Cylinder bore surface structures for an opposed-piston engine
11598211 · 2023-03-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02F1/004
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C29/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02F1/186
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2223/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B75/282
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02F1/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F01B7/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02F1/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A cylinder for an internal combustion opposed-piston engine includes a bore, either as part of the cylinder directly or of a liner. The bore has a surface for guiding a pair of pistons disposed for opposing movement in the cylinder. The cylinder bore has three zones of surface finishes: an inner zone extending between and including exhaust and intake ports, where only piston compression rings travel on the bore surface; two instances of an outer zone where only piston oil control rings travel on the bore surface; and two instances of a port zone where both types of rings travel on overlapping paths in the same bore surface portion. Each zone may have a particular surface finish that is tailored to specific requirements including oil control, ring wear, and scuff resistance relevant to the zone.
Claims
1. A cylinder for an internal combustion engine, comprising a bore surface, a first port means opening through the cylinder for transporting air into the cylinder, a second port means opening through the cylinder at a location longitudinally separated from the first port means for transporting exhaust gas out of the cylinder, a first bore surface zone extending between and including the first port means and the second port means, a second bore surface zone in the vicinity of a first end of the cylinder, and a third bore surface zone between an outer edge of the first port means and the second bore surface zone, in which the first bore surface zone comprises a first surface finish, the second bore surface zone comprises a second surface finish, and the third surface zone comprises a third surface finish.
2. An opposed-piston engine cylinder a bore surface for guiding movement of two opposed pistons, a first bore surface finish in a first zone of the bore surface which extends between and includes an intake port and an exhaust port, a second bore surface finish in a second zone of the bore surface in the vicinity of a first cylinder end, and a third bore surface finish in a third zone of the bore surface between an outer edge of the intake port and the second zone of the bore surface.
3. An opposed-piston engine, comprising a ported cylinder with a bore surface including outer zones, corresponding to an intake end and an exhaust end of the ported cylinder, separated by an inner zone which extends between and includes an exhaust port of the cylinder and an intake port of the cylinder, a first bore surface finish in the inner zone, a second bore surface finish in a first outer zone, and a third bore surface finish in a second outer zone, the first bore surface finish being of a higher roughness than both the second bore finish and the third bore finish.
4. The opposed-piston engine of claim 3, the second bore finish and the third bore finish each being of a substantially equal roughness.
5. The opposed-piston engine of claim 3, the ported cylinder further including the exhaust port being situated adjacent first end of the inner zone, and the bore surface further including an exhaust zone between the exhaust port and the first outer zone.
6. The opposed-piston engine of claim 5, the ported cylinder further including the intake port being situated adjacent a second end of the inner zone, and the bore surface further including an intake zone between the intake port and the second outer zone.
7. A liner for a cylinder of an opposed-piston engine, comprising a piston-guiding bore surface extending along a longitudinal axis: of the cylinder; an intake port region and an exhaust port region, each comprising a respective circumferentially-extending portion of the bore surface, the exhaust port region and intake port region being disposed in spaced-apart, coaxial alignment along the longitudinal axis; an inner bore surface zone including a longitudinally central portion of the bore surface which extends from the exhaust port region to the intake port region; one or more injection ports opening through the bore surface in the inner bore surface zone; and at least one outer bore surface zone near an end of the cylinder wherein the inner bore surface zone has a different surface finish than the outer bore surface zone.
8. An assembly for an opposed-piston engine, comprising: a pair of pistons, each piston comprising a crown portion; a skirt portion with a first end where the skirt portion and crown portion and a second end longitudinally separated from the first end, the second end being an: open end of the piston; at least one compression ring in the crown portion; and, at least one oil control ring in the skirt portion near the open end; and a cylinder, the cylinder comprising a bore surface for guiding the pair of pistons in opposing directions; an intake port and an exhaust port, each port comprising a generally circumferential array of port openings through the bore surface, the intake port and exhaust port separated longitudinally along a cylinder axis; and, a pair of injection ports opening through the bore surface in an intermediate portion of the cylinder between intake and exhaust ports; and wherein the bore surface of the cylinder includes at least two zones separated longitudinally along the cylinder axis, each zone comprising a generally circumferential bore surface area contacted solely by a piston compression ring or a piston oil control ring during operation of the engine, and each zone being finished to a different oil retention capacity than the other zone.
