Toroidal internal combustion engine

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6250277
  • Patent Number
    6,250,277
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, September 3, 1998
    26 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, June 26, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
A rotary engine with one or more toroidal chambers defined by rotors that rotate within cylindrical housings. Pistons project into the chambers from the rotors. The pistons cooperate with valves to define compression regions and expansion regions in the chambers. The rotors, the pistons, the valves, or a combination thereof define or include combustion regions of constant volume wherein a fuel-air mixture compressed in the compression regions burns and then is ejected to the expansion regions. Fuel is injected into both the compression regions and the expansion regions, so that the engine operates according to the Trinkler cycle. In a first embodiment of the engine, the valves are rotary and include recesses that accommodate the pistons as the pistons pass the valves. As a piston transits from a compression region to an expansion region via a valve, the space in the valve recess not occupied by the piston is the combustion region. In a second embodiment of the engine, the motion of two pistons in two chambers is coordinated so that as one piston arrives at the end of a compression region of its chamber and the other piston enters an expansion region of its chamber, the volume between the two pistons is the combustion region. In a third embodiment of the engine, the combustion region is enclosed by two tandem rotary valves of two different chambers. In a fourth embodiment, the combustion regions are in rotary combustion chambers inside the pistons or inside the rotors.
Description




FIELD AND BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to internal combustion engines and, more particularly, to an internal combustion engine that is significantly more efficient than those known heretofore.




Internal combustion piston engines have been familiar and ubiquitous since the days of Otto and Diesel. These engines suffer from several widely recognized deficiencies. One is that their thermal efficiencies are far less than their theoretical efficiencies according to the second law of thermodynamics. Up to 30% of the heat released by fuel combustion is absorbed by the engine cooling systems. Another 30% is devoted to engine operation, including compressing air or an air-fuel mixture in the cylinders of these engines. From 5% to 20% of the available energy may be wasted because of incomplete combustion of hydrocarbon fuels. The net result is that these engines generally have overall efficiencies between 32% and 42%.




Another deficiency of these engines is that their exhausts tend to contain toxic substances: carbon particles and carcinogenic hydrocarbons because of incomplete combustion, and nitrogen oxides formed at the high (1800° C. to 2000° C.) combustion temperatures that characterize these engines. A third is that they provide power by transforming the reciprocating motion of their pistons to the rotary motion of their crankshafts. When the fuel-air mixture in a cylinder of an internal combustion engine explodes, the piston is at or near top dead center. At this position, the moment arm, across which the rod connecting the piston to the crankshaft transfers force to the crankshaft, is close to zero. Therefore, the piston exerts minimal torque on the crankshaft. As the piston moves down from top dead center, the moment arm through which the piston transfers force increases, but in the meantime the combustion gases expand somewhat, losing some of their propulsive force, so that the maximum torque exerted on the crankshaft is less than the maximum torque that could be exerted if the force of the piston could always be transferred to the crankshaft at maximum moment arm. Several attempts have been made to address some of these deficiencies. Ferrenberg et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,928,658) use a heat exchanger to preheat the input fuel and air of an internal combustion engine with some of the heat of the exhaust gases. Loth et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,239,959) ignite the fuel-air mixture in a separate combustion chamber before introducing the burning mixture to the cylinder, in order to attain more complete combustion and inhibit the formation of nitrogen oxides. Forster (U.S. Pat. No. 5,002,481) burns a mixture of fuel, air and steam. This mixture burns at a relatively low temperature of about 1400° C., and nitrogen oxides are not formed. Gunnerman (U.S. Pat. No. 5,156,114) burns a mixture of hydrocarbon fuel and water, but requires a hydrogen-forming catalyst to achieve the same power with his mixture as with ordinary gasoline. Each of these prior art patents addresses only one of the defects of reciprocating internal combustion engines. None addresses the problem in its totality.




U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366 describes an engine that further addresses the outstanding deficiencies of existing internal combustion engines. In this engine, a mixture of fuel, air and steam is burned in one or more combustion chambers, each combustion chamber being defined by a toroidal combustion chamber housing, a piston and a valve. The mixture is burned at a temperature between about 1400° C. and about 1800° C., thereby minimizing the formation of nitrogen oxides and other pollutants while reducing the heat lost to conduction and radiation through the engine walls. The axis of rotation of the power shaft of the engine is perpendicular to the plane of the combustion chamber housing. The piston is connected to the power shaft of the engine, and the force of the piston always is applied to the power shaft at a constant moment arm perpendicular to that axis of rotation, so that maximum torque is imposed on the power shaft.




In the toroidal engine of U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366, the volume of the combustion chamber increases as the burning mixture pushes the piston away from the valve. This increase in volume, before the mixture is entirely burned, tends to decrease the thermodynamic efficiency of this engine.




