Zero Emissions Marine Engine
20220144402 ยท 2022-05-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02T10/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F02M21/0275
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T70/50
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F02M31/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T90/40
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B63H21/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T10/12
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B63H21/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02M21/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
This is a utility patent application for the design of a large marine engine that is also suitable, in different configurations, for smaller marine applications and many different power generation and transportation applications. The drawings show a ten-cylinder two-stroke engine, cylinders with a 110-inch stroke and 36-inch bore, pistons, connecting rods, and a crankshaft. The pistons are driven by the combustion of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen ignited by a sparking system. The engine is cooled via coolant passages in the block and head and lubricated by three separate lubrication systems. It uses cryogenic fuel pumps, electronic fuel injection, and electronic actuators regulated by a remote engine control unit. It is close to a zero emissions design, with only steam, water vapor, and extremely minute quantities of burned lubricants and trace air combustion products heading up the stack.
Claims
1. It is claimed that this is a unique design for a potentially very powerful (capable of producing over 100,000 horsepower) two-stroke internal combustion engine that burns liquid hydrogen fuel with a liquid oxygen oxidizer and that employs an upwards exhaust stroke of the piston in place of a compression stroke on its return to top dead center in the cycle, the compression being supplied by the vaporization and combustion of the two pressurized fuels entering from fuel injectors and ignited by an electronic sparking system at or near top dead center of the cycle.
2. It is claimed that this design is unique due to the combination of its tremendous power potential (over 100,000 horsepower) and lack of harmful emissions and its almost complete elimination of all forms of polluting, poisonous, and greenhouse gas emissions, as the only elements emitted will be steam, water vapor, and extremely minute traces of burned lubricants and trace air combustion products, thus eliminating the need for all of the expensive engine emissions control equipment now mandated by maritime and land-based laws, statutes, and regulations.
3. It is claimed that this powerful 2-stroke internal combustion engine design is unique in that it will feature specialized and differentiated lubricants and lubrication systems for [a] its cryogenic hydrogen tanks, lines, valves, pumps, fuel rails and injectors, [b] its cryogenic oxygen tanks, lines, valves pumps, fuel rails, and injectors, and [c] its crankcase, connecting rods, pistons and rings, cylinder liners, valve stems, solenoids, and oil and water pumps.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
[0021] This utility patent application includes 9 drawings: two perspective renderings, two cutaway perspective sections, a plan, and four elevations. The drawings are shaded black and white design drawings.
[0022] These are basic design development drawings, showing major design elements, and do not show most connections, including nuts, bolts, and welds; most of the wiring; most of the valves and sensors and some of the actuators; the electronic monitoring and engine control systems; the fuel tanks and bunkers; the propeller shaft and propeller; auxiliary drive engines and gensets, including the one used for starting this engine; and most latches, bearings, seals, gaskets, and O-rings.
[0023] Material types are not shown. At this time it appears that the major materials will include aluminum alloys, stainless steel alloys, nickel-chromium alloys, foam insulation, iron alloys, copper alloys, carbon steel alloys, and various composite materials.
[0024] Five pumps are shown, including the liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen fuel pumps, two water pumps, and an oil sump pump.
[0025] The nine drawings submitted are listed as follows:
[0026] 1. 1/9
[0027] 2. 2/9
[0028] 3. 3/9
[0029] 4. 4/9
[0030] 5. 5/9
[0031] 6. 6/9
[0032] 7. 7/9
[0033] 8. 8/9
[0034] 9. 9/9
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0035] This is a utility patent application for a large marine engine, suitable for use in direct drive propeller shaft systems in the largest ships in the world, including 24,000 TEU container ships and 400,000 ton Chinamax bulk carriers, and also suitable, in different configurations, different sizes, and in genset versions, for a wide range of ships, smaller boats, and submarines, for land-based transportation uses like freight locomotives, and for a very wide range of commercial, industrial, and power generation applications.
[0036] The design shown in the nine drawings is a two-stroke ten-cylinder model that runs on the combustion of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, used to power cylinders designed with a 36-inch bore and a 110-inch stroke that run between 20 and 120 rpm. In this design the fuel enters the top of each cylinder using 12 solenoid-actuated injectors, 6 for each fuel type arranged in pairs, after which the fuel is ignited by 6 large electronic sparking units, one placed between each pair of injectors. The combustion of the two fuels creates steam and the piston power stroke, at the bottom of which are exhaust ports for the steam. At bottom dead center of the stroke, a very large exhaust valve at the top of the cylinder is opened by a large solenoid actuator and the piston goes into its exhaust stroke, clearing the remaining steam from the cylinder until, just before top dead center of the stroke, the exhaust valve closes, followed by the firing of the injectors and the electronic sparking units at or near top dead center, depending upon the actuation of adjustable electronic timing controls. The cylinders feature a removable head and liner (the fuel lines, injectors, sparking units, pistons and connecting rods are also removable) surrounded by coolant passages in the cylinder block and in the head, near the exhaust valve. The system is designed so that it can be controlled by a remote electronic engine control unit capable of adjusting the timing of each of the electronic components and wired into crankshaft, piston, and actuator timing sensors and pressure and temperature sensors located in and around the cylinders.
[0037] The fuel is supplied by separate fuel rails for the liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, which are supplied by the two large fuel pumps located in front of the engine, which are, in turn, fed by booster pumps located at the fuel tank outlet valves.
[0038] The coolant is supplied by the two large engine coolant pumps at the rear of the engine, which are in turn supplied by seawater heat exchanger systems applicable to most prospective installations.
[0039] The crankshaft bearings, connecting rods and bearings, and the pistons, piston rings, and piston rods and their slides are lubricated by a special hydrogen-resistant and oxidation-resistant lubricant supplied by an oil sump and sump pump driven by the engine flywheel at the rear of the engine.
