Efficiency enhanced fuel molecule charging devices and methods
20170260934 · 2017-09-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F23K2300/101
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F23C99/001
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F23K5/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02M27/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Devices and methods are disclosed for charging fuel molecules in a delivery conduit. The devices are monopole charging devices having at least three individual magnets. A one piece orienting mount having insert formations equal in number to the number of magnets and spaced a selected distance from each other receives and holds the magnets, and is secured around the delivery conduit. The mount holds the magnets in an orientation with a common pole of each contacting the conduit and the opposite pole of each spaced from and facing away from the conduit.
Claims
1. A fuel charging device mountable at a length of non-ferrous fuel delivery conduit, said device comprising: an array of magnets including at least three individual magnets having positive and negative poles, each one of said magnets oriented and spaced in the array to be located at a different circumferential location around the conduit with a common pole of each contacting the conduit at its said different circumferential location, said magnets arrayed radially to define polar axes through about the center of the conduit and through said poles of each one of said magnets, each one said magnets located off polar axis of any other one of said magnets in said array.
2. The device of claim 1 wherein said common pole of said each of said magnets is said negative pole.
3. The device of claim 1 further comprising an orienting mount for maintaining orientation and spacing of said magnets in said array and for enabling securement of said array on the conduit.
4. The device of claim 1 wherein each of said magnets has a contact face at said common pole with at least about a 10 cm length, said contact faces oriented so that said lengths are positionable along the length of the conduit.
5. Claim 4 wherein the conduit is a tubular conduit, wherein said device faces are selectively arcuately formed along said lengths to provide close contact of said faces along said lengths with said tubular conduit.
6. The device of claim 4 wherein said conduit is provided with external planar facets equal in number and size to said faces of said magnets.
7. The device of claim 1 wherein each of said magnets is at least about a 4,100 gauss heat tolerant magnet, each of said magnets being either a permanent magnet or an electromagnet.
8. A monopole fuel molecule charging device for mounting on a fuel delivery conduit comprising: at least three individual magnets having positive and negative poles; a one piece orienting mount having insert formations equal in number to the number of said individual magnets and located adjacent to each other, each of said insert formations sized to receive and hold at least a part of one of said magnets therein; and each one of said magnets oriented in a different one of said insert formations of said mount with said poles of each of said magnets facing the same directions in said mount.
9. The device of claim 8 wherein said mount is formed of flexible non-ferrous material.
10. The device of claim 8 wherein said insert formations of said mount are u-channels each having a channel bottom, wherein said magnets are bar magnets, and wherein said positive poles of said magnets face their respective said channel bottom when mounted.
11. The device of claim 10 wherein said u-channels are arrayed substantially parallel to one another with a selected distance defined between each.
12. The device of claim 8 further comprising securement means for securing said mount having said magnets installed therein around the fuel delivery conduit with said magnets contacting the fuel delivery conduit.
13. The device of claim 12 wherein said magnets are arrayed in said mount to define polar axes through about the center of the pipe and through said poles of each one of said magnets once said mount is secured, with each one of said magnets located off polar axis of any other one of said magnets.
14. A fuel molecule charging method comprising the steps of: orienting a plurality of magnets having positive and negative poles with a common pole of each facing the same direction; and securing the magnets to a fuel delivery conduit adjacent to an area of fuel combustion so that the common pole of each of the magnets contacts the conduit and an opposite pole of each is spaced from and faces away from the conduit to thereby define a monopole magnet array around the conduit.
15. The method of claim 14 further comprising the step of locating the magnets at different circumferential locations around the conduit with the common pole of each contacting the conduit at its the different circumferential location.
16. The method of claim 14 further comprising the step of arranging and locating the magnets radially to define polar axes through about the center of the pipe and through the poles of each one of the magnets with each one the magnets located off polar axis of any other one of the magnets.
17. The method of claim 14 wherein each one of the magnets has an elongated face with a length at the common pole, and wherein the step of securing the magnets includes contacting the faces of the magnets so the lengths thereof are oriented along conduit length.
