The invention refers to a ventilation device for the fuel tank of a vehicle. The ventilation device comprises a ventilation valve arranged in the fuel tank for aeration and ventilation purposes. Within the housing of the ventilation valve, an aeration and ventilation opening has been placed, which for simplification purposes will be subsequently named ventilation opening. The ventilation valve is located in an upper tank wall, and in this case the ventilation opening is connected to the ambient air. This ventilation valve has been designed as a float valve—in other words, a float that carries a sealing element and works together with the ventilation opening located in the float valve's housing that has been placed so it can move from a closed position to a resting position. In its resting position, the float is arranged in a lower position of the housing and the sealing element is located away from the ventilation opening. Such valves are generally made for closing ventilation openings so fuel won't spill out, but they have the purpose of limiting the filling level of the fuel tank. During the filling up process (which takes place through a filling pipe found in the fuel tank), the float is lifted by the lifting forces exerted by the rising fuel. When it finally reaches its closing position, it presses the sealing element with more or less substantial force against the ventilation opening. From that moment on, the gas displaced by the fuel flowing into the tank—by this we mean a fuel-air mixture—can no longer escape the tank through the ventilation valve or the ventilation opening. As a result of the fuel flowing into the tank, its level keeps rising at first, which leads to the overfilling of the tank. In other words, the fuel volume displaced by the float increases, so the floater now dips into the fuel more than is necessary, which causes the corresponding increase of the force being exerted on the sealing element. Finally, the fuel that flows through the filling pipe and into the tank rises and as soon as it reaches a certain level, the shut-off level, it causes the pump nozzle to shut off.
Due to the overfilling that goes on during the filling up process and sometimes also due to the slowly increasing pressure within the tank when the vehicle is running, the re-opening of the ventilation opening is coupled with hysteresis (re-filling hysteresis). This means that the ventilation opening will remain closed until the fuel reaches a lower level through consumption, the so-called opening level. Depending on the horizontal cross-sectional area of the fuel tank, this level will be reached only when several liters of fuel (at least 6, for example) have been consumed. This is not only disadvantageous because there is a potentially damaging inner pressure in the tank for a relatively long running period, but also because in the car rental business this effect makes it impossible to re-fill the car after short trips and gasoline consumption must then be paid either by the next customer or the car rental company.
With this assumption in mind, the task of the invention is to suggest a ventilation device for the fuel tank of a vehicle that will be able to overcome the disadvantages described above.
This task is solved by a ventilation opening according to claim 1 that comprises, as has already been mentioned, a ventilation valve equipped with a valve housing that has a ventilation opening. At least one inflow opening for letting gas in and fuel through has been arranged in an upper position of the valve housing, close to the ventilation opening, and there is at least one outflow opening in a lower position. Apart from them, there are no more openings in the housing area between the openings mentioned above. So no fuel can flow through the outflow opening and into the interior of the valve housing during the refilling process, a sealing element of a shut-off valve can close the valve housing. How the shut-off valve will work is basically unimportant. An electromagnetically activated valve could do the job, for example, but a valve equipped with a floating sealing element is preferred because this kind of valve works reliably with little manufacturing and mounting expense. The embodiment described above makes it possible for the fuel inside the tank to rise to a certain level that will be higher than the fuel or closing level needed for closing the ventilation opening within the valve housing. Since there is no fuel in the valve housing, the float remains in its resting position at first. Only when the fuel reaches the inflow opening located high above the closing level in the ventilation valve will it be able to flow into the interior space of the valve housing and lift the float to its closing position. The design described so far would have the advantage of allowing a higher fuel filling level in the tank's interior space (i.e. the advantage of taking better advantage of the tank volume). However, the disadvantage would be that a lot of fuel would have to be consumed while the vehicle is running to make the fuel level in the tank drop to a level in which the shut-off valve will release the outflow opening in the valve housing so the fuel can flow out into the tank's interior and the float can release the ventilation opening.
