The present disclosure relates to a variable-geometry turbine housing intake channel for an exhaust driven turbocharger for an internal combustion engine (ICE).
ICEs are often called upon to generate considerable levels of power for prolonged periods of time on a dependable basis. Many such ICE assemblies employ a boosting device, such as an exhaust gas driven turbocharger, to compress the airflow before it enters the intake manifold of the engine in order to increase power and efficiency.
Specifically, a turbocharger is a centrifugal gas compressor that forces more air and, thus, more oxygen into the combustion chambers of the ICE than is otherwise achievable with ambient atmospheric pressure. The additional mass of oxygen-containing air that is forced into the ICE improves the engine's volumetric efficiency, allowing it to burn more fuel in a given cycle, and thereby produce more torque and power.
A variable-geometry turbocharger (VGT) is a type of a turbocharger usually designed to allow the effective expansion ratio (E:R) of the turbocharger to be altered in line with engine speed, and thus facilitate increased ICE operating efficiency. Turbochargers using moveable vanes are the most common type of VGTs. VGTs using moveable vanes tend to be more common on compression ignition or diesel ICE's, as compared to spark ignition engines, because lower exhaust temperatures of diesel engines provide a less extreme environment for such VGTs' movable vanes and other sensitive, dimensionally precise components.
A variable-geometry turbocharger (VGT) for an internal combustion engine configured to generate a flow of post-combustion gases as a byproduct of generating output torque includes a turbine housing defining a volute. The VGT also includes a turbine wheel mounted on a shaft having a rotational axis, retained inside the turbine housing, and configured to be rotated about the rotational axis by the flow of post-combustion gases. The turbine housing defines an inlet to the turbine wheel downstream of the volute and upstream of the turbine wheel. The inlet to the turbine wheel includes a circumferentially continuous and unobstructed intake channel having a selectable cross-sectional area and configured to regulate effective expansion ratio of the VGT.
The VGT may also include a mechanism configured to select the cross-sectional area of the intake channel and includes a ring defined by an outer diameter surface and moveably mounted to the turbine housing in the intake channel to thereby define a moveable back wall of the intake channel.
The ring may be moveably mounted to the turbine housing in the intake channel via a precision fit and configured to slide along the rotating axis to thereby select the cross-sectional area of the intake channel.
The ring may be in threaded engagement with the turbine housing and configured to simultaneously rotate and translate relative to the turbine housing to thereby select the cross-section of the intake channel.
The turbine housing and the ring may have comparable coefficients of thermal expansion.
The VGT may also include a bearing housing having at least one bearing configured to support the shaft. In such a case, the ring may be mounted between the bearing housing and the turbine wheel when viewed along the rotational axis.
The volute of the turbine housing may include an internal cylindrical wall defined by a diameter, and the outer diameter surface of the surface may match the diameter of the internal cylindrical wall.
The outer diameter surface of the ring may have one of a rounded and a beveled edge configured to receive the flow of post-combustion gases from the volute and reduce turbulence in the flow of post-combustion gases.
The mechanism may additionally include an actuator configured to selectively vary a position of the ring relative to the turbine housing.
The mechanism may be configured to vary the position of the ring in a continuous and step-less motion.
The actuator may have either an electro-mechanical or a pneumatic configuration.
The mechanism may additionally include a controller having a memory and configured to regulate the actuator.
Another embodiment of the invention is directed to an internal combustion engine that employs the VGT as described above.
The above features and advantages, and other features and advantages of the present disclosure, will be readily apparent from the following detailed description of the embodiment(s) and best mode(s) for carrying out the described invention when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings and appended claims.
Referring to the drawings wherein like reference numbers correspond to like or similar components throughout the several figures,
As shown in
The ICE 10 also includes an induction system 24 configured to channel an airflow 26 from the ambient to the cylinders 14. The induction system 24 includes an intake air duct 28, a variable geometry turbocharger (VGT) 30, and an intake manifold (not shown). Although not shown, the induction system 24 may additionally include an air filter upstream of the VGT 30 for removing foreign particles and other airborne debris from the airflow 26. The intake air duct 28 is configured to channel the airflow 26 from the ambient to the VGT 30, while the VGT is configured to pressurize the received airflow, and discharge the pressurized airflow to the intake manifold. The intake manifold in turn distributes the previously pressurized airflow 26 to the cylinders 14 for mixing with an appropriate amount of fuel and subsequent combustion of the resultant fuel-air mixture.