18. The method of claim 14 wherein the step of orienting a plurality of magnets includes orienting the magnets in a mount configured for maintaining orientation and spacing of the magnets, and wherein the step of securing the magnets includes securing the mount on the conduit.
19. The method of claim 17 wherein the conduit is tubular and wherein each one of the magnets has an elongated face with a length at the common pole, the method further comprising conforming the faces of the magnets to closely fit the tubular conduit along substantially the entire surfaces of the faces.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0016] The accompanying drawings illustrate a complete embodiment of the invention according to the best mode so far devised for the practical application of the principles thereof, and in which:
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DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0025] One preferred embodiment 11 of a fuel charging device of this invention mountable at a length of non-ferrous fuel delivery conduit 13 is illustrated in
[0026] Magnets 17 each have an elongated contact face 23 at common pole 21. Contact faces 23 are each preferably at least about 10 cm in length, the contact faces oriented so that the lengths are positionable along the length of conduit 13 (see
[0027] As shown in
[0028] Orienting mount 25 (as best illustrated for this embodiment in
[0029] Each of formations 27 is sized to receive and hold at least a middle part of one of magnets 17 therein with the poles of each of the magnets facing the same directions in mount 25. Mount 25 is formed of flexible material, preferably non-ferrous metallic sheet material (for example, aluminum) suitable to disperse heat and configured to secure the magnets against damaging vibrations. Non-metallic materials suitable to the task at hand could also be utilized. Where magnets 17 are bar magnets, formations 27 are preferably an array of substantially parallel u-channels having channel bottoms 31. In such case, the common poles 21 of magnets 17 (preferably most often the negative poles) are positioned at the open ends 33 of the u-channels while the opposite poles 35 (preferably most often the positive poles) face their respective channel bottoms 31 when mounted therein.
[0030] Device 11 may employ any suitable means for securing mount 25 and magnets 17 around fuel delivery conduit 13 with magnets 19 contacting the fuel delivery conduit as illustrated. Depending on the installation objectives, known securement devices could be utilized such as plastic ties 36 (where there is adequate ventilation such that excessive heat will present little problem) or metal straps (see
[0031] Turning to
[0032]
[0033] Thus in use, a plurality of magnets 17 are oriented with a common pole 21 of each facing the same direction and secured to a fuel delivery conduit 13 adjacent to an area of fuel combustion. The common pole of each of the magnets thereby achieves contact with the conduit. The opposite pole 35 of each magnet 17 is spaced from and faces away from conduit 13 to thereby define a monopole magnet array around the conduit. Device 11 should be secured to the main fuel conduit 13 as close as possible to the injector pump, carburetor, or combustion chamber. A device 11 is preferably mounted on each injector conduit.
[0034] As any fluid fuel passes through the monopole magnetic field, the fuel becomes similarly charged thus spreading the fuel more evenly throughout the air that the fuel is dispensed, injected or sprayed into. This results in a greater portion of each fuel molecule being burned providing a more efficient combustion which results in less unburned fuel and other general pollutants of combustion.
[0035] Orienting mount 25 may be formed using rotary die. It is then preferably anodized or provided with some other heat resistant coating to prevent the aluminum material from corroding or degrading. The magnet material is preferably Y9 to Y33 steel, preferably about a Y12 to Y14, which is strong, stable and highly resistant to vibration. The magnets can be made out of any material, for example neodymium, alnico, ceramic, ferrite, injection-molded composite of various types of resin and magnetic powders, flexible magnets composed of a high-coercivity ferromagnetic compound (usually ferric oxide) mixed with a plastic binder, rare-earth or rare-earth-free, lanthanoid, samarium-cobalt, neodymium-iron-boron (NIB), and all other types of permanent magnets, or any type of coil or non coil electromagnet where an available charge source can be tapped.
[0036] Alternative configurations of the devices of this invention include specially constructed conduits segments wherein magnets 17 are incorporated into the or inside conduit material or wherein magnets 17 are mounted inside the tubing. Other alternatives would see the magnets mounted inside the burner or injector or built into the burner, injector, pump, nozzle, dispenser, or the like.