Intake and charge air cooling system
10830122 ยท 2020-11-10
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F01P2060/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P9/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P2060/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B29/0431
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B29/0443
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P7/165
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B29/0412
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P3/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
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
F02B29/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P9/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An air cooling system for a vehicle engine includes an air intake configured to receive intake air for delivery to the engine, a first coolant loop thermally coupled to the air intake to provide cooling to the intake air, and a second coolant loop thermally coupled to the air intake to provide further cooling to the intake air. The first and second coolant loops are separate loops using a common condenser
Claims
1. An air cooling system for a vehicle engine, the system comprising: an air intake configured to receive intake air for delivery to the engine; a first coolant loop thermally coupled to the air intake to provide cooling to the intake air; a second coolant loop thermally coupled to the air intake to provide further cooling to the intake air; wherein the first and second coolant loops are separate loops using a common condenser, and wherein coolant in the second coolant loop undergoes a vapor compression cycle; wherein the intake air is compressed charge air received from a turbocharger or a supercharger, and wherein the air intake includes an intercooler configured to cool the compressed charge air; wherein the first coolant loop is thermally coupled to the intercooler to provide cooling to the compressed charge air; and wherein the second coolant loop is thermally coupled to the intercooler to provide further cooling to the compressed charge air; and a controller having a processor and memory, the controller in signal communication with a pump configured to circulate coolant through the first coolant loop, and a compressor configured to circulate the coolant through the second coolant loop, wherein upon receipt of a signal indicating a first measured air charge temperature (ACT) is greater than a target ACT, the controller is configured to turn the pump on.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the intercooler includes a first charge air cooler layer and a second charge air cooler layer, the first and second charge air cooler layers being distinct layers.
3. The system of claim 2, wherein the first coolant loop is thermally coupled to the first charge air cooler layer and the second coolant loop is thermally coupled to the second charge air cooler layer.
4. The system of claim 1, wherein the first and second coolant loops circulate a shared refrigerant.
5. The system of claim 1, wherein the second coolant loop includes an expansion valve disposed in the second coolant loop at a location upstream of the intercooler and downstream of a condenser.
6. The system of claim 5, wherein the second coolant loop includes a first internal heat exchanger and a second internal heat exchanger.
7. The system of claim 6, wherein the first internal heat exchanger is disposed in the second coolant loop at a location upstream of the expansion valve and downstream of the condenser, and the second internal heat exchanger is disposed in the second coolant loop at a location downstream of the intercooler and upstream of the compressor.
8. The system of claim 1, wherein upon receipt of a signal indicating a second measured ACT is greater than the target ACT, the controller is configured to turn the compressor on.
9. The system of claim 8, wherein upon receipt of a signal indicating a third measured ACT is greater than the target ACT, the controller is configured to de-rate the vehicle engine through torque reduction due to engine management system intervention.
10. The system of claim 9, wherein upon receipt of a signal indicating the third measured ACT is less than the target ACT, the controller is configured to turn off the compressor, and wherein upon receipt of a signal indicating the second measured ACT is less than the target ACT, the controller is configured to turn off the pump.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(4) Described herein is an intake air cooling system configured to provide cooling to intake air passing into a naturally aspirated engine or charge air passing through a dual layer intercooler. In a forced induction engine, a first coolant circuit provides cooling to the first layer of the intercooler, and a second coolant circuit provides further cooling to the second layer of the intercooler. The two coolant circuits share a coolant and a condenser, which eliminates the need for a dedicated low temperature cooling circuit.
(5) With initial reference to
(6) In the example embodiment, the CAC 12 receives hot compressed air from the charger 16, absorbs heat therefrom, and subsequently supplies cooled, compressed air to an intake and cylinders (not shown) of the engine 14. In the illustrated example, CAC 12 is a two-stage, two-phase evaporative charge air cooler having a first cooler or layer 18 and a second cooler or layer 20. In one exemplary embodiment, the two layers 18, 20 are separate and distinct layers. Accordingly, after the hot compressed air from the charger 16 is cooled in the first CAC layer 18, the cooled compressed air is further cooled in the second CAC layer 20 to below ambient temperature, as described herein in more detail. Such reduced charge air temperatures provide benefits such as increased charge density (power) and knock mitigation.
