Refrigerant Cooled Coaxial Fuel Rail
20180229581 ยท 2018-08-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
F01P3/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M55/025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P9/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B60H2001/00307
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02M53/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M31/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B60H1/00271
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02M69/465
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B60H1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02M31/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An engine fuel cooling system for vehicles exchanges heat between fuel and a flow of cold liquid in a coaxial fuel rail. The coaxial fuel rails include an inner fuel path through an inner tube surrounded by an outer cold liquid path through an outer tube, to cool the fuel provided to fuel injectors. The inner tube has no substantial direct contact with the outer tube to prevent external heat from being conducted to the inner tube. In one embodiment, the inner tube is solely supported by an fuel inlet fitting and injector hats teaching through the outer tube and into the inner tube. The coaxial fuel rail may be constructed using dip soldering.
Claims
1. A fuel cooling system for a vehicle including an internal combustion engine and an air conditioning system, said fuel cooling system comprising: a coaxial fuel rail including an outer tube and an inner tube inside the outer tube and spaced apart from the outer tube; a fuel inlet fitting passing through the outer tube and into the inner tube providing fluid communication between a fuel source and the inner tube; injector hats passing from the inner tube and through the outer tube providing fluid communication between the inner tube and fuel injectors; and the coaxial fuel rail in thermal communication with the air conditioning system, the coaxial fuel rail configured to receive a cold liquid flow produced by an air conditioning system into a space between the inner tube and the outer tube, and a fuel flow from the fuel source through the fuel inlet fitting and into the inner tube, wherein heat is conducted from the fuel flow through walls of the inner tube into the cold liquid flow.
2. The fuel cooling system of claim 1, wherein the inner tube has no direct contact with the outer tube.
3. The fuel cooling system of claim 2, wherein the inner tube is held in position inside the outer tube by the fuel inlet fitting and the injector hats.
4. The fuel cooling system of claim 3, wherein the fuel inlet fitting and the injector hats are attached to the inner tube and the outer tube by dip soldering.
5. The fuel cooling system of claim 3, further including a sensor bung passing through the outer tube and into the inner tube, wherein the inner tube is solely held in position inside the outer tube by the fuel inlet fitting, the sensor bung, and the injector hats.
6. The fuel cooling system of claim 1, wherein the cold liquid flow passes through both the coaxial fuel rail and an intake air heat exchanger.
7. The fuel cooling system of claim 6, wherein the cold liquid flow passes first through the coaxial fuel rail, and then through the intake air heat exchanger, before returning to the compressor.
8. The fuel cooling system of claim 6, wherein the cold liquid flow passes first through the intake air heat exchanger and then through the coaxial fuel, and refrigerant rail, before returning to the compressor.
9. The fuel cooling system of claim 7, wherein the cold liquid flow is a refrigerant flow from an expansion valve the air conditioning system and flowing from the coaxial fuel rail to a compressor of the air conditioning system.
10. The fuel cooling system of claim 7, wherein: the cold liquid flow is a cold coolant flow; the cold coolant flow is cooled in a heat exchanger by a cold refrigerant flow; and the heat exchanger receives the cold refrigerant flow from an expansion valve of the air conditioning system and returns the cold refrigerant flow to a compressor of the air conditioning system
11. A fuel cooling system for a vehicle including an internal combustion engine and an air conditioning system, said fuel cooling system comprising: a coaxial fuel rail including an outer tube and an inner tube inside the outer tube and spaced apart from the outer tube having no direct contact with the outer tube; a fuel inlet fitting passing through the outer tube and into the inner tube providing fluid communication between a fuel source and the inner tube; injector hats passing from the inner tube and through the outer tube providing fluid communication between the inner tube and fuel injectors; a sensor bung passing from the inner tube and through the outer tube, wherein: the inner tube is held in position inside the outer tube by the fuel inlet fitting, the sensor bung, and the injector hats; and the fuel rails are constructed by dip soldering the outer tube, inner tube, fuel inlet fitting, the sensor bung, and the injector hats; and the coaxial fuel rail configured to receive a cold refrigerant flow produced by an air conditioning system expansion valve into a space between the inner tube and the outer tube and a fuel flow from the fuel source through the fuel inlet fitting and into the inner tube, wherein heat is conducted from the fuel flow through walls of the inner tube into the cold refrigerant flow.
