ROBUST SUPERCHARGER FOR OPPOSED-PISTON ENGINES EQUIPPED WITH EXHAUST GAS RECIRCULATION
20200158131 ยท 2020-05-21
Assignee
Inventors
- John M. Kessler (San Diego, CA, US)
- John Koszewnik (Colorado Springs, CO, US)
- Bryant A. Wagner (San Diego, CA, US)
Cpc classification
F04D29/4206
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/611
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02C6/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C2230/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C2230/92
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C18/126
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/512
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04C23/006
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F04D29/42
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A supercharger assembly includes rotors, a base plate, and a housing with an anti-fouling material on one or more surfaces where accumulation of soot and/or soot-like material may lead to mechanical friction and possibly seizing. The anti-fouling material can have oleophobic and/or hydrophobic properties.
Claims
1. A supercharger assembly, comprising: a bearing plate; a first rotor and a second rotor, each rotor comprising: two or more lobes; two or more valleys; a bearing plate facing end; and a housing facing end; and a housing that, with the bearing plate, encloses the first and second rotors, wherein the bearing plate includes anti-fouling material on a surface adjacent to the bearing plate facing ends of the first and second rotors.
2. The supercharger assembly of claim 1, wherein the housing comprises the anti-fouling material on an inside surface.
3. The supercharger assembly of claim 1, wherein each of the first and second rotors comprises the anti-fouling material on the bearing plate facing end.
4. The supercharger assembly of claim 1, wherein the anti-fouling material comprises a layer of anodized material impregnated with a material with hydrophobic and oleophobic properties.
5. An air handling system of a two-stroke, internal combustion engine, comprising: an exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) system; and a supercharger assembly coupled to receive recirculated exhaust from the EGR system, the supercharger assembly comprising: a bearing plate; a first rotor and a second rotor; each rotor comprising two or more lobes; two or more valleys; a bearing plate facing end; and, a housing facing end; and, a housing that, with the bearing plate, encloses the first and second rotors; wherein the bearing plate includes anti-fouling material on a surface adjacent to the bearing plate facing ends of the first and second rotors.
6. A method of making a supercharger assembly, comprising: preparing one or more components of the supercharger assembly for formation of an anti-fouling material; and forming an anti-fouling material coating on at least a portion of a surface of the one or mare components.
7. The method of claim 6, further comprising assembling the one or more components with the anti-fouling material coating with other components of the supercharger assembly to create a complete supercharger assembly.
8. The method of claim 6, wherein preparing one or more components of the supercharger assembly for anti-fouling material formation comprises at least one of polishing, surface roughening, washing with degreasing agent, etching, and machining.
9. The method of claim 6, wherein the anti-fouling material comprises at least one of: an anodized metal oxide; polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE); epoxy, polyurethane or polyamide systems that are reactively cross-linked with perfluorinated monomers or oligomers; a fluoropolymer; an oxidized polyarylene sulfide; a polyphenylene sulfide; carbide; a ceramic material; a high-temperature polyimide; a polyamide imide; a polyester imide; an aromatic polyester plastic; or any material with a low affinity for soot or soot-like compounds and with high dimensional stability when exposed to a large range of temperatures.
10. The method of claim 6, wherein the anti-fouling material coating is created by any vapor deposition, dip coating, thermal oxide growth, selective etching, anodizatien, electrochemical plating, or electrochemical deposition.
11. The method of claim 6, wherein the supercharger assembly comprises: a bearing plate: a first rotor and a second rotor, each rotor comprising two or more lobes; two or more valleys; a bearing plate facing end; and a housing facing end; and, a housing that, with the bearing plate, encloses the first and second rotors, wherein the one or more components of the supercharger assembly on which the anti-fouling material are formed comprise any of the bearing plate facing end of each rotor, at least a portion of an inner surface of the bearing plate, and at least a portion of an inner surface of the housing.
12. An air handling system of a two-stroke, opposed-piston engine, comprising: a supercharger in which recirculated exhaust gas is received and mixed with charge air upstream of the supercharger; the supercharger comprising: a bearing plate; a first rotor and a second rotor, each rotor comprising two or more lobes, two or more valleys: a bearing plate facing end; and, a housing facing end; a housing that, with the bearing plate, encloses the first and second rotors; and, an anti-fouling material on a surface of the bearing plate adjacent to the bearing plate and facing ends of the first and second rotors.
13. The supercharger of claim 12, wherein the housing comprises the anti-fouling material on an inside surface.
14. The supercharger of claim 12, wherein each of the first and second rotors comprises the anti-fouling material on the bearing plate facing end.
15. The supercharger of claim 12, wherein the anti-fouling material comprises a layer of anodized material impregnated with a material with hydrophobic and oleophobic properties.
