SWIRL SEAT NOZZLE
20220143633 · 2022-05-12
Inventors
- Heico Stegmann (Reichenberg, DE)
- Mathew J. Lloyd (Leeds, GB)
- Lukas Kaufmann (Tiefenthal, DE)
- Robert L. Holroyd (Halifax, GB)
Cpc classification
F02M61/163
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B05B1/3468
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05B1/3046
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B05B1/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An injector is provided, comprising: a valve seat having a needle opening extending from an upper surface along a longitudinal axis and terminating at a seating surface configured to mate with a valve needle to control flow of fluid through the injector, and a nozzle plate. The valve seat further comprises a plurality of drillings and a corresponding plurality of swirl channels, each of the plurality of drillings being in flow communication with the needle opening and a swirl channel. Each of the swirl channels directs flow of fluid from one of the drillings toward the longitudinal axis into a central swirl chamber. The nozzle plate includes a substantially flat upper surface that engages the valve seat lower surface and includes an opening in flow communication with a metering orifice, the opening being aligned with the central swirl chamber when the nozzle plate is attached to the valve seat.
Claims
1. An injector, comprising: a valve seat including a body having an upper surface, a lower surface, and a needle opening formed into the upper surface, the needle opening having at least one liquid passage and a needle bore sized to permit movement of a valve needle between a lowered position, wherein a lower end of the valve needle forms a seal with a seating surface in valve seat to prevent liquid from flowing out of the at least one liquid passage, and a raised position, wherein the lower end of the valve needle is spaced apart from the seating surface to permit liquid to flow out of the at least one liquid passage; and a nozzle plate including a body having an upper surface, a lower surface, and a metering orifice extending between the nozzle body upper surface and the nozzle body lower surface; wherein the valve seat body includes a plurality of drillings that extend at an angle relative to a longitudinal axis extending through the valve seat and the nozzle plate, the plurality of drillings having openings formed in the seating surface and being in flow communication with inlet portions of a plurality of swirl channels, the plurality of swirl channels being configured to deliver fluid from the plurality of drillings to a central swirl chamber in flow communication with the metering orifice, which delivers the fluid from the injector in the form of a spray.
2. The injector of claim 1, wherein the plurality of swirl channels is formed into the lower surface of the valve seat.
3. The injector of claim 2, wherein each of the plurality of swirl channels is defined by a wall that extends from an upper surface of the channel to the lower surface of the valve seat.
4. The injector of claim 3, wherein each of the plurality of swirl channels includes a milling extension to accommodate formation of a corresponding one of the plurality of drillings.
5. The injector of claim 3, wherein each of the plurality of drillings is formed directly into a corresponding inlet portion of a corresponding one of the plurality of swirl channels.
6. The injector of claim 3, wherein the upper surface of the valve plate is featureless except for an opening in flow communication with the metering orifice.
7. The injector of claim 1, wherein the plurality of swirl channels is formed into the upper surface of the nozzle plate.
8. The injector of claim 7, wherein one of the lower surface of the valve seat or the upper surface of the nozzle plate includes a registration post and another of the lower surface of the valve seat or the upper surface of the nozzle plate includes a registration bore configured to receive the registration bore to align the inlet portions of the plurality of swirl channels with the plurality of drillings of the valve seat.
9. The injector of claim 1, wherein each of the plurality of swirl channels includes a curved portion in flow communication with the inlet portion and an outlet portion in flow communication with the curved portion and the central swirl chamber.
10. An injector, comprising: a valve seat having an upper surface, a lower surface and a needle opening extending from the upper surface toward the lower surface along a longitudinal axis of the valve seat and terminating at a seating surface configured to mate with a valve needle to prevent flow of fluid from the needle opening when the valve needle is in a lowered position and to permit flow of fluid from the needle opening when the valve needle is in a raised position, the valve seat further comprising a plurality of drillings and a corresponding plurality of swirl channels, each of the plurality of drillings being in flow communication with the needle opening and a corresponding one of the plurality of swirl channels, each of the swirl channels directing flow of fluid from a corresponding one of the plurality of drillings toward the longitudinal axis into a central swirl chamber; and a nozzle plate including an upper surface, a lower surface, and a metering orifice extending between the nozzle plate upper surface and the nozzle plate lower surface, the upper surface being substantially flat and engaging the valve seat lower surface and including an opening in flow communication with the metering orifice, the opening being aligned with the central swirl chamber when the nozzle plate is attached to the valve seat.
11. The injector of claim 10, wherein each of the plurality of swirl channels includes a curved portion in flow communication with an inlet portion and an outlet portion in flow communication with the curved portion and the central swirl chamber.
12. The injector of claim 10, wherein the plurality of swirl channels is formed into the lower surface of the valve seat.
13. The injector of claim 12, wherein each of the plurality of swirl channels is defined by a wall that extends from an upper surface of the channel to the lower surface of the valve seat.
14. The injector of claim 13, wherein each of the plurality of swirl channels includes a milling extension to accommodate formation of a corresponding one of the plurality of drillings.
15. A valve seat for an injector, comprising: a body having an upper surface, a lower surface, a needle opening extending into the body from the upper surface to a seating surface configured to mate with a valve needle to control flow of fluid through the valve seat, a plurality of drillings extending from the needle opening toward the lower surface and away from a longitudinal axis of the body, and a plurality of swirl channels formed into the lower surface, each swirl channel being in flow communication with a corresponding one of the plurality of drillings and a central swirl chamber.