[0040] The exhaust exits through a large system at the rear of the engine which would be connected to the ship's stack.
[0041] The engine head covers, fuel lines, head, and exhaust valve system are removable, as are the coolant and lubricant exterior lines. The engine features operable side ports for access to the piston and connecting rods bolts for the purposes of removal and repair. The cylinder block is removable and the crankcase is designed in two bolted parts which can be separated for repair of the crankshaft and crankshaft bearings in major engine overhauls.
[0042] This design is similar to current marine diesels in that it uses very similar crankshaft, connecting rod, piston, and engine cooling systems. That is pretty much where the similarity ends. This engine will feature close to zero emissions, as the exhaust will be steam and water vapor plus very minute amounts of burned lubricants and trace elements of combustion with air. While this is a two-stroke design, the lubricant is not mixed with the fuel, as in many current versions, but is applied through a classic diesel lubricating system. The fuel enters the fuel rails, injectors, and cylinder in a 100% pure state. As such, this engine will easily comply with the International Maritime Organization's Tier III and Tier IV standards and the greenhouse gas emissions standards it is about to issue without the use of any bulky and expensive emissions control systems whatsoever.
[0043] In addition, this design differs from diesel engines and modern two-stroke engines in that there is no real piston compression stroke, because the two cryogenic fuels supply their own compression during gasification and combustion at the top of the cylinder. There will only be a very small amount of compression in the remaining steam just before top dead center of the exhaust stroke, after the exhaust valve closes. The two fuels will be injected into the cylinders where the pressure above the piston may be as low as 15-50 psi, depending upon timing, much lower than any known diesel or gasoline engine. This will create a very different combustion dynamic, where the atomization, gasification, and combustion of the fuel will depend on the design of the injector head and orifice and the temperature and phase of the fuel, rather than injection into a high-pressure environment.
[0044] For these reasons power, in tetins of horsepower and torque, per cubic inch of cylinder displacement should also be much greater than in any existing diesel design of comparable size.
[0045] This design also differs from any existing diesel in that it employs cryogenic fuels. Today hundreds of huge LNG tankers roam the world's seas, carrying massive tanks filled with cryogenic fuel. Some of them use the boil-off from their tanks to help power their engines. It is basically the same phase issue that faces this engine, but on a different scale. Cryogenic fuels tend to go into turbulent, multi-phase states and non-laminar flows when pumped through fuel lines and injectors, and that is the expectation in this engine's pumps and fuel lines as well. In addition, current cryogenic fuel tanks are not designed to maintain a specific fuel temperature, but that is an issue that the inventor is currently working on in separate projects, and it may turn out to be practical to attach electronically controlled and powered cryocoolers to the ship fuel bunkers for that purpose, especially in the case of the liquid hydrogen fuel tanks. Those cryocoolers would also serve to drastically reduce fuel boil-off rates. Pumping the fuel under relatively high pressure also lessens the phase transition issue as it raises the boiling point of the fuel. These are issues which will have to be analyzed in working models of the engine.
[0046] Finally, this design differs from existing ship diesels in that it employs a sparking system. At this time the cylinder is being designed with a direct injection system, due in large part to the rather large cylinder volume. Hydrogen/oxygen combustion features an extremely rapid flame spread, but in liquid form the two fuels do not fully ignite and burn without the help of a large amount of initial heat, which is supplied in the form of an electric sparking system in this design. The precise design, size, and orientation of the fuel injectors and the precise amount of amperage that will be needed by the sparking system are details that will have to be worked out during the development of the working models.
[0047] Testing of working models may also demonstrate the need for an electric heating system in the head for the purposes of starting and shutting down the engine. This has yet to be determined, but icing and incomplete combustion problems could develop in start-up and shut-down modes. Start-up modes will also require a fuel pump, fuel line, and fuel injector cool-down phase, which will require running the engine slowly using a gaseous ignition mode for a short period of time until the lines cool down and it can transition into a liquid ignition mode. In addition, the fuel lines will require a series of pressure relief valves and check valves for start-up and shut-down modes as well as for general engine safety. It may turn out that the fuel lines and pumps will also require attached vacuum pumps for start-up and shut-down operations and for purging the lines, valves, pumps, and injectors.
[0048] The starting system is not shown. At this time it is envisioned that an auxiliary engine, temporarily connected to the rear shaft by means of gearing systems, will be used for the starting phase.
[0049] The propeller shaft and propeller are not shown. These designs will depend on the overall ship design, and may or may not include a gearbox and a power take-off system. The two fuel pumps and two water pumps shown are driven by large electric motors.
[0050] In terms of installations in actual ships, this engine will require specially-designed fuel tanks and fuel bunkers and the development of new fuel supply systems at ports and marine depots, along with the requisite service, maintenance, and training facilities. It will also require special permitting and regulatory approval and a period of working model design and testing and sea trials.
[0051] Smaller versions of this engine are also envisioned, and the design can be used on everything from yachts, tugboats, ferries, fishing trawlers, submarines, research vessels, cruise ships, sight-seeing craft, dinner cruises, and offshore wind turbine service craft all the way up to the largest ships in the world.
[0052] This engine type also has many power generation applications, including utility-scale power plants, municipal power facilities, industrial power plants, and institutional and commercial back-up power generation, including large data center and server primary and back-up power, along with general industrial and commercial power applications. In addition, it also has several transportation applications in smaller sizes, including freight train locomotive power plants and large off-road industrial vehicle power. Technically, it could also be used as a truck engine on 18-wheel tractor-trailers if the demand arises in that sector and it receives regulatory approval, and it could also be used to power drag racers and off-road racing bikes, cars, and trucks, if the financing for projects like that ever actually materializes, which has not happened to date.