from cooling fluid that flows through the connecting duct 18 inside the valve rod 11. A piston chamber 21 is arranged in the thermostat housing 2 and a piston 22 is displaceably received in said piston chamber. The valve rod 11 extends through the piston chamber 21, and the piston 22 is fixedly connected with and disposed on the exterior of the valve rod 11. The wax body 20 is housed in the piston chamber 21 and arranged so as to act upon a piston 22. When the cooling fluid that flows through the connecting duct 18 has a temperature that is below the melting temperature of the wax substance in the wax body 20, the wax body is in a solid state and the valve body 10 is then located in the first end position illustrated in
In the illustrated example, sealing members 23a, 23b in the form of O-rings are arranged between the valve rod 11 and the thermostat housing 2 on either side of the piston chamber 21.
In the embodiment illustrated in
The cooling fluid that flows through the radiator 44 is cooled by means of air that is blown against the radiator when the motor vehicle is in motion. The cooling system 40 can also comprise a fan 51 that is arranged so as to generate an airflow through the radiator 44. This fan 51 can be coupled to the combustion engine 42 in order to be driven thereby.
A thermostat device 1 of the type described above is coupled into the cooling circuit 41 in such a way that:
The pilot line 50 is connected to the second line 48 at a second point P2 located between said first point P1 and the cooling fluid inlet 46a of the combustion engine 42. A small part of the cooling fluid that is fed to the cooling fluid inlet 46a of the combustion engine is diverted to the pilot line 50 from the second line 48 and conducted by the pilot line to the thermostat device 1. In the thermostat device 1, the cooling fluid received from the pilot line 50 is brought into heat-transferring contact with the activating element 14 and then conducted back to the second line 48 via the connecting duct 18 and the second outlet duct 5b in the thermostat device 1 and the third line 49. The cooling fluid that is conducted to the thermostat device 1 via the pilot line 50 has the same temperature as the cooling fluid that is conducted into the combustion engine 42. The activating element 14 of the thermostat device thus comes to be controlled by the temperature of the cooling fluid that is conducted into the combustion engine 42.
When the temperature of the cooling fluid in the cooling circuit 41 is low, the wax body 20 remains in a solid state and the valve body 10 is kept in the aforesaid first end position, whereupon all the cooling fluid that flows from the combustion engine 42 via the first line 37 to the thermostat device 1 is returned to the combustion engine 42 via the third line 49 and the second line 48 without passing through the radiator 44. When the cooling fluid in the cooling circuit 41 has become hot enough that the wax body 20 has begun to melt, the valve body 10 will assume a position between the aforesaid first and second end positions, whereupon a certain amount of the cooling fluid that flows via the first line 47 from the combustion engine 42 to the thermostat device 1 is conducted further to the radiator 44 and cooled therein before the cooling fluid is returned via the second line 48 to the combustion engine, while a second amount of cooling fluid is returned to the combustion engine 42 via the third line 49 and the second line 48 without passing through the radiator 44. When essentially the entire wax body 20 has melted, the valve body 10 assumes the aforesaid second end position, whereupon all the cooling fluid that flows via the first line 47 from the combustion engine 42 to the thermostat device 1 is conducted further to the radiator 44 and cooled therein before the cooling fluid is returned via the second line 48 to the combustion engine 42.
The thermostat device according to the invention and the cooling system according to the invention are intended in particular to be used in a heavy motor vehicle such as a bus, a tractor or a goods vehicle.
The invention is obviously in no way limited to the embodiments described above, but rather a number of possible modifications thereof should be obvious to one skilled in the art without deviating from the basic idea of the invention as it is defined in the accompanying claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1250351-2 | Apr 2012 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/SE2013/050326 | 3/25/2013 | WO | 00 |