There is thus a widely recognized need for, and it would be highly advantageous to have, an internal combustion engine that further approaches its theoretical thermal efficiency while emitting minimal pollution.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




According to the present invention there is provided an engine, including: (a) at least one housing; (b) for each of the at least one housing: a rotor, rotatably mounted within the each housing, the rotor and the each housing defining between them a toroidal chamber, the rotor including at least one piston projecting into the toroidal chamber; and (c) for each the at least one housing, at least one valve, movably mounted within the at least one housing, at least one element selected from the group consisting of the rotor, the at least one piston and the at least one valve defining at least one combustion region at least while the at least one piston moves past the at least one valve.




According to the present invention there is provided an engine, including: (a) a housing; (b) a rotor, mounted within the housing to rotate about an axis of rotation and having an outer surface including at least one portion of variable distance from the axis of rotation; and (c) a valve, rotatably mounted within the housing and shaped to maintain rolling contact with the outer surface as the rotor and the valve rotate within the housing.




Like the prior art engine of U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366, the engine of the present invention includes one or more housings with toroidal interiors. Within each housing rotates a rotor to which is attached one or more pistons that projects into the toroidal interior of the housing, so that the rotor of the present invention is analogous to the ring seal of U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366. The rotor and the housing define between them a toroidal chamber. One or more valves in the housing alternately seals the region between itself and an approaching or departing piston or moves to allow the piston to pass. The difference between the engine of the present invention and the engine of U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366 is that in the preferred embodiment of the engine of U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366, separate toroidal chambers are used for compression, combustion and expansion; whereas in the engine of the present invention, the valves, the pistons, the rotor, or some combination thereof define a combustion region of approximately constant volume in which combustion takes place as the valve or valves move to accommodate the transit past the one or more valves of the one or more pistons. This allows the engine of the present invention to operate according to the Trinkler cycle: A mixture of compressed air and fuel introduced into the combustion region by the cooperative motion of the pistons and the valves burns therein at approximately constant volume. The burning mixture then is released to an expansion region, where more fuel is injected to continue the burning and keep the expanding mixture at least initially at approximately constant pressure. Thus, the engine of the present invention is more efficient than the engine of U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366, in which the combustion occurs in a steadily increasing volume.




In a first preferred embodiment of the engine of the present invention, the valve includes a circular disk with a recess shaped to accommodate the pistons as the pistons pass the valve. The constant-volume combustion region is the space between a passing piston and the interior of the recess. The disk rotates in synchrony with the rotor so that while a piston is not passing the valve, the valve seals off the interior of the housing to form a compression region as a piston approaches the valve or to form an expansion region as a piston departs from the valve.




In a second preferred embodiment of the engine, with two axially adjacent toroidal housings, with two such axially adjacent valves, one of the two axially adjacent valves in each housing, and with the two rotors joined to rotate together within the housings, a port is provided, adjacent the two valves, that connects the interiors of the two housings. The pistons of one rotor lag the pistons of the other rotor, and the rotors are provided with ports that line up with the interhousing port when the valves are between a lagging piston of one rotor and the corresponding leading piston of the other rotor. Those two pistons then define between them a constant-volume combustion region that spans the two housings as the valves move to accommodate the passage of the pistons. Prior to the arrival of the lagging piston, that piston compresses the air-fuel-steam mixture against the corresponding valve. As the leading piston departs, the hot burning combustion products push the leading piston away from the corresponding valve.




In a third preferred embodiment of the engine of the present invention, also with two axially adjacent toroidal housings, also with two such adjacent valves, one valve per housing, and also with the two rotors joined to rotate together within the housings, the adjacent circular disks of the valves include opposed chambers that define a constant-volume combustion region. The pistons of one rotor lead the pistons of the other rotor. The leading piston of a pair of matched pistons compresses the air-fuel-steam mixture against the corresponding valve, and then pushes the compressed mixture into the combustion region while passing the valve. The mixture is heated by combustion and then released to the other housing as the lagging piston passes the other valve. The hot burning mixture then pushes the lagging piston away from the other valve.




In a fourth preferred embodiment of the engine of the present invention, the combustion regions are enclosed within the pistons or within the rotor adjacent to the pistons. The valves are either the rotating valves of the first embodiment, or blade valves, or rotating valves whose outer surfaces are shaped to maintain rolling contact with the outer surface of the rotor. The latter valve-rotor combination is a further innovative aspect of the present invention. As a piston approaches a valve, the piston compresses the air-fuel-steam mixture against the valve. The compressed mixture is admitted to the combustion region inside or adjacent to the piston, where the mixture burns. The resulting hot burning mixture is released after the piston passes the valve, to push the piston away from the valve. Most preferably, separate compression and expansion valves are provided, to allow time for constant volume combustion as the piston transits from the compression valve to the expansion valve.