9. The assembly of claim 8, a first zone of the at least two zones being contacted only by the compression rings of the pair of pistons and comprising a first surface finish with a first oil retention capacity, and a second zone of the at least two zones being contacted only by the at least one oil ring of a first piston of the pair of pistons and comprising a second surface finish having a second oil retention capacity, wherein the first oil retention capacity is greater than the second oil retention capacity.
10. The assembly of claim 8, a first zone of the at least two zones being contacted only by the compression rings of the pair of pistons comprising a first surface finish with a first surface roughness, and a second zone of the at least two zones being by contacted only by the one or more oil rings of a first piston of the pair of pistons and comprising a second surface finish having a second surface roughness, wherein the first surface roughness is greater than the second surface roughness.
11. The assembly of either of claims 9 and 10, the bore surface of the cylinder further including a third zone comprising a generally circumferential bore surface area contacted by a compression ring an oil control ring in overlapping movements during operation of the engine, and the third zone being finished to a different oil retention capacity than the first zone or the second zone.
12. The assembly of either of claims 9 and 10, the cylinder further including the exhaust port being situated adjacent an outer end of the first zone, and the bore surface further including an exhaust zone between the exhaust port and the second zone.
13. A method manufacturing a cylinder for an opposed-piston engine, comprising providing a cylinder with a bore; designating a first bore surface zone on a bore surface, the first bore surface zone including first and second circumferential port regions concentrically aligned at spaced-apart locations on a longitudinal axis of the cylinder; designating respective second bore surface zones near opposite ends of the cylinder, designating respective third bore surface zones, each located between a respective port region and a respective second bore surface zone; and, finishing the bore surface in the designated first bore surface zone to a first surface roughness; finishing the bore surface in the designated second bore surface zones to a second surface roughness; and, finishing the bore surface in the designated third bore surface zones to a third surface roughness; wherein, the first surface roughness is greater than the second surface roughness.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein finishing bore surface includes patterning areas of the cylinder bore surface with oil retaining slots.
15. The method of either claim 13 or 14, wherein finishing the bore surface comprises honing the bore to create a surface finish on the bore surface prior to putting the cylinder in service in an engine, in which the surface finish is defined by at least one of a surface roughness, a surface waviness, and an oil retention area per unit area.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7) The component and engine embodiments described and illustrated herein are improvements and modifications of corresponding designs for two-stroke opposed-piston engines. Other aspects include methods for fabrication and use of pistons and cylinders of opposed-piston engines.
(8) A two-stroke cycle engine is an internal combustion engine that completes an operating cycle with a single complete rotation of a crankshaft and two strokes of a piston connected to the crankshaft. One example of a two-stroke cycle engine is an opposed-piston engine in which two pistons are disposed in opposition in the bore of a cylinder. During engine operation, combustion takes place in a combustion chamber formed between the end surfaces of the two pistons when the pistons move through respective top center locations in the bore. The combustion chamber is defined and bounded by the end surfaces of the pistons and the annular portion of the bore surface between the end surfaces.
