AIR/FUEL MIXTURE CONTROL SYSTEM FOR INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES
20170058818 ยท 2017-03-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02D33/006
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M37/0023
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M37/0047
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M37/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2200/0414
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2250/31
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
F02D2200/703
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/1446
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M35/10216
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/3082
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02D41/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M69/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A control system for automatically adjusting air/fuel mixture in an internal combustion engine having a mechanical fuel injector system. The automatic air/fuel mixture control system has an electronic control unit which controls the quantity of fuel provided to the combustion chamber in response to sensor inputs in accordance with desired parameters.
Claims
1. An air/fuel mixture control system for an internal combustion engine having a fixed orifice fuel injector system, said mixture control system comprising an electronic control unit having a plurality of sensors and operatively connected to control pressure of fuel flowing to each said injector.
2. An air/fuel mixture control system as in claim 1, said mixture control system comprising an electronic control unit having a plurality of sensors and operatively connected to a flow control valve through which fuel flows to said injector, said electronic control unit reducing pressure of fuel flowing through said valve.
3. The air/fuel mixture control system of claim 1 wherein said system comprises a pulse width modulated fuel pump in fluid communication with said injector, said electronic control unit being operatively connected to said fuel pump to control fuel pressure ouput of said fuel pump.
4. The air/fuel mixture control system of claim 1 wherein said system comprises a fuel bleed valve in fluid communication with a fuel divider providing fuel to a plurality of fuel injectors; said fuel bleed valve being controlled by said electronic control unit to adjust fuel flow to said fuel divider.
5. The air/fuel mixture control system of claim 1 wherein said system comprises a fuel bleed valve in fluid communication between a fuel divider and each one of a plurality of fuel injectors, said fuel bleed valves being controlled by said electronic control unit to adjust fuel flow to each of said fuel injectors.
6. The air/fuel mixture control system of claim 1 wherein said system comprises a vacuum bleed valve in fluid communication between vacuum chambers in a fuel injection throttle body, said vacuum bleed valve being controlled by said electronic control unit to adjust vacuum to said throttle body to thereby adjust metered fuel flow through said throttle body to a fuel divider.
7. The air/fuel mixture control system of claim 1 wherein said engine has a throttle plate and said injector is positioned upstream of said throttle plate.
8. The air/fuel mixture control system of claim 7 wherein said engine has a carburetor.
9. A method of controlling air/fuel mixture in an internal combustion engine by installing an air/fuel mixture control system on said engine, said system having at least one fixed orifice fuel injector, and controlling fuel flowing through said injector using an electronic control unit having a plurality of sensors.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein said electronic control unit has a plurality of sensors and said system has a flow control valve through which fuel flows to said injector, said electronic control unit controlling pressure of fuel flowing through said valve.
11. The method of claim 9, wherein said system comprises a pulse width modulated fuel pump in fluid communication with said injector, said electronic control unit being operatively connected to said fuel pump to adjust air/fuel mixture by controlling fuel pressure ouput of said fuel pump.
12. The method of claim 9, wherein said air/fuel mixture control system comprises a fuel bleed valve in fluid communication with a fuel divider providing fuel to a plurality of fuel injectors; said fuel bleed valve being controlled by said electronic control unit to adjust fuel flow to said fuel divider.
13. The method of claim 9, wherein said system comprises a fuel bleed valve in fluid communication between a fuel divider and each one of a plurality of fuel injectors, said fuel bleed valves being controlled by said electronic control unit to adjust fuel flow to each of said fuel injectors.
14. The method of claim 9, wherein said system comprises a vacuum bleed valve in fluid communication between vacuum chambers in a fuel injection throttle body, said vacuum bleed valve being controlled by said electronic control unit to adjust vacuum to said throttle body to thereby adjust metered fuel flow through said throttle body to a fuel divider.
15. The method of claim 9, wherein said engine has a throttle plate and said injector is positioned upstream of said throttle plate.
16. The method of claim 15 wherein said engine has a carburetor.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0014]
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0015] A system of the present invention automatically adjusts the air/fuel mixture in the combustion chamber or chambers of an internal combustion engine having a fixed orifice fuel injector system. The system has an electronic control unit (ECU) which is programmed to automatically adjust the air/fuel mixture in each combustion chamber by controlling the amount of fuel provided to each fixed orifice fuel injector in response to sensor input in accordance with desired parameters. The system adjusts the mixture from a fuel mixture system which is set to default to run relatively rich so that if there is a failure of the automatic electronic system, there is a virtually seamless ability to revert back to the pre-existing mechanical system. The system is particularly well-suited to be retrofit onto existing aircraft engines which have mechanical fuel injectors or have carburetors but can be modified to have mechanical fuel injectors.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0016] Broadly speaking, the present invention relates to a method and system for controlling the air/fuel mixture provided to an internal combustion engine having fixed orifice fuel injectors, commonly referred to as mechanical fuel injectors. The system is also useful for engines which have carburetors but can be modified to have mechanical fuel injectors for use in accordance with the present invention. The method and system of the present invention uses an electronic fuel control unit to automatically and precisely lean the air/fuel mixture in response to inputs from various sensors and in accordance with desired parameters by reducing the quantity of fuel fed into mechanical type fuel injectors in the cylinders of an internal combustion engine.