16. The supercharger of any one of claims 13, 14, and 15 wherein the anti-fouling material comprises at least one of: an anodized metal oxide; polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE); epoxy, polyurethane or polyamide systems that are reactively cross-linked with perfluorinated monomers or oligomers; a fluoropolymer; an oxidized polyarylene sulfide; a polyphenylene sulfide; carbide; a ceramic material; a high-temperature polyimide; a polyamide imide; a polyester imide; an aromatic polyester plastic; or any material with a low affinity for soot or soot-like compounds and with high dimensional stability when exposed to a large range of temperatures.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] In the figures,
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0018]
[0019] In instances when the engine 110 is constructed and operated as a two-stroke cycle, opposed-piston engine, gas flow through the engine system 100 is not assisted by any pumping action of the pistons, as occurs in a four-stroke engine with a single piston in each cylinder. Charge air must be continuously pumped to the cylinders by means external to the cylinders. In the engine system 100, such means include the supercharger 130, which is situated downstream of the compressor 121 in the direction of charge air flow. The supercharger 130 maintains a positive pressure drop across the engine 110 that ensures forward motion through the engine of the charge air and exhaust at all engine speeds and loads, a condition that cannot be met by the turbocharger 120. In addition, the supercharger 130 provides needed boost quickly in response to torque demands to which the turbocharger 120 responds more slowly. In many cases, cold start of the engine 110 is enabled by the supercharger 130 pumping air through the charge air system. In instances when the provision of exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) is through a high pressure EGR system such as the EGR loop 131, the supercharger 130 maintains a positive pressure drop across the EGR loop 131 that ensures the transport of exhaust gas through the loop 131. Manifestly, reliable operation of the supercharger 130 is a critical factor in meeting the performance and emission goals of such an engine. Poor, deteriorating, or otherwise impaired supercharger operation must be avoided. However, the integrity of supercharger operation can be severely compromised by build-up of particulates such as soot contained in the recirculated exhaust gas. Generally, when a supercharger is fluidly coupled to an air handling system in which recirculated exhaust is received and mixed with charge air upstream of the supercharger, particulate collection and build-up on internal surfaces pose a threat to the viability of the supercharger.
[0020] In the engine system 100 shown in
[0021]
[0022] The supercharger 230 includes a housing 231 that, along with a bearing plate 234, encloses a first rotor 232 and a second rotor 233. The first rotor 232 is shown as having two lobes 232L and valleys 232v between the lobes, and similarly, the second rotor 233 has two lobes 233L and valleys 233v between the lobes. The first and second rotors have central axes 236 and 237, respectively, about which the rotors turn. The line 2B in
[0023] The flow of charge air through the supercharger is represented as entering the supercharger by 239 in both
[0024] The anti-fouling material can be a coating or a layered structure created on surfaces of the supercharger assembly, particularly the interfaces described above (e.g., rotor/housing interfaces, rotor/bearing plate interfaces, rotor/rotor interfaces).
[0025]
[0026] One type of anti-fouling material can be an anodic coating. An anodic coating is produced through the process of anodizing, or reversed electroplating. The metal supercharger component is submerged in an acid electrolyte in an anodizing system that includes a cathode and perhaps another electrode, with the metal part as the anode. Once set up, a current is applied that flows between the cathode and metal component. The water molecules present in the acid electrolyte solution split and release oxygen onto the metal component. The released oxygen converts the surface of the metal component to a metal oxide. The acid in the electrolyte partially dissolves this oxide, creating a porous, or permeable, film on the surface of the component. By varying the time that current is applied and the component is immersed in the acidic electrolyte, the depth of the anodic (e.g., metal oxide) layer and degree of porosity can be varied. This permeable anodic film can trap, or accept, almost all materials that pass through its pores and can be impregnated with many different materials to inhibit adhesion of soot, soot-like materials, and the like. The process of creating an anodized film impregnated with a secondary material to create a hydrophobic and oleophobic material is similar to the processes described in the following standards: MIL-A-63576 and AMS 2482.
[0027] Another type of anti-fouling material can be composed of nanoparticles suspended in commercially available polymer matrices such as epoxy, polyurethane or polyamide systems that are reactively cross-linked with perfluorinated monomers or oligomers. Materials with nanoparticles in a polymer matrix can have the desired hydrophobic and oleophobic properties. To apply such a nanoparticle composite material, methods such as spraying, spin coating, dip coating, and the like can be used. The polymer matrix material can be thermally cross-linked (e.g., through critical drying) to achieve the desired crystalline polymorph, or crystal structure. During the thermal cross-linking process, the polymer evaporates and leaves the nanoparticles embedded in the crystalline configuration dictated by the cross-linked matrix.
[0028] In addition to, or in place of, the two methods described above, an anti-fouling material with hydrophobic and oleophobic properties can be applied to one or more surfaces of a supercharger assembly using vapor deposition, dip coating, thermal oxide growth, selective etching, anodization, electrochemical plating, electrochemical deposition, or other suitable surface preparation and deposition methods. Suitable anti-fouling materials can include any of a fluoropolymer, an oxidized polyarylene sulfide, a polyphenylene sulfide, carbide, a ceramic material, a high-temperature polyimide, a polyamide imide, a polyester imide, an aromatic polyester plastic, or any material with a low affinity for soot or soot-like compounds and with high dimensional stability when exposed to a large range of temperatures.
[0029] Supercharger components can be made of a base metal (e.g., substrate material) of a material suitable for use in superchargers, such as an aluminum alloy. The supercharger components can be prepared before applying an anti-fouling material. Surface preparation of the supercharger components can include polishing, surface roughening, washing with degreasing agent,etching, and machining. Adhesion between the metal of a supercharger component and an anti-fouling material can be increased by the application of heat or a drying cycle (e.g., critical drying, thermal cross-linking, annealing).
[0030]
[0031] Once placed into service in an opposed-piston engine with exhaust gas recirculation (EGR), a supercharger assembly as shown in
[0032] Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the specific embodiments set forth in this specification are merely illustrative and that various modifications are possible and may be made therein without departing from the scope of an invention which is defined by the following claims.