(9) With reference to
(10)
(11) For this disclosure, a cylinder in an opposed-piston engine may comprise a linerless boring, or a linerless formed space, in a cylinder block. Alternatively, the opposed-piston engine may comprise a liner (or sleeve) retained in a tunnel in a cylinder block. An example of the latter construction, which is not intended to limit the principles described and illustrated herein, is shown in
(12)
(13) In
(14) The cross-sectional view of
(15) With reference to
(16) The inner zone 440 may have a surface finish distinct from the two outer zones 445.sub.E and 445.sub.i. Only the inner piston rings 421 contact the inner bore surface zone 440 when the engine operates, and so the surface finish in the inner zone 440 can be optimized to reduce oil burning while minimizing friction. In this regard, the outer zones 445.sub.E and 445.sub.i have a surface finish that optimizes oil distribution and consumption, as only the outer piston rings 460 contact these zones when the engine is operating. In some instances, the outer zones 445.sub.E and 445.sub.f may have somewhat different surface finishes that are tailored to different conditions resulting from uniflow scavenging wherein average temperatures in the exhaust end 415 of the cylinder may be higher than in the intake end 417. The third zones 450.sub.E and 450.sub.i are those which both the outer piston rings and inner piston rings contact during engine operation. In these zones, the surface finish can be distinct from the surface finish in the first zone 440. In most embodiments, the roughness of the cylinder bore surface finish in the first zone 440 will be rougher than at of the outer zones 445.sub.E and 445.sub.i.
(17) As per
(18) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE I Zone Embodiment 440 445.sub.E 450.sub.E 445.sub.I 450.sub.I 1.sup.st Embodiment R.sub.440 R.sub.445E < R.sub.440 R.sub.450E > R.sub.440 R.sub.445I < R.sub.440 R.sub.450I > R.sub.440 2.sup.nd Embodiment R.sub.440 R.sub.445E < R.sub.440 R.sub.450E = R.sub.445E R.sub.445I < R.sub.440 R.sub.450I = R.sub.445I 3.sup.rd Embodiment R.sub.440 R.sub.445E < R.sub.440 R.sub.450E = R.sub.440 R.sub.445I < R.sub.440 R.sub.450I = R.sub.440
(19) With reference to
(20) In the first embodiment, a value of roughness R.sub.440 in the inner zone is selected to emphasize durability. The roughness values R.sub.450E and R.sub.450i are greater than R.sub.440, while the values R.sub.445E and R.sub.445i are less than R.sub.440. The bore surface roughness is lowest (i.e., is smoothest) at the extremities of the cylinder, where only the oil retention rings contact the bore surface, as is reflected in the values R.sub.445E and R.sub.445i. Distribution of oil to the inner piston rings is the focus of the zones 450.sub.E and 450.sub.i, and so the bore surface has the highest roughness values R.sub.450E and R.sub.450i here. Scuffing and seizing are concerns that are mitigated by adequate lubrication and oil retention, but that need to be weighed against burning oil that enters the combustion chamber by way of the ports. This results in the surface roughness of the cylinder bore in the center being a middle value, R.sub.440, in this first embodiment.
(21) The second embodiment listed in Table I is one in which the roughness values R.sub.445E and R.sub.450E are equal, or approximately the same, and similarly, R.sub.445i and R.sub.450i are approximately the same or equal. The roughness in the middle of the cylinder, R.sub.440, is greater than R.sub.445E, R.sub.445i, R.sub.450E, and R.sub.450i. In this second embodiment, retaining enough oil on the surface of the cylinder bore to prevent scuffing and undue wear from the contact of inner piston rings on the bore surface is key. The roughness in the zones 450.sub.E and 450.sub.i is lower than that of the center zone 440, and is closer to, if not the same as, that in the area where only the piston outer rings contact the cylinder bore. In this embodiment R.sub.450E and R.sub.450i are approximately equal to R.sub.445E and R.sub.445i, respectively, to lower the friction between the piston outer rings and the cylinder bore surface.
(22) Table I lists a third embodiment in which the roughness values R.sub.440, R.sub.450E, and R.sub.450i are equal, or approximately the same, while the roughness at the extremities of the cylinder is lower, such that R.sub.440 is greater than both R.sub.445E and R.sub.445i. In this third embodiment, the bore surface is predominantly finished with a texture that serves to retain oil and increase durability particularly with respect to the outer rings of each piston.
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(24) The types of surface finish that can be applied to different zones of a cylinder bore surface include various honed surfaces, as well as machined, laser textured (ablated), ion beam textured, or etched features. Surface finish may be selectively applied by certain steps in additive manufacturing. Surface finishes can be selected to reduce any of wear, friction losses, and lubricating oil consumption. A cylinder bore or cylinder liner bore can have two or more types of surface finish before an opposed-piston engine is put into service.