Berry, in U.S. Pat. No. 2,447,929, also teaches an internal combustion engine in which an air-fuel mixture is compressed in a toroidal compression chamber, ignited in a “pre-combustion and firing chamber” of substantially constant volume, and allowed to flow into a toroidal expansion chamber. The structural difference between Berry's engine and the engine of the present invention is that Berry's pre-combustion and firing chamber is separate from the housings of the toroidal chambers and the rotors, pistons and valves thereof, whereas the combustion region of the present invention is defined by the rotors and/or the pistons and/or the valves thereof.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The invention is herein described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:





FIG. 1

is a transverse cross section of a first embodiment of an engine of the present invention;





FIGS. 2A

,


2


B and


2


C show a piston of the engine of

FIG. 1

in three different positions relative to the upper valve of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 3

is a partial transverse cross section of a variant of the engine of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 4

is a partial transverse cross section of another variant of the engine of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 5A

is a partial axial cross-section of a second embodiment of an engine of the present invention;





FIG. 5B

is a partial cut-away top view of the engine of

FIG. 5A

;





FIGS. 6A and 6B

are transverse and axial cross-sections of a third embodiment of an engine of the present invention;





FIG. 7

is a transverse cross-section of a prior art engine;





FIG. 8

is a transverse cross-section of a first variant of a fourth embodiment of an engine of the present invention;





FIGS. 9A

,


9


B and


9


C show three positions of a combustion chamber of the engine of

FIG. 8

;





FIGS. 10A and 10B

are transverse cross-sections of a modification of the engine of

FIG. 8

;





FIG. 11

is a transverse cross-section of a second variant of the fourth embodiment of an engine of the present invention;





FIGS. 12A and 12B

show two mechanisms for cooling and lubricating surfaces that are in sliding contact.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




The present invention is of a toroidal internal combustion engine in which the rotors, the pistons, and/or valves define one or more combustion regions of approximately constant volume, thereby allowing the implementation of a Trinkler cycle.




The principles and operation of a toroidal internal combustion engine according to the present invention may be better understood with reference to the drawings and the accompanying description.




Referring now to the drawings,

FIG. 1

is a transverse cross-section of a first embodiment


10


of an engine of the present invention. Within a stationary housing


12


rotates an annular rotor


14


. Rotor


14


is rigidly attached to a central drive shaft (not shown) that is coaxial with rotor


14


and with housing


12


. Housing


12


and rotor


14


define between them a toroidal chamber


16


. Two pistons


18


project from rotor


14


into chamber


16


. On opposite sides of housing


12


are two housing recesses


20


and


20


′ that accommodate two disk-shaped valves


22


and


22


′ that rotate within housing recesses


20


and


20


′ in directions opposite to the direction of rotation of rotor


14


. Each valve


22


and


22


′ includes a valve recess


24


,


24


′. The outer diameter of rotor


14


is twice the diameters of valves


22


and


22


′. Valves


22


and


22


′ rotate twice for each rotation of rotor


14


, so that the surfaces of valves


22


and


22


′ and of rotor


14


that are in mutual contact do not slide relative to each other. The rotations of rotor


14


and valves


22


and


22


′ are synchronized by conventional mechanical linkages (not shown). Valve recesses


24


and


24


′ accommodate pistons


18


as pistons


18


move past valves


22


and


22


′. For this purposes, the matching surfaces of pistons


18


and valve recesses


24


and


24


′ are sections of the surfaces of right circular cylinders, as described by M. L. Novikov in


Tooth Gearings with New Engagement


, N. A. Zhukovsky High Military Engineering Academy, Moscow, 1958 (in Russian).





FIGS. 2A

,


2


B and


2


C show a piston


18


in three different positions as rotor


14


rotates clockwise in housing


12


past counterclockwise-rotating valve


22


. In

FIG. 2A

, as piston


18


approaches valve


22


, piston


18


and valve


22


define a compression region


26


in chamber


16


. In

FIG. 2B

, piston


18


is entirely within valve recess


24


. The space within valve recess


24


that is not occupied by piston


18


is a combustion region


30


whose volume is approximately constant as piston


18


moves past valve


22


. In

FIG. 2C

, as piston


18


departs from valve


22


, piston


18


and valve


22


define an expansion region


28


in chamber


16


.




The operation of engine


10


, with rotor


14


rotating clockwise, is as follows. As a piston


18


sweeps through the left side of chamber


16


, piston


18


compresses air ahead of itself, in compression region


26


, while drawing in more air behind itself into chamber


16


via air inlet port


36


. As piston


18


approaches valve


22


, fuel is injected via a fuel injection port


32


. Depending on the compression ratio in compression region


26


, either the compressed fuel-air mixture ignites spontaneously when piston


18


is almost at valve


22


, or an ignition source


34


, such as a spark plug, ignites the compressed fuel-air mixture when piston


18


is almost at valve


22


. As piston


18


passes valve


22


, piston


18


and valve


22


define between them combustion region


30


, where most of the combustion takes place at approximately constant volume. As piston


18


departs from valve


22


, the hot, high-pressure gas created by the combustion process leaves combustion region


30


into expansion region


28


and pushes piston


18


, thereby creating torque. More fuel is injected via a fuel injection port


32


′ to continue the combustion and maintain the expanding gas at least initially at approximately constant pressure. As piston


18


sweeps through the right side of chamber


16


, piston


18


pushes residual gases from the previous cycle out through exhaust port


38


.