12. A fuel cooling system for a vehicle including an internal combustion engine and an air conditioning system, said fuel cooling system comprising: a coaxial fuel rail including an outer tube and an inner tube inside the outer tube and spaced apart from the outer tube having no direct contact with the outer tube; a fuel inlet fitting passing through the outer tube and into the inner tube providing fluid communication between a fuel source and the inner tube; injector hats passing from the inner tube and through the outer tube providing fluid communication between the inner tube and fuel injectors; a sensor bung passing from the inner tube and through the outer tube, wherein: the inner tube is held in position inside the outer tube by the fuel inlet fitting, the sensor bung, and the injector hats; and the fuel rails are constructed by dip soldering the outer tube, inner tube, fuel inlet fitting, the sensor bung, and the injector hats; and the coaxial fuel rail is configured to receive a cold coolant flow through a space between the inner tube and the outer tube and a fuel flow from the fuel source through the fuel inlet fitting and into the inner tube, wherein heat is conducted from the fuel flow through walls of the inner tube into the cold coolant flow, the cold coolant flow cooled in a heat exchanger by a cold refrigerant flow produced by an air conditioning system expansion valve of the air conditioning system.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING
[0012] The above and other aspects, features and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent from the following more particular description thereof, presented in conjunction with the following drawings wherein:
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[0027] Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding components throughout the several views of the drawings.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0028] The following description is of the best mode presently contemplated for carrying out the invention. This description is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but is made merely for the purpose of describing one or more preferred embodiments of the invention. The scope of the invention should be determined with reference to the claims.
[0029] Where the terms about or generally are associated with an element of the invention, it is intended to describe a feature's appearance to the human eye or human perception, and not a precise measurement.
[0030] The term fuel is used herein to refer to liquid fuel (gasoline, diesel, alcohol and the like) mixed with air for combustion in internal combustion engines.
[0031] The term supercharger is used hereafter to refer to any type of forced induction device including belt driven superchargers and turbo superchargers.
[0032] The term refrigerant is used herein to refer to common refrigerants used in mobile air conditioning systems. Preferred refrigerants have a vaporization temperature at or below 61 degrees Fahrenheit at ambient pressure.
[0033] The term coolant is used herein to refer to common liquid coolant used to cool internal combustion engines. These include, water, glycol, a water and rust inhibitor mix, a water glycol mix, and the like. Coolants have a vaporization temperature above 212 degrees Fahrenheit at ambient pressure.
[0034] A general diagram of a fuel and air cooling system 10 according to the present invention, for use with an internal combustion engine, is shown in
[0035] The flow of cabin refrigerant 14a passes through a cabin air conditioning system including a cabin circuit valve 32a and then a cabin circuit expansion valve 34a producing cold refrigerant 14c. A cabin heat exchanger (also called an evaporator coil) 36 residing in or proximal to a vehicle cabin 37, a cabin thermostat 38, and optionally, a heat exchanger 40 for cooling fuel, oil, coolant, beverages, and the like.
[0036] The flow of fuel and air refrigerant 14b is separated into two parallel flows to pass through a fuel system including a primary fuel and air circuit valve 32b and then a primary fuel and air circuit expansion valve 34b, and secondary fuel and air circuit valve 32c and then a secondary fuel and air circuit expansion valve 34c producing parallel flows of cold refrigerant 14c, and then recombine the parallel flows of cold refrigerant 14c. The recombined flow of fuel and air refrigerant 14c passed through a heat exchanger 48, optionally through a fuel pre-cooler 20, and re-joins the flow of cabin refrigerant 14c at refrigerant node 41 to return to the compressor 24.