(7) In the example implementation, the charge air cooler system 10 generally includes a first coolant circuit or loop 22 and a second coolant circuit or loop 24 having a shared condenser 26 and a shared coolant. In the example embodiment, the shared coolant is a refrigerant such as, for example, R-1234yf. However, it will be appreciated that system 10 may use any suitable coolant or refrigerant that enables system 10 to function as described herein. As such, the combined coolant loops 22, 24 enable charge air cooler system 10 to provide charge air cooling without a dedicated low temperature cooling circuit.
(8) The charge air cooler system 10 is in signal communication with a controller 60 such as an engine control module (ECM). As described herein in more detail, the ECM is configured to selectively initiate a flow of coolant through the second loop 24 to provide increased cooling to intercooler 12, particularly the second CAC layer 20, which results in increased engine power and performance and/or improved fuel economy. Moreover, separate control strategies for this secondary cooling in the second CAC layer 20 may be utilized to provide optimal intercooler cooling for a given mode of vehicle operation such as a race mode or a track mode.
(9) As used herein, the term controller refers to an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), an electronic circuit, a processor (shared, dedicated, or group) and memory that executes one or more software or firmware programs, a combinational logic circuit, and/or other suitable components that provide the described functionality.
(10) In one example implementation, the first coolant loop 22 is thermally coupled to the first CAC layer 18 and is configured to provide cooling to the hot compressed charge air passing therethrough. In the example embodiment, first coolant loop 22 generally includes condenser 26, a receiver/accumulator 28, and a pump 30. The pump 30 is configured to pump the coolant around the first coolant loop 22 to the first CAC layer 18 where the coolant is subsequently heated by the hot compressed charge air. The heated coolant is subsequently directed through a conduit 32 to the condenser 26 (e.g., a vehicle radiator) where it is cooled by ambient air, airflow created by a fan 34, and/or ram air. The resulting cooled coolant is then circulated through a conduit 36 and returned to the first CAC layer 18 to repeat the cycle. In the example embodiment, the receiver/accumulator 28 is disposed on conduit 36 downstream of the condenser 26 and upstream of the branch to the second coolant loop 24.
(11) In the example implementation, the second coolant loop 24 is fluidly coupled to the first coolant loop 22 and circulates the same coolant therethrough. However, the second coolant loop 24 is dedicated to providing cooling to the second CAC layer 20. In the example embodiment, the second coolant loop 24 generally includes a first internal heat exchanger 40, an expansion valve 42, a second internal heat exchanger 44, and a compressor 46. The compressor 46 is selectively activated (e.g., by controller 60) to circulate the coolant around the second coolant loop 24 to provide the second CAC layer 20 with coolant, which is subsequently heated by the cooled compressed charge air from the first CAC layer 18. Such additional cooling by the second coolant loop 24 enables the compressed charge air to be further cooled, for example, to a temperature below ambient.
(12) After providing cooling in the second CAC layer 20, the now heated coolant is subsequently directed through a conduit 48 to the second internal heat exchanger 44 where it is further heated by indirect heat exchange with the coolant flowing through the first internal heat exchanger 40. The heated coolant is then directed to the compressor 46 where it compressed and directed through a conduit 50 that is fluidly coupled to the conduit 32. The compressed coolant then flows into conduit 32 and is subsequently directed through condenser 26 where it is cooled by ambient air, an airflow created by fan 34, and/or ram air.
(13) While the compressor 46 is operating, a portion of the cooled coolant from the condenser 26 is drawn into a conduit 52 of the second coolant loop 24 that branches off of conduit 36. The coolant in conduit 52 is subsequently cooled in the first internal heat exchanger 40 by indirect heat exchange with the heated coolant passing through the second internal heat exchanger 44. The cooled coolant is then directed to the expansion valve 42 where it is reduced in pressure and further cooled before entering the second CAC layer 20. The coolant then returns to compressor 46 and repeats the cycle.