On startup, only fuel is injected via fuel injection port


32


. During steady state operation, up to 15% steam is injected along with the fuel, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366, to allow operation at lower temperatures than would otherwise be possible.




Engine


10


is reversible, in the sense that engine


10


can be operated with rotor


14


rotating counter-clockwise and valves


22


and


22


′ rotating clockwise. For this purpose, the roles of fuel injection ports


32


and


32


′ are interchanged, and an alternate ignition source


34


′ is provided to the right of valve


22


. During clockwise operation, air inlet port


36


functions as an exhaust port and exhaust port


38


functions as an air inlet port.




The above description in terms of housing


12


remaining stationary while rotor


14


rotates therewithin is illustrative rather than limitative. Rotor


14


can remain stationary while housing


12


rotates thereabout, in which case housing


12


, rather than rotor


14


, is rigidly attached to the drive shaft. Indeed, both housing


12


and rotor


14


can move, as long as rotor


14


rotates with respect to housing


12


.





FIG. 3

is a partial transverse cross-section of a variant of engine


10


in which housing recess


20


includes a channel


40


that connects to compression region


26


. The purpose of channel


40


is to equalize pressure between compression region


26


and valve recess


24


, so that the pressure of the compressed air-fuel mixture in compression region


26


does not drop suddenly when valve


22


reaches the point in the rotation of valve


22


at which valve recess


24


opens upon compression region


26


.





FIG. 4

is a partial transverse cross-section of a variant of engine


10


in which valve recess


24


leads to a cylindrical chamber


44


in the center of valve


22


. With piston


18


occupying valve recess


24


as shown, both cylindrical chamber


44


and the portion of valve recess


24


not occupied by piston


18


combine to form a combustion region


30


′ that is enlarged with respect to combustion region


30


of FIG.


2


B and that also has a more nearly constant volume, as piston


18


passes valve


22


, than combustion region


30


of FIG.


2


B.

FIG. 4

also shows the periphery of valve


22


partly occupied by graphite blocks


42


. Graphite blocks


42


lubricate the movement of the periphery of valve


22


past the inner surface of housing


12


, where valve


22


and housing


12


are in sliding contact. This and other lubrication systems are discussed in more detail below.





FIG. 5A

is a partial axial cross-section of a second embodiment


110


of an engine of the present invention.

FIG. 5B

is a partial cut-away top view of embodiment


110


. In embodiment


110


, a first stationary housing


112




a


and a second stationary housing


112




b


sandwich between them an annular partition


100


. A first rotor


114




a


, supported within housing


112




a


by bearings


115




a


, rotates within housing


112




a


and defines, along with housing


112




a


, a toroidal compression chamber


106


. A second rotor


114




b


, supported within housing


112




b


by bearings


115




b


, rotates within housing


112




b


and defines, along with housing


112




b


, a toroidal expansion chamber


116


. Rotors


114




a


and


114




b


are rigidly joined to each other and rotate together with respect to housings


112




a


and


112




b


. A piston


118




a


projects from rotor


114




a


into compression chamber


106


. A piston


118




b


projects from rotor


114




b


into expansion chamber


116


. The motion of rotors


114




a


and


114




b


relative to housings


112




a


and


112




b


is from left to right in

FIG. 5B

, so that faces


119




a


and


119




b


of pistons


118




a


and


118




b


are leading faces and faces


121




a


and


121




b


of pistons


118




a


and


118




b


are trailing faces, and so that piston


118




a


lags piston


118




b


. Because pistons


118




a


and


118




b


are never opposite each other across partition


100


, only piston


118




a


is shown in FIG.


5


A. As in embodiment


10


, a disk-shaped valve


122




a


rotates, within a housing recess in housing


112




a


, in a direction opposite to the rotation of rotor


114




a


. Valve


122




a


includes a valve recess that accommodates piston


118




a


as piston


118




a


passes valve


122




a


. Similarly, a disk-shaped valve


122




b


rotates, within a housing recess in housing


112




b


, in a direction opposite to the rotation of rotor


114




b


. Valve


122




b


includes a valve recess that accommodates piston


118




b


as piston


118




b


passes valve


122




b.






Valves


122




a


and


122




b


are on opposite sides of partition


100


. Partition


100


includes a port


102


between valves


122




a


and


122




b


. Rotor


114




a


includes a port


104




a


that leads piston


118




a


. Rotor


114




b


includes a port


104




b


that lags piston


114




b


. When both pistons


118




a


and


118




b


are approaching valves


122




a


and


122




b


, piston


118




a


and valve


122




a


define between them a compression region analogous to compression region


26


of FIG.


2


A. When both pistons


118




a


and


118




b


are departing from valves


122




a


and


122




b


, piston


118




b


and valve


122




b


define between them an expansion region analogous to expansion region


28


of FIG.


2


C.

