This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(a)-(d) to German Patent Application DE 102005014093.3, filed Mar. 29, 2005.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for operating an internal combustion engine equipped with a piston pump as a high-pressure pump, which is driven by a drive shaft of the engine; the high-pressure pump delivers fuel from a low-pressure region to a high-pressure side and a quantity control valve sets the quantity of fuel delivered by the high-pressure pump.
2. Related Art
In direct-injection gasoline engines (GDI=gasoline direction injection), one-cylinder high-pressure pumps are used to raise the pressure from the preliminary pressure of the presupply pump (EFP=electric fuel pump) to the pressure required for the direct injection (50 to 200 bar). These one-cylinder pumps are operated with 2, 3, or 4 pump strokes per camshaft rotation, depending on the amount of fuel that the motor requires. Usually, the driving action is provided by a cam on the camshaft. During normal operation, each pump stroke is used and the required quantity is set, for example, by a quantity control valve. In other words, when operating in idle mode and in the partial load range, only part of the possible quantity per pump stroke is delivered.
EP-1327766-A2 has disclosed a method in which only a part of the delivery strokes is used at low supply quantities. The motivation for this is the better controllability at very low supply quantities. In this method, a fixed pattern of used and unused delivery strokes in relation to the camshaft rotation is set, e.g. only 2 out of 4 delivery strokes are used.
3. Problems of the Prior Art
When in delivery mode, the high-pressure pump generates structure-borne acoustic vibrations, which generate airborne sound that is perceived as acoustic noise. The method is intended to reduce the acoustic emission of the high-pressure pump and to change this acoustic emission so that it is not perceived as annoying.
This problem is solved by a method for operating an internal combustion engine equipped with a piston pump as a high-pressure pump, which is driven by a drive shaft of the engine; the high-pressure pump delivers fuel from a low-pressure region to a high-pressure side and a quantity control valve sets the quantity of fuel delivered by the high-pressure pump; the high-pressure pump functions in a two-point operation, alternating between full delivery for individual or successive piston strokes and idle delivery for individual or successive piston strokes and, when the pressure falls below a lower pressure threshold, the full delivery is activated until an upper pressure threshold is reached.
The term “full delivery” is understood to mean that the high-pressure pump delivers the maximum quantity, i.e. the quantity control valve remains closed during the entire piston stroke. The term “idle delivery” is understood to mean the exact opposite: the high-pressure pump does not deliver any fuel over the entire piston stroke, i.e. the quantity control valve remains continuously open. The term “partial delivery” is understood to mean a delivery quantity between idle delivery and full delivery; in this case, the quantity control valve is opened intermittently during the piston stroke of the piston pump so that a delivery quantity of between zero and the maximum delivery quantity can be achieved. The upper pressure threshold and the lower pressure threshold depend on the pressure in the accumulator required to reliably execute an injection. The two pressure thresholds can be identical and correspond to the desired pressure of the high-pressure side or can be slightly higher and lower, respectively, than the desired pressure.
An essential aspect of this method is to limit the frequency of delivery by the high-pressure pump to the absolute amount required. This is achieved by switching to two-point control in idle mode and executing each activated delivery with the maximum delivery quantity. This brings to bear the effect that a full delivery of the high-pressure pump is quieter than a partial delivery. The two effects cause the acoustic emission of this control method to be significantly lower than that of the method currently in use.
Preferably, the two-point operation is activated when the engine speed falls below a minimum speed and/or when the injection quantity falls below a minimum quantity. The decrease to below a minimum speed can, for example, be when the idling speed is reached. In one embodiment of the method, when not in idle mode, the high-pressure pump is operated with partial delivery.
The term “idle mode” here is defined on the one hand by a speed range typical of internal combustion engines and on the other hand by the speed requested by the driver during operation, for example when the gas pedal of an automobile is brought into the idle position. Other requests of the operator that signal idle mode as the requested engine speed include, for example, when the selector lever is moved into the park position in an automatic transmission or in an automated manual transmission.
In another embodiment of the method, after the upper pressure limit is reached, the high-pressure pump is switched to idle delivery until the pressure falls back below the lower pressure limit. The high-pressure pump is operated in the full delivery mode when the quantity control valve is closed and is operated in the partial delivery mode when the quantity control valve is intermittently or continuously open. The quantity control valve remains open down to a lower pressure threshold and, once the lower pressure threshold has been reached, remains closed until the upper pressure threshold is reached.
In another embodiment of the method, the quantity control valve is opened when the upper the pressure threshold is reached.
The problem mentioned at the beginning is also solved by an internal combustion engine equipped with a piston pump as a high-pressure pump, which is driven by a drive shaft of the engine; the high-pressure pump delivers fuel from a low-pressure region to a high-pressure side and a quantity control valve sets the quantity of fuel that the high-pressure pump delivers to the accumulator, characterized in that in idle mode, the high-pressure pump can be operated in full delivery mode and in idle delivery mode.
The problem mentioned at the beginning is also solved by a control unit for an internal combustion engine, characterized in that it is able to execute a method as described herein.
The problem mentioned at the beginning is also solved by a piece of software for a stored program control unit for an internal combustion engine, characterized in that it is able to execute a method as described herein.
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention will be explained in detail below in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
An internal combustion engine 10 according to FIG. 1—this can in particular be a direct-injecting gasoline engine—includes a fuel tank 12 from which an electrically driven prefeed pump 14 delivers fuel via a low-pressure line 16 to a high-pressure pump 18. The fuel travels onward via a high-pressure line 20 to an accumulator 22 (also referred to as the common rail) in which the fuel is stored at high pressure. The accumulator 22 has a number of injection devices 24 connected to it that inject the fuel directly into combustion chambers 26. The combustion of the fuel in the combustion chambers 26 sets a crankshaft 28 into rotation. Via a mechanical coupling 30 that is only depicted schematically in
When not in idle mode, the quantity control valve 44 is actuated so that each delivery stroke of the pump is used. The quantity is controlled by using partial strokes through intermittent opening of the quantity control valve 44, as described above. In idle mode, however, the operation switches over to a two-point control with full delivery. This means that a delivery and therefore the actuation of the quantity control valve 44 is only triggered if the pressure falls below a pressure threshold on the high-pressure side. In this operating state, the delivery is always executed as a full delivery so that the pressure in the high-pressure system increases by a relatively large amount. The injections that follow cause the pressure to decrease again steadily. But since the injection quantities are low in idle mode, it takes a relatively long time before the pressure falls below the lower pressure threshold that triggers the next delivery.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 014 093 | Mar 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/060251 | 2/24/2006 | WO | 00 | 10/5/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/103147 | 10/5/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080234916 A1 | Sep 2008 | US |