Additional design features now come into play that will substantially reduce the re-filling hysteresis: A storage container positioned in the tank's interior is connected to the interior of the valve housing through a connecting conduit in such a way that the fuel found therein can flow out into the storage container—in which case the flow cross-section of the connecting conduit is smaller than the opening cross-section of the inflow opening. The dimensions of the connecting conduit mentioned above ensure that the fuel flowing out into the storage container will lift the float to its closing position without having much effect on the closure of the ventilation opening. Once the ventilation opening has been closed, the rising fuel level in the filling pipe causes the pump nozzle to shut off. Furthermore, the flow cross-section of the connecting conduit has been designed in such a way that the fuel available in the interior of the valve housing will flow into the storage container within a certain time period (a few seconds, for example). The float will then move back to its resting position so that—depending on the available capacity of the storage container—several re-filling steps are possible.
Since the storage container has limited capacity, it must be emptied, and an emptying device has been designed for such purpose. It can be, for example, a suction device such as a suction system already found in the fuel tank that includes a sucking jet pump. However, it is better to empty the storage container via its outflow opening that can be closed with a sealing element of a shut-off valve.
Advantageous designs are given in the Sub-Claims, explained in more detail in the enclosed drawings that refer to the invention. These drawings show:
The ventilation valve 1 shown partially diagrammatically in the drawings has been placed on a mounting opening 2 in the upper wall 3 of a fuel tank 4. It is supported by a flange 5 located on the external side 6 of the wall 3 of the fuel tank 4. The flange 5 is interspersed with a ventilation opening 8 that serves to aerate and ventilate the tank interior 7 and carries a connecting piece 9 that is connected via a line 10 with an activated carbon container 13, in which case the latter is connected to the surroundings, for example, through a line 12. The connecting piece 9, the lines 10 and 12, the activated carbon container 13 and the conduit 14 are components of the ventilation system of the fuel tank 4.
A housing 14 that includes a valve housing 15 and a storage container 16 that are integral parts of the housing 14—which is preferably an injection mold part—has been placed on the lower side of the flange 5. However, the storage container can also be separately arranged within the fuel tank. The interior 17 of the storage container 16 is delimited from the interior 18 of the valve housing 15 by a dividing wall 21 and connected to the ventilation system of the fuel tank 4. The underside of the valve housing 15 and the storage container 16 is closed by a common bottom 19. A sealing element 20 that carries a float 23 moveable from a resting position (
The ventilation valve 1 has been designed in such a way that a gas exchange for aeration and ventilation purposes can only take place when the valve housing is in a position close to the upper tank wall 3 or to the ventilation opening 8. So this can take place, an opening is found in this area that will be known as an inflow opening 24 owing to a function explained in more detail below (namely to allow the inflow of fuel into the interior 7 of the valve housing 15). Additional openings that allow fuel to flow into the valve housing 15 do not exist. Although there are outflow openings 25 and 26 in the bottom 19 of the housing 14 (their function will be explained below), fuel is prevented from flowing into these openings by a shut-off valve 27 placed externally on the bottom 19. On its lower side it has an opening 28 through which fuel can flow into its interior 29. A sealing element 30 shaped like a circular disk floats in the interior 29. When the fuel level 33 rises from the approximate point shown in
An apron 37 placed at a radial distance from the inflow opening 24 and extending roughly vertically covers at least part of the opening area of the inflow opening 24 and is, for example, molded on the flange 5 or on a lid 38 that closes the housing 14. With respect to the mounting state of the ventilation valve 1, the lower edge 39 of the apron 37 runs mostly along a horizontal plane or a plane perpendicular to the middle longitudinal axis 40 of the valve housing 15. The apron 37 is molded on the lateral peripheral areas 43 of the inflow opening 24 or those opposite them in the circumferential direction of the valve housing 15 (see
A fuel tank 4 equipped with a ventilation valve 1 of the kind described above works as follows: When, for example, the fuel level 33 starts rising from the scenario shown in
As can be seen especially clearly in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 030 039.7 | Jun 2007 | DE | national |
10 2007 050 970.9 | Oct 2007 | DE | national |