[0037] The coolant 16 is circulated by a pump 56. The coolant 16 splits into a flow of refrigerated coolant 16a and a flow of air cooled coolant 16b. The refrigerated coolant 16a passes through the heat exchanger 48 where it is cooled by the fuel and air refrigerant 14b. The air cooled coolant 16b passed through a heat exchanger (radiator) 60 where it is cooled by the flow of ambient air 18. After being cooled, the refrigerated coolant 16a and air cooled coolant 16b join at coolant node 51, and flow sequentially through an intake air intercooler 50 and fuel rails 22. Supercharging heats the air compressed in the supercharger and the intercooler 50 is preferably, but not necessarily, a supercharger intercooler and cools air compressed by a supercharger before entry into an engine. The flow of coolant through the fuel rails 22 cools the fuel 12 before injection into the engine. The coolant flow 16 then proceeds through a sight glass and filter 52, optionally through an intake air pre-cooler 53, past an expansion/reservoir tank 54, and back to the coolant pump 56.
[0038] A refrigerant manifold 62 preferably houses the solenoid valves 32a, 32b, and 32c, and the expansion valves 34b and 34c. The cabin circuit expansion valve 34a is preferably the original equipment expansion valve of the vehicle the fuel and air cooling system 10 is installed in. The refrigerated coolant 16a preferably passes through the refrigerant manifold 62 to cool the refrigerant manifold 62. Details of the refrigerant manifold 62 are shown in
[0039] A diagram of a fuel and air cooling system 10 with refrigerant cooling features (e. g., the compressor 24) turned off is shown in
[0040] In other embodiments the cold refrigerant 14c may be directly supples to the intercooler 50 and/or the fuel rails 22, and when the cold refrigerant 14c is directly supplied to both the intercooler 50 and the fuel rails 22, the order of the intercooler 50 and the fuel rails 22 may be the intercooler 50 first, or the fuel rails 22 first.
[0041] An example of a physical layout of the fuel and air cooling system 10, in the fuel and air cooling mode of
[0042] A diagram of a fuel and air cooling system 10 with refrigerant cooling only provided for the cabin 37 is shown in
[0043] A diagram of the fuel and air cooling system 10, with refrigerant cooling provided to cabin interior and the fuel and air is shown in
[0044] The coolant pump 56b pumps the coolant 16 to the two way valve 58 which is set to allow the refrigerated coolant 16a to pass through the coolant heat exchanger 48 to be cooled by the fuel and air refrigerant 14b. After being cooled, the refrigerated coolant 16a flows sequentially through the supercharger intercooler 50 and fuel rails 22. In the intercooler 50, the refrigerated coolant 16a cools the air compressed by the supercharger before entry into the engine. The refrigerated coolant 16a flows through the fuel rails 22 to cool the fuel 12 before injection into the engine. The coolant flow 16 then proceeds through the sight glass and filter 52, optionally through the intake air pre-cooler 53, past an expansion/reservoir tank 54, and back to the coolant pump 56.
[0045] A diagram of the fuel and air cooling system 10 with refrigerant cooling provided to the fuel and air only is shown in
[0046] The coolant pump 56b pumps the coolant 16 to the two way valve 58 which is set to allow the refrigerated coolant 16a to pass through the coolant heat exchanger 48 to be cooled by the fuel and air refrigerant 14b. After being cooled, the refrigerated coolant 16a flows sequentially through the supercharger intercooler 50 and fuel rails 22. In the intercooler 50, the refrigerated coolant 16a cools the air compressed by the supercharger before entry into the engine. The refrigerated coolant 16a flows through the fuel rails 22 to cool the fuel 12 before injection into the engine. The coolant flow 16 then proceeds through the sight glass and filter 52, optionally through the intake air pre-cooler 53, past an expansion/reservoir tank 54, and back to the coolant pump 56.
[0047] The refrigerant manifold 62 is shown in
[0048] An exploded view of a coaxial fuel and coolant rail 80 is shown in
[0049] Fuel cooling blocks 96 clamped over fuel lines 94 and fuel injector hats 78 are shown in
[0050] A second coaxial flow fuel and coolant rail 100 is shown in
[0051] While the invention herein disclosed has been described by means of specific embodiments and applications thereof, numerous modifications and variations could be made thereto by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention set forth in the claims.