(25) The surface finish applied to one or more zones in a cylinder bore before an engine is put into service can include plateau honing. Plateau honing of a cylinder bore surface creates valleys in the surface, while providing a flat surface above the valleys for the piston rings to travel across. The valleys in a plateau honed surface allow for oil retention and direction of oil flow.
(26) Alternatively, or additionally, the surface finish applied to one or more zones in a cylinder bore prior to use can include a finish produced by using a slide honing tool with a reduced rotational speed. The honing angle in this helical honing pattern can be 140 degrees as a result of the reduced rotational speed of the honing tool. The honing angle used in conventional plateau honing, in comparison, can be around 45 degrees. In some implementations, one of the honing angles used to create a surface finish in one or more of the zones of a cylinder bore can range from 55 degrees to 65 degrees.
(27) A cylinder bore surface can also be finished by coating with a material distinct from that of the cylinder block or cylinder liner. Methods that can be used to apply the coating material include plasma spraying, plasma-transferred wire arc applications, screen-printing, electroplating, anodization, and the like. The coated material applied to the cylinder bore can include a single material, a layered structure of two or more materials, or a composite of two or more materials. Two or more materials can be different or distinct even if the elements are the same when the structure of the materials are different. That is to say that two different phases or crystal structures of a metal, alloy, or oxide can be considered to be different materials when describing the material coated onto the cylinder bore surface. Materials that can be coated onto the cylinder bore include one or more of: diamond-like carbon (DLC); iron; iron oxide (e.g., wuestite or wustite, FeO); solid lubricant; polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE); graphite; manganese phosphate; zinc phosphate; one or more high-temperature metal alloys; titanium oxide, metallic-loaded resin; an abradable powder coating; a polymer or resin matrix with embedded ceramic, metal, and/or graphite particles; and the like. The metal alloys can include alloys of titanium, nickel containing alloys, chromium containing alloys, or molybdenum containing alloys.
(28) The coating applied to the cylinder bore can be honed to achieve a desired finish. A coating applied to the cylinder bore can be applied at an initial thickness of hundreds of microns (i.e., 200 or more micrometers), and the final coating thickness can be about 100 microns to about 150 microns. When the coatings are honed, they can be honed using diamond honing techniques. Alternatively, in the case of PTFE or polymer matrix coatings, the coating material can have a final thickness of about 10 microns to 50 microns. Materials coated onto a cylinder bore can have a bond strength of 30 MPa or greater, and the finished coating can include pores which can enhance the oil storage capacity of the finished surface. The pores can be formed by the material coating process (e.g., anodization, plasma spraying) or can be formed after the coated material is honed using laser, machining, or etching techniques.
(29)
(30) At 611, bore surface zones are designated. In this regard, an inner bore surface zone is designated on a bore surface of the piston. The inner bore surface zone includes first and second circumferential port regions concentrically aligned at spaced-apart locations on a longitudinal axis of the cylinder. Respective outer bore surface zones are designated near opposite ends of the cylinder, and respective exhaust and intake bore surface zones are designated, each located between a respective port region and a respective outer bore surface zone.
(31) At 613, the designated bore surface zones are finished. In this regard, the bore surface portion in the designated inner bore surface zone is finished to a first surface roughness; the bore surface portions in the designated outer bore surface zones are finished to a second surface roughness; and, the bore surface portions in the designated exhaust and intake bore surface zones are finished to a third surface roughness.
(32) At 615, the finishing step 613 is controlled so as to provide varying degrees of surface roughness, in which the first surface roughness is greater than the second surface roughness.
(33) At 617, optionally, a surface finish can be defined by a surface roughness, a surface waviness, or an oil retention area per unit area, or by a type of honing used to create the surface finish that is present on the bore surface prior to putting the cylinder in service in an engine.
(34) These 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 the subject cylinder bore surface constructions for an opposed-piston engine.