FIG. 5B

shows the intermediate situation: piston


118




a


approaching valve


122




a


while piston


118




b


departs from valve


122




b


. Now, both port


104




a


and port


104




b


are adjacent to port


102


, forming an open passage between chambers


106


and


116


, so that pistons


118




a


and


118




b


and valves


122




a


and


122




b


define among them a combustion region


130


that is bounded on the left by leading face


119




a


and on the right by trailing face


121




b


. When pistons


118




a


and


118




b


are both either approaching valves


122




a


and


122




b


or departing from valves


122




a


and


122




b


, ports


104




a


and


104




b


are adjacent to partition


100


, so that chambers


106


and


116


are sealed off from each other unless pistons


118




a


and


118




b


are on opposite sides of valves


122




a


and


122




b


, as shown in FIG.


5


B.




The operation of embodiment


110


is similar to the operation of embodiment


10


. While both pistons


118




a


and


118




b


approach valves


122




a


and


122




b


, piston


118




a


compresses air against valve


122




a


and fuel is injected into the compressed air via a fuel injection port


132


to form a compressed air-fuel mixture. After piston


118




b


passes valve


122




b


, the air-fuel mixture is ignited by an ignition source


134


and burns in combustion region


130


. After piston


118




a


passes valve


122




a


and chamber


116


is cut off from chamber


106


, the hot burning gas mixture thus created pushes piston


118




b


away from valve


122




b


. More fuel is injected via a fuel injection port


132


′ to maintain continued combustion and keep the expanding gas mixture at least initially at approximately constant pressure.





FIG. 6A

is a transverse cross-section of a third embodiment


210


of an engine of the present invention.

FIG. 6B

is an axial cross-section of embodiment


210


, taken along cut I—I of FIG.


6


A. The transverse cross-section of

FIG. 6A

is taken along cut II—II of FIG.


6


B. As in embodiment


110


, a first stationary housing


212




a


is mated to a second stationary housing


212




b


. A first rotor


214




a


rotates within housing


212




a


and defines, along with housing


212




a


, a toroidal compression chamber


206


. A second rotor


214




b


rotates within housing


212




b


and defines, along with housing


212




b


, a toroidal expansion chamber


216


. As in embodiment


110


, rotors


214




a


and


214




b


are rigidly joined to each other and rotate together with respect to housings


212




a


and


212




b


. Two pistons


218




a


project from rotor


214




a


into compression chamber


206


. Two pistons


218




b


, shown in phantom in

FIG. 6A

, project from rotor


214




b


into expansion chamber


216


. The motion of rotors


214




a


and


214




b


relative to housings


212




a


and


212




b


is clockwise in

FIG. 6A

, so that pistons


218




a


lead corresponding pistons


218




b


by 90°. As in embodiments


10


and


110


, disk-shaped valves


222




a


and


222




b


rotate within housing recesses


220




a


in housing


212




a


and housing recesses


220




b


in housing


220




b


, respectively, in a direction opposite to the rotation of rotors


214




a


and


214




b


, i.e., counterclockwise in FIG.


6


A. Valves


222




a


include valve recesses


224




a


that accommodate pistons


218




a


as pistons


218




a


pass valves


222




a


. Similarly, valves


222




b


include valve recesses


224




b


, shown in phantom in

FIG. 6A

, that accommodate pistons


218




b


as pistons


218




b


pass valves


222




b


. Because valves


222




a


and


222




b


rotate twice for each rotation of rotors


214




a


and


214




b


, valve recesses


224




b


are displaced by 180° from the corresponding valve recesses


224




a


. Each valve


222




a


and


222




b


includes a central cylindrical chamber


244




a


and


244




b


, respectively, that are in communication with respective valve recesses


224




a


and


224




b


. Cylindrical chambers


244




a


and


244




b


of opposed valves


222




a


and


222




b


also are open to each other, as shown in

FIG. 6B

, thereby forming a combustion region


230


.




The operation of engine


210


is similar to the operation of engines


10


and


110


. As pistons


218




a


sweep through compression chamber


206


towards valves


222




a


, pistons


218




a


compress air ahead of themselves, in compression regions defined by pistons


218




a


and valves


222




a


towards which pistons


218




a


approach, while also drawing in more air behind themselves into compression chamber


206


via air inlet ports


236


. As pistons


218




a


approach valves


222




a


, fuel is injected into the compressed air via fuel injection ports (not shown) to produce compressed fuel-air mixtures. As pistons


218




a


enter valve recesses


224




a


, these compressed fuel-air mixtures are pushed into combustion regions


230


and, if necessary, are ignited by appropriate ignition sources (not shown). After pistons


218




a


leave valves


222




a


, and while pistons


218




b


are approaching valves


222




b


, the fuel-air mixture burns in combustion regions


230


under constant-volume conditions. As pistons


218




b


depart from valves


222




b


, the hot high-pressure gases created by the combustion process leave combustion regions


230


into expansion chamber


216


, specifically, into expansion regions defined by pistons


218




b


and valves


222




b


, and push pistons


218




b


away from valves


222




b


. Further injection of fuel into the expansion regions, and the ensuing continued combustion, keep the expanding gases at least initially at approximately constant pressure. As pistons


218




b


sweep through expansion chamber


216


, pistons


218




b


push residual gases from previous cycles out through exhaust ports


238


, of housing


212




b


, that are shown in phantom in FIG.