(14) In one example, the charge air cooler system 10 provides two-phase heat transfer in both the first and second coolant loops 22, 24, and the second coolant loop 24 is a typical vapor compression cycle. More specifically, in the first coolant loop 22, the cooled coolant exits the condenser 26 as a subcooled liquid and is pumped through conduit 36 to the first CAC layer 18. Heating in the first CAC layer 18 results in a two-phase fluid or superheated vapor, which is subsequently directed through conduit 32 back to condenser 26.
(15) In the second coolant loop 24, the cooled coolant exiting the condenser as a subcooled liquid is drawn into conduit 52 by the pumping action of compressor 46. The subcooled liquid is further subcooled in internal heat exchanger 40 to increase the available heat of vaporization, thereby reducing mass flow rate required through compressor 46. As such, the total work of the compressor 46 is reduced, resulting in improved efficiency of the cycle. The subcooled liquid is expanded by expansion valve 42 and the resulting two-phase fluid is directed to the second CAC layer 20. Heating in the second CAC layer 20 results in a superheated vapor, which is subsequently directed through conduit 48 back to compressor 46. The superheated vapor is then directed back to condenser 26 via conduits 50, 32 for subsequent cooling.
(16) If flow is only desired through first coolant loop 22, compressor 46 is turned off and/or expansion valve 42 is closed. Flow only through the first coolant loop may be a default mode of operation for normal or typical driving and/or for improved fuel economy operation of the vehicle. When reduced air charge temperature (ACT) is required or requested, for example when high levels of torque are requested (e.g., racing or track mode), compressor 46 is turned on and expansion valve 42 is opened (if it was closed) to initiate a flow of coolant through the second coolant loop 24. This provides reduced air charge temperature to facilitate significantly increasing engine performance and power output.
(17)
(18) If the first measured ACT is greater than the target ACT, control proceeds to step 206 where pump 30 and radiator fan 34 are turned on. At step 208, it is determined if a second measured ACT is greater than the target ACT. The second measured ACT is determined after the pump 30 and radiator fan 34 are turned on. If the second measured ACT is not greater than the target ACT, control proceeds to step 210 where pump 30 and radiator fan 34 are turned off. Control then returns to step 202.
(19) If the second measured ACT is greater than the target ACT, control proceeds to step 212 where compressor 46 is turned on and expansion valve 42 is opened. At step 214, it is determined if a third measured ACT is greater than a target ACT. The third measured ACT is determined after the compressor 46 is turned on and the expansion valve 42 is opened. If the third measured ACT is not greater than the target ACT, control proceeds to step 216 where the compressor 46 is turned off and expansion valve 42 is closed. Control then returns to step 208. If the third measured ACT is greater than the target ACT, control proceeds to step 218 and the controller 60 determines whether to take further action such as performing an engine de-rate.
(20)
(21) At step 308, controller 60 determines if compressor 46 is on and if expansion valve 42 is open. If yes, control proceeds to step 312. If no, at step 314, controller 60 turns on compressor 46 and opens expansion valve 42. Control then proceeds to step 312. At step 312, controller 60 returns the vehicle to the default driving mode after receiving a signal indicating the driver has deactivated the racing mode or activated the default driving mode (e.g., via a touch screen user interface), or when the vehicle is restarted.
(22) Described herein are system and methods for providing additional cooling to intake air or a charger intercooler. An air cooler system includes a two-stage, two-phase evaporative cooler to provide a merged low temperature cooling loop and AC cooling loop to save packaging space. The first loop includes a coolant pump to circulate coolant to cool a first layer of the intercooler. The second loop, which shares a condenser with the first loop, includes a compressor, expansion valve, and internal heat exchanger to circulate the coolant to provide further charge air cooling in a second layer of the intercooler. In some examples, the described system is configured to provide cooling of charge air to below ambient temperatures. The reduced charge air temperatures provided by the described system enable increased charge density, improved knock mitigation, elimination of a low temperature cooling circuit, and improved charge air cooler effectiveness due to multi-phase heat transfer in two stages. Moreover, the system is capable of providing improved vehicle fuel economy by enabling the engine to operate at higher compression ratios.
(23) It should be understood that the mixing and matching of features, elements and/or functions between various examples may be expressly contemplated herein so that one skilled in the art would appreciate from the present teachings that features, elements and/or functions of one example may be incorporated into another example as appropriate, unless described otherwise above.