This application is a 371 application of International Application No. PCT/GB06/00677 filed Feb. 27, 2006, which claims priority to United Kingdom Patent Application No. 0504058.9 filed Feb. 26, 2005. Each of the foregoing applications is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
This invention relates to the hydraulic actuation of intake and exhaust valves in an internal combustion engine. Many camless, i.e. direct valve actuation techniques have been developed, most of which work on a common rail basis, if they are hydraulic or pneumatic, or electro-magnetically if they are not. Other means have been developed to change the phase relationship of conventional camshafts with the crankshaft over the speed range. Solenoid venting valves have been used in conjunction with hydraulic tappets to keep valves closed, thereby disabling cylinders for improved part load efficiency. The approach described here is fundamentally different. Its objectives are the same as the other camless techniques but it aims to achieve them with much reduced parasitic power loss and complexity.
The fluid-working machine described in EP-B-361927 uses cycle-by-cycle mode selection of its positive displacement pumping chambers. We have discovered that an extension of this technique to control the phasing and duration of a cyclic linear fluid actuation, working at the frequency of the input shaft, can be used to open and shut intake and exhaust valves in internal combustion engines.
The invention provides a valvetrain control arrangement according to the independent claim. Preferred or optional features of the invention are defined in the dependent claims.
In the invention, a fluid-working machine has one or a plurality of working chambers of cyclically varying volume. Each chamber is independently connected to a piston actuator which is capable of moving an intake or exhaust valve in an internal combustion engine. The crankshaft of the fluid-working machine is driven at the same speed as the engine, and each working chamber is linked to the low-pressure manifold by a venting valve, the venting valve being normally open but electromagnetically closable by a signal from an electronic sequencing means which operates in timed relationship to the engine crankshaft phase.
Preferably the electronic sequencing means can operate in two modes, the first of which is normal timed operation, whereby the valves open and shut at optimal times during the engine cycle, the second being an idle mode where the sequencing means does not issue a signal to operate the poppet valve and so leaves it open throughout the engine cycle such that the intake and exhaust valves do not operate (and the engine cylinder does not admit or expel any working fluid) and where the fuel injector operation is suppressed.
Preferably, the electronic sequencing can change between operation modes on a rotation-by-rotation basis such that an idle stroke can immediately follow an active one and vice versa.
Preferably the electronic sequencing means can choose the time averaged ratio of idle to enabled cylinders according to the demanded power level such that the remaining enabled ones are used to produce more work and are, therefore, more efficient.
Preferably the electronic sequencing means can choose the sequence of idle cylinders to reduce engine torque pulsation using a “look ahead” algorithm which forecasts the future torque of previously enabled cylinders during the coming revolutions of the engine.
Preferably the electronic sequencing means can restart the four-cycle sequence for each cylinder at the beginning of each new revolution, if the previous revolution has been an idle mode, and thereby reduce the normal delay in achieving a power stroke such that torque control bandwidth is significantly improved.
Preferably the engine valve timing and duration can be adjusted to optimise engine efficiency and reduce emissions through a combination of varying both the phase relationship between the fluid-working machine and the engine and through the change of timing of the sequencing means of the electromagnetic valve.
For example, the electronic sequencing means can receive a signal representing a desired mechanical energy for a subsequent power stroke of the internal combustion engine, determines a lift time and an open duration for the intake valve which will admit an amount of air and fuel generating essentially said desired mechanical energy and actuates the corresponding venting valve to open the intake valve at that lift time and for that duration.
Moreover, the electronic sequencing means can determines a lift time and an open duration for the exhaust valve which will minimise emissions and maximise engine power and actuates the corresponding venting valve to open the exhaust valve at that lift time and for that duration.
A particular embodiment of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The complete system is shown in
Because the engine valve actuation occurs part way into the sinusoidal stroke, the transit time is very short in both the opening and closing directions.
Valve striking noise is limited through the use of fluid cushion dampers 24 within the actuator cylinder 25 at both ends of the actuator piston 21 stroke.
The valve timing and duration can be adjusted in two ways. The phase between the engine and the fluid-working machine crankshafts can be varied by a limited angle rotary actuator 2b in the coupling means or, if the machines are linked by a belt or chain, an idler on an arm, or eccentric, acting on the belt or chain between the sprockets, on its driven side, can be moved to deflect the path of the belt and so change the active length between the two machines. The timing of the closing of the electromagnetic valve 6 effectively selects the starting time of the valve opening, with the position of this valve actuation on the underlying piston motion determining the valve opening duration. Thus by combining the two adjustments the machine phase and the electromagnetic valve timing, both the starting time of the valve and its opening duration can be controlled.
In a four-stroke engine each valve is actuated for only one stroke in four, or every other revolution. The engine induction valve can be left closed, and the cylinder can be left idle without pumping loss, by leaving the electromagnetic valve open through the pumping stroke of the cylinder such that the actuator is never pressurised during alternate revolutions.
To efficiently regulate power output of the engine, the entire two-revolution cycle can be disabled or idled by keeping the intake and exhaust valves shut through both revolutions. The valve control strategy works in conjunction with a fuel injector which also cuts fuel supply to the idle cylinder. Preferably, the electronic sequencing can change between operation modes on a rotation-by-rotation basis such that an idle stroke can immediately follow an active one and vice versa.
The idling process can occur on a stroke-by-stroke basis so that the cylinder enabling philosophy, described in EP-B-361927, can be employed to an internal combustion engine. This allows the reduced number of enabled cylinders to work at much higher brake mean effective pressure, and efficiency, than would a full complement of partly-loaded cylinders. The electronic control of the valves, spark and the fuel injection allows the conventional four-stroke cycle to be interrupted and restarted on a rotation-by-rotation basis, thus effectively doubling the bandwidth of the engine speed control. This technique allows the torque pulses, created by disabling fixed banks of cylinders, to be significantly reduced. The controller can use a look-ahead algorithm on the currently enabled cylinders to forecast coming torque pulsations and so choose to enable cylinders which will act to oppose and reduce the crankshaft torsional pulse amplitude.
The independent claim 1 includes the word “comprising”, from which it should be understood that the control arrangement may consist exclusively of the components mentioned but may include further components.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0504058.9 | Feb 2005 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB2006/000677 | 2/27/2006 | WO | 00 | 3/28/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/090174 | 8/31/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4206728 | Trenne | Jun 1980 | A |
4716862 | Sauro et al. | Jan 1988 | A |
4898129 | Junghans et al. | Feb 1990 | A |
5190446 | Salter et al. | Mar 1993 | A |
5537976 | Hu | Jul 1996 | A |
6173684 | Buehrle et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6308690 | Sturman | Oct 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
35 20 215 | Sep 1986 | DE |
36 11 476 | Oct 1987 | DE |
0361927 | Apr 1990 | EP |
754 998 | Aug 1956 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080245322 A1 | Oct 2008 | US |