INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE
20190353089 ยท 2019-11-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02B19/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B19/1071
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/405
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B19/1085
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02P13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T10/40
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
F02B19/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B19/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/0002
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B19/108
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02B19/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B19/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B19/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02P13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A method of operating the stratified charge Merritt Engine described in WO2005/052335 and WO2007/0830366 enabling new benefits such as full compliance with NOx emission regulations, control over peak pressures, increased power density, and high fuel economy all enabled by preprogramming the timing of the gasoline direct fuel injection process.
Claims
1. A method of operating an internal combustion engine comprising; at least one cylinder (2); a cylinder head to close the cylinder at one end; a piston located in the cylinder for reciprocating movements therein (1); an unavoidable bump clearance volume in the cylinder (2) situated above the piston (1) when the piston reaches the end of its compression stroke; air inlet means communicating with the cylinder (3,10); exhaust means communicating with the cylinder; a combustion chamber within the cylinder head having a near end and a far end relative to the cylinder, said chamber being spaced from the cylinder but communicating therewith at its near end; a transfer orifice (7) communicating with the cylinder (2) and the combustion chamber (5) at its near end positioned to deliver a jet of air into the combustion chamber with a tangential velocity component during the compressions stroke of the piston (1); means to promote an axial velocity component to swirling air motion within the combustion chamber which is directed towards the far end (6); fuel injection means (8) communicating with the combustion chamber at its near end arranged to deliver liquid fuel spray towards the far end of said combustion chamber and into the air jet; at least one ignition means in the region of the far end of the combustion chamber; and a controller to control the fuel injection process, the ignition process and air intake process; wherein said method comprises controlled delivery of fuel from the fuel injector (8) outlet into the volume above the piston inside the cylinder (2), after the ignition means (9) ignites fuel in the combustion chamber and/or after the piston (1) commences its expansion stroke.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the combustion chamber is configured to induce or enhance swirling flow of air when delivered therein.
3. A method as claimed in claim 1 or 2 wherein the combustion chamber operates as a vortex tube.
4. A method as claimed in any preceding claim in which the combustion chamber is cylindrical, conical or part-conical.
5. A method as claimed in any preceding claim simultaneously applied together with a secondary method comprising controlled partial restriction of said air inlet means.
6. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the engine controller is enabled to inject fuel during both the compression stroke and during the early part of the expansion stroke, to enable transfer of fuel into the bump clearance volume by expanding gases flowing from the combustion chamber (5) towards the cylinder (2).
7. A method as claimed in any preceding claim wherein a second ignition means, such as a glow plug, is provided in the region of the exit from transfer orifice (7) in the cylinder (2).
8. A method as claimed in any one of claims 5 to 7 wherein the air inlet means (3) includes a throttle valve (10) operable from fully open to partial closure.
9. A method as claimed in any one of claims 5 to 8 wherein both methods are applied when the cyclic fuel quantity is determined to cause unacceptable quantity of Nitrogen Oxides in the engine exhaust gas and the use of a catalytic converter is required.
10. A method as claimed in any one of claims 6 to 9 wherein the method is applied when the cyclic fuel quantity is determined to cause excessive peak cylinder pressure after ignition.
11. A method according to any preceding claim applied when a need arises to increase the amount of waste heat in the exhaust.
12. A method as claimed in any preceding claim in which the surface of the transfer orifice (7) is selected from one or more of the following: made of material of poor thermal conductivity, covered with thermal insulation material; such as ceramic, or is covered with catalytic material such as platinum.
13. A method as claimed in any preceding claim in which the fuel injector (8) is controlled to deliver fuel in more than one pulse during one engine cycle, such as in two pulses or three pulses and wherein one or two such pulses are delivered into the cylinder region.
14. An engine as defined in claim 1 provided with a controller adapted to enable its operation in accordance with any preceding claim.
15. An engine as claimed in claim 14 in which the controller is able to select or de-select either or both methods of such operation.
16. An engine as claimed in claim 15 in which the selection is effected based on the amount of fuel delivered per engine cycle and without interruption of engine operation.
17. A motor vehicle fitted with an engine as defined in any one of claims 14 to 16.
18. A motor vehicle according to claim 17 fitted with an exhaust catalytic converter.
19. A method of operating an engine as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 13 substantially as herein described.
20. A method of operating an engine as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 13 substantially as herein illustrated.