[0017] The system of the present invention is particularly well adapted to retrofit aircraft engines which have mechanical fuel injectors or can be modified to have mechanical fuel injectors. Mechanical fuel injectors have constant flow nozzles with fixed orifices and are usually located in the intake manifold near the intake valve of each cylinder. The air/fuel ratio of aircraft engines using mechanical fuel injectors is traditionally accomplished by the pilot manually adjusting a mixture control to reduce fuel pressure at the input side of each fixed orifice injector to thereby reduce the amount of fuel supplied to each cylinder at a given throttle setting. Traditional mixture adjustments are often not very timely or precise. Some aircraft engines also have a mechanical arrangement in the throttle body which makes approximate adjustments to the mixture to compensate for altitude changes. However, further manual adjustment of the mixture is required for precise mixture adjustment.
[0018] In accordance with the present invention, an electronic, automatic mixture adjustment system is provided for fuel injected engines having mechanical fuel injectors. The air/fuel mixture in each cylinder is adjusted by an electronic control unit which reduces the quantity of fuel supplied to each cylinder in response to sensor input. The present invention uses an electronic control unit or ECU to provide the advantages of a FADEC system to aircraft engines with fixed orifice fuel injectors. Furthermore, the present invention provides a system which is a fail safe in that it reverts back to the original mechanical fuel supply system if the electronic control system should fail.
[0019] The electronic control unit or ECU of the present system is operatively connected to function to reduce the fuel supply to each cylinder by reducing the fuel pressure to each constant orifice injector. The ECU includes a microprocessor which is programmed to compute the desired air/fuel mixture for the particular operating conditions of the engine. The operating conditions are signaled to the ECU by inputs from various sensors. If the electronic fuel control unit fails then the fuel pressure is not reduced and the engine is set to run rich under the existing mechanic al fuel supply system. The ECU reduces fuel supply by either: [0020] bleeding down the metered fuel pressure before a flow divider to lean the mixture (see
[0025] Now referring to
[0026] Fuel pump 26 is in fluid communication with fuel tank 28 and pumps fuel through fuel line 30 to throttle body 32. Throttle 34 is connected to throttle body 32 having throttle plate 33 and which meters fuel in a conventional manner in response to throttle position to provide metered fuel through metered fuel line 36 to fuel pressure bleed valve 14. As is conventional in the art, throttle body 32 also controls the amount of intake air, indicated by arrow 38, provided to intake manifold 40 which provides air/fuel mixture to cylinder 42 of engine 44. . It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that, while only one cylinder 42 is shown in the Figure, it is contemplated that multiple cylinders 42 of engine 44 will be connected to intake manifold 40 as is conventional in the art.
[0027] Throttle body 32 controls manifold pressure in intake manifold 40 and provides metered fuel through fuel line 36 at a pressure to provide metered fuel at a full rich mixture. ECU 12 controls fuel bleed valve 14 to reduce the pressure and thereby the quantity of fuel flowing through fuel line 46 to flow divider 48 and hence to adjust the amount of fuel flowing through a plurality of injector lines 50, each of which is in fluid communication with a fuel injector 52 which injects fuel into each cylinder 42 in a conventional manner. Fuel injectors 52 are generally located near an intake valve of an associated cylinder 42. System 10 is shown as having six injectors for six cylinders but the exact number of injectors and cylinders may vary within the scope of the present invention.
[0028] It is intended that throttle body 32 be set to provide metered fuel at a pressure that would provide a rich mixture into cylinders 42 through injectors 52 if fuel pressure bleed valve 14 did not reduce the quantity of fuel going to the fuel injectors 52 to provide a leaner air/fuel mixture to cylinder 42. Fuel bleed valve 14 functions to either not to reduce or to reduce the fuel pressure going to flow divider 48 and hence to injectors 52. Thus, injectors 52 run at full rich or are leaned from full rich mixtures as controlled by ECU 12 controlling fuel bleed valve 14. While operating in automatic mode, throttle body 32 is always run or set to a relatively rich configuration. System 10 adjusts fuel by only reducing the amount of fuel so that if system 10 fails, fuel supplied to cylinders 42 provides a rich mixture.
[0029] Now referring to
[0030] Now referring to
[0031] Now referring to
[0032] The fuel pressure in fuel line 346 is controlled by ECU 312 which is operatively connected to electric pulse width fuel pump 326. ECU 312 controls pulse width modulated fuel pump 326 to control the fuel pressure in fuel line 336 to thereby control the amount of fuel flowing into flow divider 348 and hence to adjust the amount of fuel flowing through each fuel injector line 350 and through each fuel injector 352 into intake manifold 340 and associated cylinder 242 of the engine (not shown but analogous to engines 44 and 144). Only one injector 352 is shown in the figure but it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that each fuel line 350 feeds an associated injector 352. The exact number of injector fuel lines and injectors is dependent upon the number of cylinders and design of the engine. The fuel line pressure is determined by ECU 212 based on rpm and manifold pressure taking into consideration outside air pressure and temperature as well as EGTs and other desired parameters. Throttle body 332 controls the amount of air 338 provided to intake manifold 340.
[0033] Now referring to
[0034] Now referring to
[0035] It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the present invention is subject to modification and variation. It is intended that such modifications and variations are considered to be within the broad scope of the invention which is intended to be limited only by the following claims. Such modifications are intended to be included herein so long as they operate in accordance with the principles of this invention.