METHOD FOR PRODUCING A HOLLOW VALVE FOR INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES
20220152690 · 2022-05-19
Inventors
Cpc classification
B21D22/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21K1/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21J7/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F01L2303/01
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B21H7/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B21K1/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D22/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The invention relates to a method for producing a valve body for a hollow valve. Said method comprises the following steps: providing a workpiece, blank or semi-finished product and a forming punch, introducing a protective layer between the workpiece and the forming punch (22) and press forming the workpiece to produce a preform. The invention also relates to a hollow valve produced by means of this method.
Claims
1-10. (canceled)
11. A method for producing a preform of a valve body of a hollow valve, comprising the following steps: providing a workpiece and a forming punch; inserting a powder comprising iron oxide or Ti—F as a protective coating between the workpiece and the forming punch; and compressive forming of the workpiece for creating said preform.
12. The method according to claim 1, wherein prior to inserting the protective coating, a step of generating a cavity in the workpiece is performed, into which cavity the protective coating is inserted.
13. The method according to claim 12, wherein the step of generating the cavity and/or compressive forming is performed by means of a hot forming process.
14. The method according to claim 11, including heating the powder to 1050-1200° C.
15. The method according to claim 11, wherein the powder or a powder combination is effective for increasing the cooling effect of a valve plate bottom of the valve body, which combines with the valve plate to form a cooling layer.
16. The method according to claim 11, wherein a valve stem and a valve head with a valve plate and a valve plate bottom is formed in a further method step, either by compressive forming or impact extrusion or forging.
17. The method according to claim 16, wherein a diameter of the valve stem is further reduced by necking, swaging, flow forming or axial feed transverse rolling of the preform with or without mandrel after spin extrusion in a further method step by cold, semi-hot or hot forming.
18. The method according to claim 11, wherein the workpiece is a blank or semi-finished product.
19. A hollow valve comprising a valve body, produced using the method according to claim 11.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0029] In the following, exemplary embodiments of the invention are described in more detail with reference to the drawings, in which
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033] In the following, identical reference signs are used both in the description and in the drawing for identical or similar elements or components. Furthermore, a list of reference signs list is included, which applies to all drawings. The embodiments shown in the drawings are merely schematic and do not necessarily represent the actual proportions.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0034]
[0035] Preferably, a blank 2 made of valve steel known to the person skilled in the art serves as a starting point, see
[0036] The blank 2 is deformed into a bowl-shaped semi-finished product (or workpiece) 4 shown in
[0037] Instead, the bowl-shaped semi-finished product 4 can be provided directly; the method then starts with providing the bowl-shaped semi-finished product 4 shown in
[0038] In a subsequent deforming step, the valve head 12 is formed from the bottom section 10. A preform 6 of the valve body obtained in this manner is shown in
[0039] Both the deforming of the blank 2 into a bowl-shaped workpiece 4 and the forming of the valve head 12 from the bottom section 10 can be performed by means of a hot or cold forming method, for example. Impact extrusion or forging is preferably used. In impact extrusion, a punch is pressed into the blank 2 or the semi-finished product 4 to form the cavity 8 or the valve head 12, i.e. it is essentially a reverse extrusion or transverse extrusion (of a bowl). The preform 6 can also be formed directly from the blank 2 in a single deforming step, e.g. by means of forging or impact extrusion.
[0040] In the next processing step, from
[0041] For this purpose, the flow forming or cylinder flow forming process can be performed on a flow-forming mandrel 22. During the flow forming process, the preform rotates and at least one forming roller 24, 26, which rotates along by means of frictional engagement, is pressed against the outside of the tubular wall and moved in the axial direction, such that it causes the plastic shape to change. The associated incremental deforming leads to an advantageous work hardening of the machined steel. Overall, the wall thickness of the tubular wall decreases while at the same time the axial length of the tubular wall increases. If necessary, the at least one forming roller is displaced several times in the axial direction until the desired length increase or wall thickness reduction is achieved. In this case, the radial distance of the at least one forming roller from the axis of the tubular wall is successively reduced during consecutive passes.
[0042] Due to the flow-forming mandrel 22 used therein, the flow forming process essentially results in an elongation of the tubular wall 14, wherein the outer diameter of the same decreases a little (corresponding to the decrease in wall thickness). If a larger decrease in the outer diameter is desired, it is also possible to perform a flow forming process with multiple forming rollers without flow-forming mandrel.