6


A.




To understand the fourth embodiment of the engine of the present invention, it is useful first to consider the prior art engine described by Edwards in International Publication WO 93/21423, which is incorporated by reference for all purposes as if fully set forth herein. This prior art engine is partly illustrated in transverse cross section in

FIG. 7

, which shows a transverse cross section through a cylindrical housing


312


wherein rotates a rotor


314


that is rigidly attached to a coaxial drive shaft


356


. Rotor


314


rotates in a clockwise direction. Lobe seals


302


of rotor


314


contact inner surface


306


of housing


312


. Side face seals


304


of rotor


314


contact the inner surfaces of two side plates (not shown). Two groups


308


of ports and valve assemblies


321


are on opposite sides of housing


312


. Each valve assembly


321


includes a blade valve


322


that slides radially in a blade valve housing


320


and is urged against outer surface


340


of rotor


314


by an appropriate mechanism such as a spring


342


. Air enters an induction region


348


via an inlet port


336


and is compressed between rotor


314


and the upper blade valve


322


in a compression region


350


. This compressed air is conducted to a separate combustion chamber (not shown) via a compression port


344


, where fuel is injected into the compressed air and burned. The hot gas mixture thus formed is introduced to an expansion region


352


via a power port


346


, to push on rotor


314


. Spent gases from the previous cycle are ejected from an exhaust region


354


by rotor


314


via an exhaust port


338


. The activity in housing


314


is synchronized with the activity in the combustion chamber by means of a mechanism including a timing gear


358


.





FIG. 8

is a transverse cross-section of a first variant


310


of a fourth embodiment of an engine of the present invention. Engine


310


is modified from the prior art engine of

FIG. 7

, so like reference numerals in the two Figures refer to like parts. As understood herein, the portion of rotor


314


that is radially beyond side face seals


304


is considered to be a pair of pistons


318


. Housing


312


, and the portion of rotor


314


that is radially at side face seals


304


, define between them a toroidal chamber


316


. Apices


319


of pistons


318


are in sliding contact with the inner wall of housing


312


. Near each apex


319


, a piston recess


317


in each piston


318


includes enclosed therein a disk-shaped combustion chamber


330


that rotates within piston


318


as described below. Each combustion chamber


330


defines a combustion region


362


and an inlet/outlet port


364


. Piston inlet ports


366


and piston outlet ports


368


allow communication between toroidal chamber


316


and combustion chambers


362


via inlet/outlet ports


364


, as described below.




The essential difference between engine


310


and the prior art engine of

FIG. 7

is that in engine


310


, the combustion takes place inside pistons


318


and expansion region


352


rather than in an external combustion chamber. Consequently, engine


310


lacks compression port


344


and power port


346


. Instead, engine


310


has two valve assemblies, a compression valve assembly


321




a


and an expansion valve assembly


321




b


, on the side of housing


312


opposite ports


336


and


338


. Compression region


350


is to the left of these two valve assemblies, and expansion region


352


is to their right.





FIG. 9A

shows the position of combustion chamber


330


relative to its respective piston


318


while piston inlet


366


faces compression region


350


. Combustion chamber


330


is turned so that inlet/outlet


364


faces piston inlet


366


to admit the air compressed in compression region


350


to combustion region


362


. As apex


319


approaches blade valve


322




a


of compression valve assembly


321




a


, fuel is injected into the compressed air via a fuel injection port


332


. As apex


319


passes blade valve


322




a


, combustion chamber


330


turns to the position shown in FIG.


9


B. An ignition source


334


in piston


318


adjacent to combustion region


362


ignites the compressed fuel-air mixture in combustion region


362


and inlet/outlet port


364


. The fuel-air mixture continues to burn while apex


319


transits from the blade valve


322




a


to blade valve


322




b


of expansion valve assembly


321




b


. In fact, the reason why two valve assemblies are provided opposite ports


336


and


338


is to allow time for the initial combustion to proceed at substantially constant volume. After apex


319


passes blade valve


322




b


, compression chamber


330


turns to the position shown in

FIG. 9C

, with inlet/outlet


364


facing piston outlet


368


. The hot, high-pressure combustion gases inside compression chamber


330


enter expansion region


352


and push piston


318


and rotor


314


in a clockwise direction. More fuel is injected via a fuel injection port


332


′ in expansion region


352


, to continue the combustion and maintain the hot expanding gases at least initially at approximately constant pressure.