21. An engine as claimed in any one of claims 14 to 16 substantially as herein described.
22. An engine as claimed in any one of claims 14 to 16 substantially as herein illustrated.
23. A motor vehicle as claimed in claim 17 or 18 substantially as herein described.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020] In order that the invention in all its aspects may be illustrated, more easily appreciated and readily carried into effect by those skilled in the art, embodiments will now be described herein purely by way of non-limiting examples with reference to the accompanying three schematic diagrams which are not drawn to scale and are presented for illustrative purposes only, wherein:
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0024]
[0025] Over this lower end of IMEP the engine does not produce much NOx exhaust emissions and can therefore operate unthrottled, within allowed NOx emission limits, to deliver high thermal efficiency as an unmodified Merritt Engine. The throttle valve (10) is shown fully open. The fuel injector (8) is shown delivering a cone of liquid fuel towards spark plug (9) at the far end of the combustion chamber. The transfer Orifice (7) shows a streamline of air entering the combustion chamber (5) to form a fierce vortex type swirling air motion and a helical ramp (6) is shown imparting an axial component to the swirling gases directed towards the spark plug, a motion which can be described as helical swirl. One breathing valve (4) is shown in the closed position during the compression stroke downstream of the throttle valve (10), it is the air inlet means. A catalytic converter will be situated in the exhaust pipe of engines according to all three figures although it is not shown because the inlet pipe (3) is shown in preference to exhaust outlet to illustrate the variable position of the throttle valve (10).
[0026]
[0027] It should be appreciated that the Merritt Engine's stratified charge combustion system enables it to completely burn any amount of fuel within the combustion chamber in the presence of any amount of excess air.
[0028] The engine illustrated in
[0029] The amount of air transferred from the cylinder into the combustion chamber per unit time increases during the compression stroke. The amount of fuel injected by injector (6) into the air jet emerging from transfer orifice (7) is delivered at approximately constant rate. The resulting air fuel mixture will therefore start off rich and end lean over the compression stroke period. The vortex motion imparted to the mixture is biased in the direction towards the spark plug (9) by the helical ramp (6), so early rich mixture is forced to rotate around the plug. As the vortex becomes more intense it smears the mixture around the periphery of the chamber (5) and centrifugal force compresses it to a thin compacted layer. The molecules of Oxygen and fuel are brought into closer proximity as a result and flame propagation after ignition is very fast.
[0030] The engine illustrated in
[0031] The operation of the engine according to this invention is explained by way of an example in
[0032] In order to substantially reduce and even eliminate free Oxygen from the exhaust gases the controller needs to use both methods of operation according to the present invention and to apply them simultaneously. The partial throttling method of operation
[0033] This method is illustrated in
[0034] Rather than snap the throttle valve directly into its partially closed position, the controller can begin slowly to close it at fuelling levels corresponding to IMEP slightly below 80%, when NOx emission is still below legislated limit, so allowing it to reach the correct position when required for action. As the car driver increases IMEP demand above 80% the throttle valve changes direction until it reaches the fully open position at maximum IMEP when the fuel input consumes all or substantially all of the available Oxygen. An Oxygen sensor such as the familiar Lambda sensor can monitor Oxygen presence in the exhaust gas and provide a feed back to the controller in order to effect fine adjustments to the throttle valve position. The need to remove all free Oxygen from the exhaust gases to enable the use of the catalytic converter cannot be achieved by partial throttling alone, the simultaneous application of the other method of the present invention, is required.
[0035] The extended fuel injection period (primary) method of operation When the piston reaches TDC at the end of the compression stroke there must remain a small clearance volume between its crown and the cylinder head to avoid damaging contact. This volume is often called bump clearance volume. The design of the Merritt Engine tries to minimize the bump clearance volume in order to maximize the volume of the combustion chamber because all the fuel is delivered for burning within the chamber. An additional method is required to remove the Oxygen from the bump clearance. This additional method is illustrated in
[0036] Because the fuel injector (8) delivers fuel at high pressure inside the combustion chamber and in the opposite direction to the transfer orifice (7), it would appear impossible to deliver fuel to the bump clearance volume without installing a second fuel injector pointing down into the transfer orifice. Such a second injector was proposed in an earlier Merritt Engine invention for the purpose of increasing power density. It can be seen in the patent publication WO 2007/080366 in
[0037] This method of operation enables transfer of fuel from the fuel injector's outlet location in combustion chamber (8) into the cylinder (2) for the purpose of consuming Oxygen trapped within the bump clearance volume. The transfer is carried out by entraining some of the fuel into the dense gas which begins to flow towards the cylinder either when the expansion stroke starts or after spark ignition occurs and always after both events take place. After ignition such dense gas is very hot possibly still burning.
[0038] This method of operation effectively allows the engine controller to operate two combustion events, the first inside the combustion chamber and the second inside the cylinder.