[0043] If dimensions of the preform 6 and parameters of the flow-forming process are selected such that the length of the tubular wall 14 achieved by means of the flow forming process, the outer diameter achieved by means of the flow forming process, and an inner diameter of the tubular wall 14 of the preform (which corresponds to a diameter of the flow-forming mandrel) correspond to the desired dimensions of the hollow valve to be produced, a valve body 16 for a hollow stem valve can be obtained in this way (see
[0044] Finally (from
[0045] The reduction of the outer diameter of the tubular wall 14 can be carried out by swaging or necking (diameter reduction by constriction), wherein swaging is preferred. In the case of swaging, it is important that no further deforming step of the valve body 18 for a hollow head valve takes place after the swaging to reduce the outer diameter of the tubular wall 14, as this would worsen the positive material properties obtained by swaging. Thus, swaging is the final deforming step in this case.
[0046] Swaging is an incremental compressive deforming process in which the workpiece to be machined is hammered in rapid succession from different sides in a radial direction. Due to the resulting pressure, the material ‘flows’, so to speak, and the material structure is not distorted by tensile stresses. Swaging is preferably carried out as a cold deforming process, i.e. below the recrystallisation temperature of the processed material. Thus, a significant advantage of the use of swaging as a final deforming step is that compressive stresses are induced during swaging by the radial application of force, whereby the occurrence of tensile stresses, which increase the susceptibility to cracks, is prevented; this applies in particular to the surface layers of the hollow stem. Swaging thus works together with the preceding, also incremental deforming process of flow forming in an advantageous manner, such that optimal material properties, e.g. strength, can be achieved.
[0047] Further advantages of swaging as a final deforming step—compared to extrusion processes or necking—are a better possible surface quality and a comparatively greater diameter reduction of the stem per step. Due to the high possible surface quality and the fact that the tolerances which can be maintained during swaging are very low, a post-processing of the valve stem is usually not necessary. Free deforming processes or compression processes—such as necking—generally only result in a worse surface quality or wider tolerance ranges. Accordingly, no further method step for reducing the outer diameter of the tubular wall should be carried out particularly by means of extrusion or necking after swaging.
[0048] To complete the production process of the hollow valve, a cooling medium, e.g. sodium, can be filled into the cavity of the valve body via the outwardly open end of the valve stem, and subsequently this end of the valve stem can be closed, e.g. by a valve stem end piece, which is attached, for example, by means of friction welding or another welding process (not shown in the drawings).
[0049] The reduction of the outer diameter can be carried out in multiple partial steps (an intermediate step is shown, for example, in
[0050]
[0051] In an optional first step, a hollow space is introduced into the blank 2, at the point of the blank 2, where the later cavity 8 is to be created. This serves to create and centre the forming punch 22 on the blank 2 or to simplify the following production step. Thus, a workpiece is created as a semi-finished product 4 with cavity, as shown in
[0052] As shown in
[0053] The actual step of spin extrusion begins with the attachment of the forming punch 22 (and the forming rollers 24, 25, 26) centrically to the front side 3 of the workpiece 2, 4, as shown in
[0054] To produce the preform 6, the spindle displaces the workpiece 2, 4 in a rotation 33 about its longitudinal axis. Therein, the forming punch 22, which can also be described as a compression punch or flow-forming mandrel, may rotate along with the workpiece 2, 4, e.g. by frictional engagement or by means of a drive. Alternatively, the forming punch 22 can also not rotate, but only move axially. In the latter case, it would be expected that a lot of heat is generated. If the three forming rollers 24, 25, 26 (synchronised forming rollers), which are arranged equidistant to each other, are pressed against the side wall 14 of the workpiece 2, 4 by a radial force 23 to be applied, they move about their axes (not about the rotational axis of the spindle 33) in a rotation 27 due to frictional engagement. The rotational direction 33 of the workpiece 2, 4 together with the workpiece holder 32 and (optionally) the forming punch 22, and the rotational direction 27 of the forming rollers 24, 25, 26 are indicated in the drawing by curved arrows.
[0055] The arrangement of forming punch 22 and the forming rollers 24, 25, 26 is moved uniformly and synchronously in the axial direction in the direction of the spindle. Alternatively, the workpiece 2, 4 can be moved against the tool arrangement. This leads to a plastic deformation of the workpiece 2, 4. The forming rollers and the axially acting forming punch work simultaneously. The forming punch 22 penetrates centrically into the workpiece and forms a tubular wall 14 of a bowl with an inner diameter corresponding to the outer diameter of the forming punch 22. The outer diameter of the tubular wall 14 is limited by the forming rollers 24, 25, 26. In addition, they simultaneously carry out a step of stretch forming by compression or rolling. The excess, displaced material of the workpiece 2, 4 flows away, such that the length of the tubular wall 14 increases in the axial direction (reverse extrusion of a bowl). The translational directions of movement 21 of the forming punch 22 and the forming rollers 24, 25, 26 are indicated by arrows in the drawing. The flow direction of the material of the tubular wall 14 is opposite to these.
