1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a valve for metering a fluid, in particular for the injection of fuel in a fuel-injection system of internal combustion engines.
2. Description of the Related Art
A known valve for metering a fluid (described in published German patent application document DE 10 2009 026 532 A1) has an intake, accommodated in a connecting piece, for the fluid, a metering orifice formed in a valve body, for metering a dosed fluid quantity with the aid of a valve needle which closes and opens the metering orifice and is controlled by a piezoelectric actuator and a valve-closure spring, and an elongated, hollow-cylindrical flow channel which leads from the intake to the metering orifice. The connecting piece and the valve body are fixed in place inside a valve housing and seal it at a housing end in fluid-tight manner in each case. An elongated sleeve extends between the connecting piece and the valve body, coaxially with respect to the valve housing; the sleeve is mounted on the connecting piece and valve body via its two sleeve ends and accommodates a valve subassembly, which is made up of the piezoelectric actuator and a hydraulic coupler. The annular gap remaining between sleeve and valve housing constitutes the hollow-cylindrical flow channel for the fluid, so that the inner channel wall of the flow channel is formed by the sleeve, and the outer channel wall of the flow channel is formed by the valve housing. Installed immediately upstream of the metering orifice in the valve body is a valve chamber, which is connected to the flow channel via a radial intake bore introduced in the valve body, while a connection from the flow channel to the intake is provided in the connecting piece.
It has become obvious that pressure surges arise when metering the fluid, which is normally under high pressure, i.e., when opening and closing the valve; these pressure surges generate hydraulic vibrations which in turn excite the add-on structure at the valve to vibrations and lead to noticeable and undesired noise development. The shape of the fluid volume, predefined by the elongated hollow-cylindrical flow channel, generates pronounced hydraulic resonances across the entire length of the valve, which link quite readily to installation-related structural longitudinal resonances of the valve of typically 3 kHz.
The valve according to the present invention has the advantage that because of the subdivision of the flow channel into a plurality of channel sections which are separated from each other, and because of the production of a flow connection between the channel sections that follow one another in the flow direction, the hydraulic resonances resulting from the structural shape are able to be influenced to such an extent that an excitation of critical installation-related structural modes no longer occurs, i.e., hydraulic resonances within the critical frequency range of typically 3 kHz are no longer able to arise. In the least complicated case, the flow channel is subdivided into two channel sections, which means that the fluid volume is subdivided into two partial volumes, halfway in the flow duct. Depending on the required frequency shift, other division ratios or also a plurality of subdivisions of the flow channel at different division ratios are possible.
According to one advantageous specific embodiment of the present invention, the subdivision of the flow channel and the creation of the flow connection between the channel sections is realized in that a ring with a ring gap and a ring thickness or radial annular wall dimension that corresponds to the radial channel width is inserted at at least one channel location in the flow channel. Such a ring advantageously has a rectangular or circular cross-section and is made from a band or wire having a rectangular or circular cross-section. The ring is fixed in place in the flow channel, preferably by a form-locking insertion of the ring in at least one annular groove introduced in the inner and/or outer channel wall of the flow channel.
According to one advantageous specific embodiment of the present invention, two rings are disposed at a short distance one after the other at at least one location inside the flow channel. The rings are advantageously aligned in such a way that their annular gaps are rotated relative to each other in the circumferential direction, preferably by 180°. This structural placement of the rings has the advantage of producing an intermediate volume of the fluid between two consecutive channel sections.
According to one alternative specific embodiment of the present invention, the subdivision of the flow channel and the flow connection between the produced channel sections are realized in that the cross-section is constricted at at least one location in the flow channel. This cross-section constriction is advantageously achieved in that a nose, which extends around the channel wall periphery, projects into the flow channel from at least one of the two channel walls of the flow channel, the nose advantageously being realized by a recess worked into the channel wall. Such a peripheral constriction of the flow cross-section of the flow channel has the advantage that the cross-section of the constriction varies as a function of the fluid pressure, that is to say, that it increases with increasing pressure. When the pressure is reduced, a more effective subdivision of the fluid volume than at high pressure therefore exists, so that at high pressure (higher engine load), a possibly existing adverse effect on the valve operation is advantageously reduced as a result of the fluid volume subdivision. The operating points having high pressure are generally non-critical with regard to noise generation and thus do not require any noise countermeasures anyway.
The valve for metering a fluid, shown in longitudinal section in
Valve housing 14 is sealed in fluid-tight manner by a connecting piece 16 at its one end face, and by a valve body at its other end face. Connecting piece 16 includes intake 11, whereas metering orifice 12 is developed in valve body 17. Sleeve 15 is fixed in place in fluid-tight manner at connecting piece 16 via its one sleeve end, and on valve body 17 via its other sleeve end. Integrated into sleeve 15 is a valve assembly, which is made up of a hydraulic coupler 18 gimbal-mounted on connecting piece 16, a piezoelectric or magnetostrictive actuator 19 connected to coupler 18, and a valve closure spring 20 braced on valve body 17. Actuator 19 and valve closure spring 20 engage with opposite effective directions at a valve needle 21, which is guided inside valve body 17 in axially displaceable manner and controls metering orifice 12 together with a closing head 22, which cooperates with a valve seat 23 surrounding metering orifice 12.
Via a contact bridge 24, actuator 19 is connected to an electrical plug connector 25; when a current is supplied, it lifts off closing head 22 of valve needle 21 in the outward direction, counter to the restoring force of valve closure spring 20. When the current is switched off, valve closure spring 20, which is tensioned via valve needle 21 when metering orifice 12 is open, presses closing head against valve seat 23 again, so that metering orifice 12 is closed. The connection between flow channel 13 and metering orifice 12 within valve body 17 is realized by a valve chamber 26 immediately upstream of metering orifice 12, and by a radial bore 27 which leads from flow channel 13 to valve chamber 26, whereas flow channel 13 is connected to intake 11 by a connecting bore 33 introduced in connecting piece 16.
In order to influence the afore-described hydraulic resonances resulting from the structural design in such a way that an excitation of critical structural modes caused by the installation is no longer able to take place, flow channel 13 having an annular flow cross-section is subdivided into at least two channel sections 131, 132 which are separated from each other, and a flow connection for the fluid is created between channel sections 131, 132. In the simplest case, flow channel 13 is subdivided using a 1:1 ratio. However, depending on a desired frequency shift, other ratios and the subdivision of flow channel 13 into more than two channel sections may be required.
The subdivision of flow channel 13 into two or more channel sections and the creation of the flow connections between the channel sections at one or multiple channel locations may be realized in different ways.
In section A of flow channel 13, shown in enlarged form in
In the two exemplary embodiments of
In the exemplary embodiment of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2012 203 607.5 | Mar 2012 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/051803 | 1/30/2013 | WO | 00 |