16. The valve seat of claim 15, wherein each of the swirl channels is defined by a wall that is substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis.
17. The valve seat of claim 15, wherein the plurality of drillings extend from a lower portion of the seating surface.
18. The valve seat of claim 15, wherein each of the swirl channels includes an inlet portion in flow communication with a corresponding one of the plurality of drillings, a curved body portion in flow communication with the inlet portion, and an outlet portion in flow communication with the central swirl channel.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008] The above-mentioned and other features and advantages of this disclosure, and the manner of obtaining them, will become more apparent, and will be better understood by reference to the following description of the exemplary embodiments taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021] Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. Although the drawings represent embodiments of various features and components according to the present disclosure, the drawings are not necessarily to scale and certain features may be exaggerated in order to better illustrate and explain the present disclosure. The exemplification set out herein illustrates an embodiment of the invention, and such an exemplification is not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0022] For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the present disclosure, reference is now made to the embodiments illustrated in the drawings, which are described below. The exemplary embodiments disclosed herein are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the disclosure to the precise form disclosed in the following detailed description. Rather, these exemplary embodiments were chosen and described so that others skilled in the art may utilize their teachings.
[0023] The terms “couples,” “coupled,” and variations thereof are used to include both arrangements wherein two or more components are in direct physical contact and arrangements wherein the two or more components are not in direct contact with each other (e.g., the components are “coupled” via at least a third component), but yet still cooperate or interact with each other. Furthermore, the terms “couples,” “coupled,” and variations thereof refer to any connection for machine parts known in the art, including, but not limited to, connections with bolts, screws, threads, magnets, electro-magnets, adhesives, friction grips, welds, snaps, clips, etc.
[0024] Throughout the present disclosure and in the claims, numeric terminology, such as first and second, is used in reference to various components or features. Such use is not intended to denote an ordering of the components or features. Rather, numeric terminology is used to assist the reader in identifying the component or features being referenced and should not be narrowly interpreted as providing a specific order of components or features.
[0025] Various types of injectors are used in internal combustion engines. Some injectors inject fuel into a combustion chamber or into a port upstream of the combustion chamber. Other injectors inject water or air into fuel-air mixtures delivered to the combustion chamber of the engine. In diesel engines, injectors are also used to deliver diesel exhaust fluid (DEF) into a Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) system which converts nitrogen oxide (NOx) compounds into nitrogen, carbon dioxide or water for improved emissions performance. In some applications, the DEF is a reductant, such as an aqueous urea solution. The injectors described in the present disclosure are described as liquid reductant injectors, but the disclosure is not intended to be limited to reductant injector applications. Those skilled in the art with the benefit of the present disclosure may readily apply the teachings provided herein to any of a variety of injectors including those mentioned above.
[0026] As is known to those skilled in the art, thorough atomization of liquid reductant injected upstream of an SCR catalyst improves the evaporation, thermolysis and hydrolysis needed to form gaseous ammonia which reduces the undesirable NOx in the engine exhaust gas. Various approaches exist for improving atomization including reducing the volume of the reductant flow path as the reductant flows downstream through the injector to one or more injector nozzle openings and/or imparting rotational energy into the reductant flow using a swirl device to reduce the droplet size of the reductant at the nozzle opening. The exemplary embodiments described herein provide effective reductant atomization at the injector nozzle outlet through simplified designs for imparting rotational energy into the flow of reductant.
[0027] Turning now to
[0028] From one metering unit 57 that is realized as an intake, the reductant is routed via a filter sieve 62, through a plurality of recesses in linear plain bearing 63, to valve seat 12. If, when electromagnet 58 is in the energized state, the reductant is allowed to pass through a central opening in valve seat 12, the reductant is routed through an atomizing nozzle 11. This atomizing nozzle 11 is realized as a swirl nozzle, and comprises two nozzle discs 67, 68, which are placed over one another. Nozzle discs 67, 68 are tensioned against valve seat 12 by an outlet nozzle insert 69. Outlet nozzle insert 69 has an outletnot shown in greater detail that widens in the shape of a funnel. Owing to the shape of the openings (not shown) of the nozzle discs 67, 68, the outflowing reductant undergoes swirling, which atomizes the reductant as it emerges. The reductant is injected by nozzle 11 into a region of the exhaust-gas line that precedes a catalytic converter.
[0029] Turning now to
[0030] As shown in
[0031] In
[0032] Still referring to
[0033] Referring now to
[0034] Referring now to
[0035] As shown in
[0036] As was described above with reference to valve seat assembly 100, when the valve needle is in a lowered position a seal is formed between seating surface 234 and the lower end of the valve needle. When in this position, liquid in passages 230 is prevented from flowing into drillings 236 for delivery to nozzle plate 204. When the valve needle is moved to a raised position, fluid is delivered by nozzle assembly 200 in the manner described below.
[0037] Unlike valve seat assembly 100, in valve seat assembly 200 the swirl channels 240 are formed in lower surface 210 of body 206 of valve seat 202 instead of on the upper surface of nozzle plate 204. More specifically and best shown in
[0038] In the manner described above with reference to
[0039] As best shown in
[0040] It should be understood that valve seats 202 of
[0041] Valve seat assembly 100 of
[0042] While this invention has been described as having an exemplary design, the present invention may be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practices in the art to which this invention pertains.