The invention relates to a volume flow control valve with a feedback-control function for ventilating the crankcase of an internal combustion engine in a housing between a crank chamber of a crankcase and an intake tract with at least two openings between the crank chamber and the intake tract.
In the prior art, so-called “PCV valves” have been proposed and used. “PCV” means “positive crankcase ventilation” and is a ventilation valve, especially a volume flow control valve or flow rate control valve, which is supposed to ensure, for example, that the engine, especially of an automotive, is well ventilated by allowing part of the intake air to escape through the crankcase via this ventilation at idling speed, and when the load is low. Contamination of the engine oil by condensates is to be reduced thereby.
Usually, a piston in this valve regulates an opening cross-section that controls the air flow to the intake manifold or intake tract by means of a spring so that only a defined small amount of gas is allowed to pass, and thus the pressure difference is controlled.
DE 20 2010 001 191 01 U1 describes a valve for controlling a gas flow, a liquid separator, a ventilation system, and an internal combustion engine having such a valve. This utility model relates to a valve for controlling a gas flow from a discharge side to a suction side of the valve, comprising a valve closure, especially a valve disk, a valve opening closable by means of a valve closure, and a valve bearing in which the valve closure is supported by a spring, characterized in that said valve closure has one or more gas passing openings from the discharge side to the suction side of the valve.
DE 10 2008 005 409 B4 relates to a valve for ventilating the crankcase of an internal combustion engine. The patent relates to a valve for ventilating the crankcase of an internal combustion engine, wherein the valve comprises a fresh-air side for connection with an intake section, an engine side for connection with the crankcase and a valve insert movable as a whole for changing the flow resistance through the valve, wherein said valve insert is held inside said valve without preload, wherein a negative pressure on the fresh-air side relative to the engine side causes free displacement of the valve insert to a ventilation limit-stop position, and excess pressure on the fresh-air side relative to the engine side causes free displacement of the valve insert to another limit-stop position, wherein the valve insert is designed to open a ventilation cross-section in the ventilation limit-stop position, and wherein said valve insert has a covering element for covering at least one passage opening in said valve, wherein said covering element opens said at least one passage opening in a limit-stop position, and in the other limit-stop position, which is an aeration limit-stop position, opens an aeration cross-section that is different from the ventilation cross-section, and at least one passage opening is provided between the fresh-air side and the engine side, which is open independently of the position of the valve insert, in order to supply fresh air through the passage opening to the crankcase in the aeration limit-stop position, and to discharge blow-by gas through the passage opening from the crankcase in the ventilation limit-stop position.
DE 40 22 129 C2 relates to a pressure-control valve to be incorporated in a ventilation duct on an internal combustion engine. The pressure-control valve is characterized in that an intermediate valve is arranged between the valve plate of the diaphragm and the first valve seat at the bottom of the housing, which intermediate valve has a second valve seat facing towards the diaphragm and cooperates with the valve plate of the diaphragm, and comprises a valve plate facing towards the valve seat of the bottom of the housing and cooperates with it, wherein said intermediate valve is provided on the diaphragm in such a way that an axial relative movement between the diaphragm and the intermediate valve is possible.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,308,798 A describes a metering valve for a crankcase ventilation system.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,111,138 A describes a crankcase ventilation regulator.
In a similar way, the gas flow and the pressure drop are controlled by pressure-control valves with an elastomer diaphragm and a compression spring, or with the above mentioned PCV valves with a piston and compression spring in the prior art (DE 10 2009 012 872 A1; U.S. Pat. No. 3,645,242 A).
In particular, compression springs have also been used for regulating a diaphragm or the piston with a correspondingly large mounting space required. The oil separation was arranged separately. However, these require more mounting space, wherein the high flow rate required by the valve was not utilized for droplet separation from the blow-by gas.
Accordingly, it has been the object of the present invention to limit the amount of gas for aerating or ventilating the crankcase, to regulate the reduced pressure in the crank chamber, optionally to separate the oil from the blow-by gas, and all this using a small and compact mounting space.
The present invention is illustrated and described herein with reference to the drawing, in which like reference numbers denote like method steps and/or system components, respectively, and in which:
In a first embodiment, the above object is achieved by a volume flow control valve with a feedback-control function for ventilating the crankcase of an internal combustion engine in a housing 2 between a crank chamber 1 of a crankcase and an intake tract 8 with at least two openings 5a, 5b, 6 between the crank chamber 1 and the intake tract 8,
characterized in that the cross-section of at least one first opening 5a, 5h is generally constant, and the cross-section of at least one second opening 6 is spanned by at least one spring sheet 3, said spring sheet 3 opens a lower volume flow at first through the second opening 6 when the pressure difference between the crank chamber 1 and the intake tract 8 increases, switches at a defined high pressure drop, the spring sheet 3 thus reducing the cross-section of the second opening 6 and ultimately closing it, that the volume flow is localized through the first opening 5a, 5b and is limited to a lower level, even if the pressure difference increases further.
The volume flow control valve according to the invention controls the gas flow, or the pressure difference between the ventilated crankcase or crank chamber 1, and the intake tract 8. The valve directs the gas from the crank chamber 1 through the intake tract 8 into the combustion room, but it also avoids that a high reduced pressure propagates into the crankcase during partial load operation in the intake tract 8, for example, in an Otto engine.
The present invention provides a gas and pressure control with a defined valve characteristic diagram and a small mounting space. With at least one spring sheet 3, the flowed-through cross-section of opening 6 between the crankcase 1 and the intake tract 8 is reduced, and thus the gas flow and the pressure drop are controlled.
Another advantage of the present invention resides in the fact that there is only one movable element, namely spring sheet 3.
Spring sheet 3 serves to control the flowed-through cross-section. For example, spring sheet 3 can be mounted in the region of crank chamber 1 under a defined bias 4 to open the way of the gas flow through the opening 6. If the pressure drop increases because of a higher suction pressure, the spring sheet 3 will move towards the wall of the housing 2 up to the point where the opening 6 is completely closed.
While the spring sheet has the constant opening 5a in
Thus, in contrast to valves having a similar mechanism, the control function is represented by at least one spring sheet 3 in the volume flow control valve according to the invention, which reduces the size of at least one opening 6 or one corresponding gap when the pressure loss increases (from range 11 through 12 and 13 in
In another preferred embodiment of the present invention, the volume flow control valve is characterized by having at least one flow barrier 9 for deviating the gas flow in the intake tract 8 downstream of the openings 5. The separation of oil from a blow-by gas into the structure according to the invention can be integrated thereby. Thus, the oil separation unit is arranged separately and is not a direct or necessary component of the valve, but a preferred component of the concept according to the invention, resulting in a separation of the oil droplets from the blow-by gas leaving the crankcase.
Therefore, the characteristic pressure loss/volume flow curve according to
In
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2016 211 265 | Jun 2016 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2017/065080 | 6/20/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2017/220572 | 12/28/2017 | WO | A |
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International Search Report for International Application No. PCT/EP2017/065080 dated Sep. 27, 2017. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190271243 A1 | Sep 2019 | US |