[0039] The two new methods according to this invention namely the extended fuel injection and partial throttling need to be used together at the higher end of IMEP in order to enable the use of a catalytic converter to remove NOx from the exhaust. However the extended fuel injection method when used on its own can also offer four other operational capabilities which enhance engine performance.
[0040] Additional Operational Capabilities
[0041] These can be applied by the engine controller whilst the engine is operating. Some of the capabilities are unusual in other internal combustion engines.
1. It allows the engine controller to limit the peak pressures produced at high IMEP operations;
2. It allows the engine controller to increase the maximum power density when [0042] operating at maximum IMEP, by providing fuel to burn with the Oxygen trapped in the bump clearance.
3. It allows the engine controller to choose to increase the amount of heat discarded in the exhaust gases if such extra heat is required for cabin heating inside a car;
4. It allows the engine to discard the partial use of throttle in countries which do not impose NOx limits whilst retaining the first three additional capabilities listed above or by restricting maximum IMEP subject to car driver's control it allows a car to dispense with the use of a catalytic converter whilst benefiting from maximum thermal efficiency and minimum exhaust pollution at the expense of reduced power density.
[0043] First Capability:
[0044] The vortex tube type gas movement in the combustion chamber, forces fuel and air molecules to be compressed nearer together against its periphery by centrifugal force. As a result the combustion process in the Merritt engine is extremely fast compared with diesel and even Otto engines combustion speeds. At moderate engine speeds the Merritt Engine can operate nearly on the constant volume air cycle which delivers the highest thermal efficiency of unthrottled car engines in common use. However at the higher IMEP range and lower engine speeds very fast combustion can cause excessive peak pressures in the cylinder which can even damage the piston. The extended fuel injection method according to this invention enables the late fuel delivery to burn inside the cylinder after the piston moves away from TDC to expose an increased cylinder volume so reducing the peak cyclic pressures. At lower engine speeds it may be preferable to operate the fuel injector according to this method aspect twice in quick succession to cause two such combustion events within the cylinder, alternatively the rate of fuel injection per unit time may be reduced by the controller to enable one long injection event astride TDC.
[0045] Second Capability:
[0046] When extended fuel injection is exercised by the controller at high IMEP operations the ignition of the late fuel delivery by very hot gases escaping into the cylinder is very likely to occur without the need to activate a second ignition means. Also under these conditions it is likely that NOx control will also be needed in some countries so the first capability will also become operational bringing the throttle valve into play. When used on its own, even when the engine is turbocharged, that method aspect can allow the engine to consume all available Oxygen for combustion so maximizing power output.
[0047] Third Capability:
[0048] Deliberate increase of heat energy rejected into the engine exhaust will understandably lower thermal efficiency of the engine. However engines with very high thermal efficiency such as the Merritt Engine are sometimes unable to generate sufficient waste heat to provide cabin heating in cold climates. The amount of heat rejected can be increased by deliberately burning fuel during the expansion stroke. Stratification in the Merritt engine enables burning of fuel with excess air inside the combustion chamber, so removing fuel from that chamber to burn within the cylinder during the expansion stroke is possible to increase the amount of heat rejected with exhaust gases. The third capability may be needed at low to mid-range IMEP values where ignition of the late fuel delivery may require assistance from a secondary ignition means. Such means may need to be located near the transfer orifice exit aperture on the cylinder head. A glow plug is a suitable such secondary ignition means, because it can be energized continuously without pre-igniting the fuel delivered inside the combustion chamber before spark ignition or before the start of the expansion stroke. Alternatively the transfer orifice itself can be thermally insulated to maintain a high temperature for example by a layer of ceramic, which can even be sputtered with a little Platinum catalyst to assist the second ignition event when necessary.
[0049] Fourth Capability:
[0050] When operating at moderate IMEP and including starting and idling, the Merritt Engine emits very small quantities of NOx which can be below the legal limits for exhaust emissions. The use of the two methods of operation according to this invention can be disabled when operating at such range of IMEP whereupon the engine can then revert to operate as an unmodified and unthrottled lean burn Merritt type engine with very high thermal efficiency and low NOx emission capability. This invention allows the engine controller to recognize when to engage one or both methods of operation, by monitoring the amount of fuel delivered per engine cycle, and act in accordance with a plan which is programmed for automatic engagement and disengagement without interrupting the engine's operation.
[0051] The selection can be done by the car's driver by a throw of a switch, or by car manufacturers who can deliberately de-rate engine output IMEP to ensure low emission of NOx and Carbon dioxide, albeit at the expense of reduced vehicle performance.