FIGS. 10A and 10B

are transverse cross sections of a modified version


310


′ of variant


310


. The difference between engines


310


and


310


′ is that instead of valves


322


,


322




a


and


322




b


and valve housings


320


,


320




a


and


320




b


, engine


310


′ has valves


372


that rotate within housing recesses


370


, just as valves


22


and


22


′ rotate within housing recesses


20


and


20


′ of embodiment


10


. Unlike valves


22


and


22


′, however, valves


372


are not circular disks. Instead, valves


372


are shaped to maintain rolling contact with outer surface


340


of rotor


314


. Specifically, the axial profiles of each valve


372


includes a first arcuate portion


374


and a second arcuate portion


376


. Arcuate portion


374


is shaped to maintain rolling contact with outer surface


340


along portions


378


thereof whose radial distances from the rotational axis of rotor


314


are constant, and arcuate portion


376


is shaped to maintain rolling contact with outer surface


340


along portions


380


thereof whose radial distance increases monotonically (preferably linearly) between portions


378


and apices


319


, and also along apices


319


.

FIG. 10A

shows arcuate portions


374


in contact with portions


378


.

FIG. 10B

shows arcuate portions


376


in contact with apices


319


.





FIG. 11

is a transverse cross-section of a second variant


410


of the fourth embodiment of the engine of the present invention. Within a housing


412


rotates a rotor


414


that is rigidly attached to a central drive shaft


413


that is coaxial with housing


412


and with rotor


414


. Housing


412


and rotor


414


define between them a toroidal chamber


416


. Two pistons


418


project from rotor


414


into chamber


416


. On one side of housing


412


is a housing recess


420




a


that accommodates a disk-shaped valve


422




a


that rotates within housing recess


420




a


. On one side of housing recess


420




a


is an air inlet port


436


. On the other side of housing recess


420




a


is an exhaust port


438


. On the other side of housing


412


are two housing recesses


420




b


and


420




c


, each of which accommodates a disk-shaped valve


422




b


,


422




c


that rotates within its respective housing recess


420




b


,


420




c


. Like valves


22


and


22


′, valves


422




a


,


422




b


and


422




c


rotate within their respective housing recesses in directions opposite to the direction of rotation of rotor


414


. Each valve


422




a


,


422




b


and


422




c


includes a valve recess


424




a


,


424




b


and


424




c


, respectively. The outer diameter of rotor


414


is twice the diameters of valves


422




a


,


422




b


and


422




c


. Valves


422




a


,


422




b


and


422




c


rotate twice for each rotation of rotor


414


, so that the surfaces of valves


422




a


,


422




b


and


422




c


and of rotor


414


that are in mutual contact do not slide relative to each other. Valve recesses


424




a


,


424




b


and


424




c


accommodate pistons


418


as pistons


418


move past valves


422




a


,


422




b


and


422




c


. Valves


422




a


,


422




b


and


422




c


serve the same purposes as valves


322


,


322




a


and


322




b


of engine


310


, respectively. In particular, valve


422




b


and piston


418


define a compression region


426


in chamber


416


as piston


418


approaches valve


422




b


, and valve


422




c


and piston


418


define an expansion region


428


in chamber


416


as piston


418


departs from valve


422




c.






Rotor


414


includes and encloses, adjacent to each piston


418


, a disk-shaped combustion chamber


430


that rotates within a rotor recess


419


. Each combustion chamber


430


includes a combustion region


462


and an inlet/outlet port


464


. Each rotor recess includes a rotor inlet port


466


and a rotor outlet port


468


that open into chamber


416


.




Engine


410


operates in the same manner as engine


310


. As piston


418


approaches valve


422




b


, air that entered chamber


416


via air inlet port


436


is compressed in compression region


426


. Compression chamber


430


turns so that inlet/outlet port


464


faces rotor inlet port


466


to admit compressed air from compression region


426


into combustion chamber


462


. When piston


418


has almost reached valve


422




b


, fuel is injected into compression region


462


via a fuel injection port


432


. As piston


418


passes valve


422




b


, combustion chamber


430


rotates so that inlet/outlet port


462


faces away from piston


418


, as shown in

FIG. 10

, and an ignition source (not shown) ignites the compressed fuel-air mixture. After piston


418


has passed valve


422




c


, combustion chamber


430


rotates so that inlet/outlet port


464


faces rotor outlet port


468


, allowing the hot, high-pressure gases in combustion region


462


to emerge into expansion region


428


and push piston


418


and rotor


414


clockwise, as piston


418


expels spent gases from the previous cycle out of chamber


416


via exhaust port


438


. More fuel is injected via a fuel injection port


432


in expansion region


428


to continue combustion and maintain the expanding gases at least initially at approximately constant pressure. The rotations of rotor


414


, valves


420




a




420




b


and


420




c


, and combustion chambers


430


are synchronized by conventional mechanical linkages (not shown).





FIGS. 12A and 12B

are generalized illustrations of the mechanisms used in the present invention for thermal stabilization and for lubricating surfaces that are in sliding contact with each other. The mechanism illustrated in

FIG. 12A

is substantially the same as the one taught in U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366.