As shown in
The inlet 52 includes a circumferentially continuous and unobstructed variable-geometry intake channel 54. The term “circumferentially continuous and unobstructed” as specifically defined herein denotes that the intake channel 54 provides a circumferentially open path to the flow of post-combustion gases 23 between the volute 50 and the turbine wheel 46 without any obstruction around the intake channel's outer circumference 54A that would break up or divide the intake channel into individual radial passages. The circumferentially continuous and unobstructed variable-geometry intake channel 54 is specifically contrasted with such VGT configurations that include discrete vanes or other devices for radially directing exhaust gas flow through the turbine housing 48 and toward the turbine wheel 46.
According to the present disclosure, the intake channel 54 has a variable or selectable cross-sectional area A for controlled passage of the flow of post-combustion gases 23. The selectable cross-sectional area A of the intake channel 54 is configured to alter the aspect ratio of the intake channel 54 and regulate effective expansion ratio (E:R) of the turbocharger in line with the speed of the ICE 10, and thus facilitate increased ICE operating efficiency. The expansion ratio of the VGT 30 is typically defined as the ratio of the pressure of a given mass flow rate of the post-combustion gases 23 pre-turbine wheel 46 to the pressure of the same mass flow rate of the post-combustion gases post-turbine wheel. The variable aspect ratio parameter is generally defined as the ratio of the width of a shape to its height. Such variable aspect ratio of the intake channel 54 facilitates regulation of the flow speed of post-combustion gases 23 and pressure generated thereby to vary rotational speed of the turbine wheel 46. Typically, if the aspect ratio is too large, the turbocharger will generate insufficient boost and exhibit response lag at lower engine speeds. On the other hand, if the aspect ratio is too small, the turbocharger will choke the engine at higher speeds, generate high exhaust manifold pressures, high pumping losses, and ultimately result lower engine torque output.
By altering the geometry of the turbine housing 48 as the ICE 10 accelerates, the aspect ratio of the intake channel 54 may be maintained such that the VGT 30 generates acceptable response and boost at low engine speeds and sufficient airflow and boost at higher engine speeds. Overall, the variable geometry intake channel 54 defines an open path around the entire outer circumference 54A and is characterized by an absence of any radially positioned obstruction therein, while still having a variable, i.e., selectable, cross-sectional area A and selectable aspect ratio of the inlet to the turbine wheel 46.
As shown, the VGT 30 includes a mechanism 56 configured to select the cross-sectional area A of the intake channel 54. The mechanism 56 may include a ring 58 moveably mounted to the turbine housing 48 in the intake channel 54. The ring 58 defines a moveable back wall of the intake channel 54 and is configured to slide along the rotating axis 40 to thereby regulate the cross-sectional area A of the intake channel. When viewed along the rotational axis 40, the ring 58 is translatably mounted between the bearing housing 44 and the turbine wheel 46. The mechanism 56 may be configured to vary the position of the ring 58 in a continuous, i.e., step-less motion. It should be noted that the specific configurations of the mechanism 56 shown in
The mechanism 56 may be configured such that the ring 58 has an infinite number of positions within a prescribed range R of motion relative to the axis 40. Accordingly, the entire prescribed range R of motion of the ring 58 is selected such that at least some of the flow of post-combustion gases 23 will pass through the intake channel 54 during operation of the VGT 30. Materials of the turbine housing 48 and the ring 58 may be specifically selected to have comparable coefficients of thermal expansion in order to reduce the likelihood of interference and sticking between the two components during VGT 30 operation at typical exhaust gas temperatures of the ICE 10. The mechanism 56 using the moveable ring 58 is intended to provide a robust and reliable VGT that may withstand not only the exhaust gas temperatures typically generated by diesel ICEs, but also the comparatively higher exhaust gas temperatures frequently generated by spark-ignition ICEs.
The ring 58 includes an outer diameter surface 58-1 for engagement with and sealing to the turbine housing 48. In one embodiment, the ring 58 may be substantially sealed to the turbine housing 48 along an internal cylindrical wall 48-1 configured as a guide channel 59A via a precision fit (shown in
The outer diameter surface 58-1 of the ring 58 may have either a rounded edge 59A (shown in
As shown in
The detailed description and the drawings or figures are supportive and descriptive of the invention, but the scope of the invention is defined solely by the claims. While some of the best modes and other embodiments for carrying out the claimed invention have been described in detail, various alternative designs and embodiments exist for practicing the invention defined in the appended claims. Furthermore, the embodiments shown in the drawings or the characteristics of various embodiments mentioned in the present description are not necessarily to be understood as embodiments independent of each other. Rather, it is possible that each of the characteristics described in one of the examples of an embodiment may be combined with one or a plurality of other desired characteristics from other embodiments, resulting in other embodiments not described in words or by reference to the drawings. Accordingly, such other embodiments fall within the framework of the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5231831 | Leavesley | Aug 1993 | A |
20110072815 | Pesiridis | Mar 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190010814 A1 | Jan 2019 | US |