Applicant claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of Austrian Application No. A 1241/2004 filed Jul. 21, 2004. Applicant also claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §365 of PCT/AT2005/000256 filed Jul. 8, 2005. The international application under PCT article 21(2) was not published in English.
The invention relates to a two-stroke internal combustion engine with at least one cylinder, comprising a crankcase flow-connected to the cylinder by at least one transfer passage and provided with an air intake manifold and comprising an injection device for optional introduction of a fuel into the cylinder or the crankcase.
To reduce the scavenging losses in two-stroke internal combustions engine with fuel-air mixing by injection of fuel into the fresh air drawn into the crankcase, the fuel can either be injected into the cylinder in the region of the transfer passage, in the case of transfer of the air drawn into the crankcase, or be injected directly into the cylinder. In both cases delayed fuel injection is possible to reduce the scavenging losses. Delayed fuel injection is accompanied by incomplete fuel-air mixing however, and this leads to reduced engine speed strength and incomplete combustion. To avoid these drawbacks it has already been proposed (U.S. Pat. No. 4,779,581 A) to inject the fuel, as a function of the engine loading or the engine speed, either into the air drawn into the crankcase or into the cylinder through the transfer passage in the discharge region thereof. For this purpose a respective injection nozzle is arranged in the air intake manifold of the crankcase and in the mouth region of the transfer passage, with the injection nozzle being controlled, optionally as a function of the engine speed, by a controller, so with high engine speeds the fuel is injected via the injection nozzle into the air drawn into the crankcase in the air intake manifold for fuel-air mixing, but at low speeds is injected via the cylinder-side injection nozzle into the combustion air transferring from the crankcase into the cylinder. The drawback of this known injection device however is the construction expenditure which results due to the injection nozzles that are associated with the crankcase on the one hand and the cylinder on the other.
The object underlying the invention is therefore to configure a two-stroke internal combustion engine of the type described in the introduction such that fuel-air mixing dependent on engine loading is possible in either the crankcase or the cylinder, without the increased construction expenditure as a result of separate injection nozzles having to be accepted.
The invention achieves the stated object in that the injection device comprises at least one injection nozzle which is oriented toward the inlet region of the transfer passage issuing from the air intake manifold and can be controlled as a function of the direction of movement of the piston and the controller of the transfer passage.
The conveying distance of the injected fuel depends, according to the orientation of the injection nozzle in the direction of the inlet region of the transfer passage issuing from the air intake manifold, on the air flow prevailing in the region of the injection nozzle and therewith on the direction of movement of the piston and control of the transfer passage through the piston. If, during the compression stroke of the piston, air is drawn into the crankcase by way of the air intake manifold, the fuel injected toward the inlet region of the transfer passage is carried along with the drawn-in air into the crankcase for fuel-air mixing. However, in the case of fuel injection at the end of the power stroke of the piston, the fuel, when the transfer passage is open, is carried along with the air conveyed from the crankcase via the transfer passage into the cylinder, so air-fuel mixing can take place in the transfer passage and in the cylinder in a delayed manner for scavenging. By selecting the injection interval as a function of the direction of movement of the piston and the controller of the transfer passage, fuel-air mixing can take place, depending on the engine speed or the engine loading, inside the crankcase or outside it in order to keep the scavenging losses low on the one hand and to ensure good speed strength on the other hand.
Particularly simple construction conditions result in this connection if the injection nozzle is arranged on the peripheral side of the air intake manifold opposing the inlet region of the transfer passage. In this case the spray cone of the injection nozzle extends transversely to the air intake manifold, and this creates advantageous flow conditions for carrying along the injected fuel both when drawing the air into the crankcase and when transferring the drawn-in air into the cylinder.
A construction variant results if the injection nozzle ends in the transfer passage at a spacing from the inlet region and is oriented counter to the transfer direction. The fuel injected into the transfer passage in the opposite direction to the air flow results in particularly intimate mixing with the transferring air which introduces the fuel into the cylinder counter to the injection direction. When the transfer passage is closed the injected fuel passes into the inlet region of the transfer passage and is conveyed with the drawn-in air into the crankcase for fuel-air mixing.
A further possibility of forming the fuel-air mixture as a function of the engine speed or the engine loading inside or outside the crankcase is characterised in that the injection device comprises at least one injection nozzle that ends in the cylinder between the two dead centres of the piston and that can be controlled as a function of the stroke position of the piston, and in that, at the peripheral side facing the injection nozzle, the piston comprises a jacket opening for injecting fuel into the crankcase. The conveying distance of the injected fuel depends on the selected injection interval in this case as well. If the fuel is injected in an upper stroke position region of the piston, the fuel passes through the jacket opening located in the region of the spray cone of the injection nozzle onto the piston side facing the crankcase and is introduced into the crankcase by the piston for fuel-air mixing in order to then be supplied to the cylinder via the transfer passage in an appropriately processed mixture. If, however, injection takes place in a lower stroke position of the piston, which frees the injection nozzle, the fuel is injected directly into the cylinder in order to mix with the air transferring from the crankcase for delayed fuel-air mixing. It is therefore apparent that with such an arrangement of the injection nozzle, fuel-air mixing inside or outside the crankcase can be selected by control of the injection nozzle as a function of the stroke position of the piston.
The subject matter of the invention is illustrated by way of example in the drawings, in which:
The two-stroke internal combustion engine according to
An injection nozzle 11 which is controlled by a controller (not shown) is used for injecting fuel. This injection nozzle 11 is arranged on the side of the air intake manifold 4 that opposes the inlet region 12 of the transfer passage 3 and is oriented in the direction of the inlet region 12 of the transfer passage 3. If the injection nozzle 11 is controlled, according to
For higher speeds and full loading good fuel-air processing in the crankcase takes effect if the injection interval is shifted into the intake phase of the air into the crankcase 2 according to
In contrast to the embodiment according to
According to the embodiment of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 1241/2004 | Jul 2004 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/AT2005/000256 | 7/8/2005 | WO | 00 | 1/22/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/007614 | 1/26/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080083381 A1 | Apr 2008 | US |