FIG. 12A

is a cross-section of a body


500


, such as valve


22


of

FIG. 4

or piston


318


of

FIG. 8

, the surface of one side


502


whereof is in sliding contact with a surface of another body. Body


500


is made of a heat-resistant material of high thermal conductivity, such as heat-resistant steel or titanium, and encloses a channel


504


for cooling water. Side


502


is covered with an outer lining


506


of a heat -resistant, low-thermal-conductivity material such a ceramic or a zirconium alloy. Side


502


is in the form of a labyrinth seal, as taught in U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366.





FIG. 12B

is a cross section of a body


510


, the surface of one side


512


whereof is in sliding contact with the surface of another body. Body


510


is made of a heat-resistant material of high thermal conductivity, such as heat-resistant steel or titanium, and encloses a channel


514


for a cooling fluid. Side


512


is covered with an outer lining


516


similar to lining


506


. Side


512


is fitted with blocks


518


of a heat-resistant material with a low coefficient of friction, for example, graphite or ceramic. Valve


22


of

FIG. 4

, which bears graphite blocks


42


, is a specific instance of body


510


.




While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, it will be appreciated that many variations, modifications and other applications of the invention may be made.



Claims
  • 1. An engine, comprising:(a) two axially adjacent housings; (b) for each of said housings: a rotor, rotatably mounted within said each housing, said rotor and said each housing defining between them a toroidal chamber, said rotor including a piston projecting into said toroidal chamber, said piston including a leading face and a trailing face, said rotors of said two housings being joined so that said rotors rotate together within said two housings; and (c) for each said housing, at least one valve, movably mounted within said at least one housing, one of said at least one valve of a first of said two housings being axially adjacent one of said at least one valve of a second of said two housings, a combustion region of substantially constant volume being bounded by said leading face of said piston of a first of said two housings and by said trailing face of said piston of a second of said two ho usings as said piston of said first housing approaches said one of said at least one valve of said first housing and said piston of said second housing departs said one of said at least one valve of said second housing; and (d) an annular partition between said two housings, said annular partition including a port between said two axially adjacent valves; and wherein said rotor of said first housing and said rotor of said second housing each include a port between said piston of said first housing and said piston of said second housing, so that, as said piston of said first housing approaches said two axially adjacent valves and said piston of said second housing departs from said two axially adjacent valves, said ports of said rotors are adjacent said port of said annular partition, thereby combining a first region, in said toroidal chamber of said first housing, between said piston of said first housing and said two axially adjacent valves, and a second region, in said toroidal chamber of said second housing, between said piston of said second housing and said two axially adjacent valves, thereby forming said combustion region.
  • 2. The engine of claim 1, wherein each said housing includes at least one said piston and wherein each said housing includes at least as many of said at least one valve as said at least one piston.
  • 3. The engine of claim 2, wherein each said housing includes equal numbers of said at least one valve and said at least one piston.
  • 4. The engine of claim 1, wherein, in each said housing, said at least one valve includes a circular disk having a recess shaped to accommodate said piston as said piston moves past said at least one valve.
  • 5. The engine of claim 4, wherein, in one of said housings, one of said at least one valve cooperates with said one of said housings, with said rotor of said one of said housings, and with said piston of said rotor of said one of said housings to form a compression region as said piston approaches said one of said at least one valve.
  • 6. The engine of claim 4, wherein, in one of said housings, one of said at least one valve cooperates with said one of said housings, with said rotor of said one of said housings, and with said piston of said rotor of said one of said housings to form an expansion region as said piston departs from said one of said at least one valve.
  • 7. The engine of claim 1, wherein, in a first of said housings, one of said at least one valve cooperates with said first housing, with said rotor of said first housing, and with said piston of said rotor of said first housing to form a compression region as said piston approaches said one of said at least one valve, the engine further comprising:(d) a mechanism for injecting fuel into said compression region.
  • 8. The engine of claim 7, wherein, in a second of said housings, one of said at least one valve cooperates with said second housing, with said rotor of said second housing, and with said piston of said rotor of said second housing to form an expansion region as said piston departs from said one of said at least one valve, the engine further comprising:(e) a mechanism for injecting fuel into said expansion region.
Parent Case Info

This is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/069,545, filed Apr. 30, 1998, abandoned, which is a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/946,986, filed Oct. 8, 1997, abandoned, which is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/743,434, filed Nov. 1, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,366, issued Aug. 25, 1998.

US Referenced Citations (8)
Number Name Date Kind
1311858 Fischer Jul 1919
1688816 Kraus Oct 1928
2062753 Linn Dec 1936
2273625 Concannon Feb 1942
3699930 Bunce Oct 1972
3921595 Saunders Nov 1975
3935840 Fisher Feb 1976
4203410 Ramer May 1980
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number Date Country
478430 Apr 1975 AU
2159066 Jun 1973 DE
52-40682 Oct 1977 JP
WO 9321423 Apr 1993 WO
Continuations (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 09/069545 Apr 1998 US
Child 09/146362 US
Parent 08/946986 Oct 1997 US
Child 09/069545 US