[0056]
[0057] In an extended arrangement (not shown in the drawings), there is a radial and an axial offset between the forming rollers 24, 25, 26. Radial offset means that the radial distance of each forming roller 24, 25, 26 from the centre axis is different. Due to the axial offset of the forming rollers 24, 25, 26, the forming roller 24 closest to the workpiece strikes the workpiece 2, 4 first and modifies it, while more distant forming rollers 25, 26 impact the workpiece later, i.e. the places that have already been modified by the previous forming roller 24. Thus, the thickness of the tubular wall 14 can be stretch-formed gradually. Consequently, the forming roller 24 closest to the workpiece must have the greatest radial distance from the centre axis for the first stretch forming step, followed by the one with the second greatest radial distance, etc. In this manner, the method can be accelerated, as multiple radius or wall thickness reduction steps can be carried out in one pass. Instead of radial offsetting forming rollers of the same diameter, it also is possible to use forming rollers with different diameters.
[0058] Eliminating an axial offset of the forming rollers 24, 25, 26 (a radial offset would be pointless in this case), on the other hand, reduces transverse and torsional forces on the workpiece, which would be caused by axially offset rollers.
[0059] Alternatively, multiple sets (not shown) of forming rollers can be arranged. The forming rollers of each set 24, 25, 26 are arranged without offset. The sets are spaced apart in the axial direction and each set causes a partial stretch forming of the workpiece 2, 4. As a result, transverse and torsional forces on the workpiece are reduced/avoided compared to flow forming with a radial/axial offset, while the advantage of a gradual stretch forming and lower flow forces in the material of the workpiece is still realized.
[0060] The spin extrusion may result in a semi-finished product 4 with a bowl forming a cavity 8 (see
[0061] Advantageously, the spin extrusion process results in high productivity, good material utilization, low expenditure of time during the production, and a continuous deforming method. Material savings of up to 90% compared to deep-hole drilling can be achieved. At the same time, an undesired welding seam on the surface of the valve plate 12 is avoided.
[0062] Partial bulk forming methods, such as spin extrusion, are characterized by the fact that the material is not plasticized in the entire deforming volume, but in temporally and spatially limited increments. For this reason, a reduction in the punching force is possible compared to the reverse extrusion process for generating a bowl shape, while still being able to achieve about four times the length-to-diameter ratio.
[0063] Due to the high hydrostatic pressure component, the method is particularly suitable for high-strength materials. The tools used for spin extrusion have a low shape memory.
[0064]
[0065] Optionally, the method can be carried out in two stages. In that case, a hollow space with a cavity 8 is formed in a blank 2 or slug in a first step, in particular is forged, in particular by means of hot forming. The cavity can have different shapes. In a second step, a protective coating 41 is introduced into the cavity. Alternatively, without executing the first step described above, a protective coating 41 can also be applied directly onto the contact surface between blank 2 and forming punch 22. For example, the material of the protective coating can be held in place by an appropriate die, which, for example, prevents the material from flowing out laterally.
[0066] Powder 40, in particular one made of the alloy Ti—Fe, can be used as the starting material of the protective coating 41, which is filled into the cavity or applied to the surface 3 of the blank 2.
[0067] After this preparation, the forging process can take place, in particular the extrusion process, in particular by means of hot forming, to produce the preform 6 (see also
[0068] This liquefied protective coating 41 hardens again during cooling and bonds to the workpiece, i.e. this special protective coating 42 remains in the finished valve.
[0069] Therefore, other powder combinations instead of Ti—Fe are also conceivable in order to increase the cooling effect of the valve plate bottom 10 by means of a cooling layer 42 in the finished valve.
[0070] Subsequently, the process chain is continued, e.g. the wall thickness 14 of the bowl can be reduced, as described in the description of
[0071] Different preforms 6 with different hollow shapes can be produced by shaping the moulding tool (forming punch 22). For example, the cross-section of the hollow form may be circular or have a driver profile such as a body of constant width, ellipse, polygon or axial-oriented splined and gearing profiles.
[0072] In particular, the method of providing the protective coating 41 can offer special advantages for the low-wear production using the extrusion method of spin extrusion described above, because simultaneously generating the cavity 8 by means of the forming punch 22 and applying pressure from the outside by means of the forming rollers 24, 25, 26 means that the tool load is higher than with conventional methods. Therefore, the low level of wear and tear is particularly (but not exclusively) important for this method.