ENGINE HAVING HOTSPOT FUEL IGNITER AND PISTON AND METHODOLOGY USING SAME
20250270969 ยท 2025-08-28
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02B2075/125
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02F3/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
An engine includes a piston movable within a combustion cylinder, a direct fuel injector, and a hotspot fuel igniter. The hotspot fuel igniter includes a core exposed to the combustion cylinder, to ignite fuel spray plumes of a directly injected fuel, and an insulator insulating the core from heat transfer with a material of the piston. Applications include igniting a range of fuels, including lower cetane number fuels.
Claims
1. An engine comprising: an engine housing including a cylinder block and a cylinder head, and having a combustion cylinder formed therein; a piston movable within the combustion cylinder; a direct fuel injector extending into the combustion cylinder and including a plurality of spray orifices; and a hotspot fuel igniter including a core exposed to the combustion cylinder, and an insulator extending at least partially around the core.
2. The engine of claim 1 further comprising an ignition aid supported in the cylinder head.
3. The engine of claim 1 wherein the hotspot fuel igniter further includes a plug, and the insulator extends between the core and the plug.
4. The engine of claim 1 wherein the core includes a fuel-impingement edge.
5. The engine of claim 1 wherein the hotspot fuel igniter is within the piston.
6. The engine of claim 5 wherein an air gap clearance is defined between the hotspot fuel igniter and a material of the piston.
7. The engine of claim 5 wherein the plurality of spray orifices define a plurality of fuel spray axes through the combustion cylinder, and the hotspot fuel igniter is one of a plurality of hotspot fuel igniters arranged in a regular pattern relative to the plurality of fuel spray axes.
8. The engine of claim 7 wherein the regular pattern includes an angularly offset pattern relative to the plurality of fuel spray axes, circumferentially around a piston center axis.
9. The engine of claim 5 wherein the piston includes an annular piston rim extending circumferentially around a combustion bowl, and the hotspot fuel igniter is attached to the annular piston rim.
10. A piston comprising: a piston crown formed of a piston crown material, and including a piston crown surface forming an annular piston rim extending circumferentially around a piston center axis; and a plurality of hotspot fuel igniters mounted in the piston crown and each including a core positioned so as to be impinged by an attached flow of a fuel along the piston crown surface, and an insulator insulating the core from the piston crown material.
11. The piston of claim 10 wherein each respective core includes a fuel-impingement edge.
12. The piston of claim 11 wherein each fuel-impingement edge is one of a plurality of fuel-impingement edges of each respective hotspot fuel igniter.
13. The piston of claim 11 wherein the plurality of hotspot fuel igniters each include a plug positioned in a bore in the piston crown and supporting the respective core.
14. The piston of claim 13 wherein an air gap clearance is defined between each respective plug and the piston crown.
15. The piston of claim 14 wherein each respective plug defines a plug axis, and the air gap clearance includes an axial air gap clearance and a radial air gap clearance.
16. The piston of claim 14 wherein the insulator includes a solid phase insulator between the respective plug and core.
17. The piston of claim 10 wherein the annular piston rim extends circumferentially around a combustion bowl, and the plurality of hotspot fuel igniters includes hotspot fuel igniters within the annular piston rim and hotspot fuel igniters within the combustion bowl.
18. A method of operating an engine comprising: directly injecting a fuel into a combustion cylinder in an engine; impinging a plurality of plumes of the directly injected fuel upon a plurality of hotspot fuel igniters in a piston crown of a piston in the combustion cylinder and insulated from heat transfer with a material of the piston; and igniting the plurality of plumes of the directly injected fuel based at least in part upon retained heat of the plurality of hotspot fuel igniters.
19. The method of claim 18 wherein the impinging a plurality of plumes includes impinging the plurality of plumes upon a fuel-impingement edge of each respective one of the plurality of hotspot fuel igniters exposed to an attached flow of one of the plurality of plumes along a piston crown surface of the piston crown.
20. The method of claim 18 wherein the directly injected fuel includes a fuel having a cetane number below about 35.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0012] Referring to
[0013] Engine system 10 further includes a fuel system 28 having a fuel supply 30, a fuel pump 32, and a direct fuel injector 24 extending into combustion cylinder 20 and including a plurality of spray orifices 26. Fuel supply 30 may contain a range of fuels or fuel blends including liquid fuels such as methanol, ethanol, naptha, gasoline, or various hydrocarbon or hydrocarbon-derivative fuel blends. Fuel supply 30 might also include any of a variety of gaseous fuels such as natural gas, propane, methane, blends of various gaseous hydrocarbon fuels, or fuels containing gaseous molecular hydrogen. In an implementation the fuel utilized in engine system 10 may include a lower cetane number fuel, including a fuel having a cetane number from approximately 30 to approximately 50, and in some embodiments a fuel having a cetane number of about 35 or less. As used herein, the term about means generally or approximately, as would be understood by a person of ordinary skill in the art including but not necessarily limited to within measurement error.
[0014] Cylinder head 18 may further include an intake port 34 and an exhaust port 36. An intake valve 38 is shown movable to control fluid communication between intake port 34 and combustion cylinder 20. An exhaust valve 40 controls fluid communication between exhaust port 36 and combustion cylinder 20. In a typical implementation, two intake valves and two exhaust valves will be generally conventionally used. Engine system 10 may be operated in a four-stroke engine cycle, although the present disclosure is not strictly limited as such. Engine system 10 also includes an ignition aid 42 that is positioned at least partially in combustion cylinder 20. In one embodiment, ignition aid includes a glowplug having a resistive electric heater. In another implementation ignition aid 32 includes a sparkplug forming a spark gap within combustion cylinder 20. In still another implementation ignition aid 42 could be a so-called prechamber ignition device having a dedicated supply of fuel to a prechamber therein that is fluidly connected to combustion cylinder 20. Still other embodiments might not include an ignition aid at all.
[0015] It will be recalled direct fuel injector 24 includes spray orifices 26 structured to spray plumes of a liquid fuel or a gaseous fuel into combustion cylinder 20. Spray orifices 26 can include any number, and direct fuel injector 24 can be operated in any suitable manner to perform the injection of fuel. For example, direct fuel injector 24 could be supplied with a fuel already pressurized to an injection pressure, and an electrically and/or hydraulically actuated fuel injection valve in fuel injector 24 operated to control fuel injection timing. In other instances, direct fuel injector 24 could be cam-actuated to pressurized a fuel for injection, or could include a hydraulically actuated fuel pressurization plunger according to a variety of known strategies.
[0016] As suggested above, certain engine systems have been observed to be challenging to optimally operate utilizing certain fuels. According to the present disclosure, specialized ignition apparatus may be utilized in combustion cylinder 20 to ignite or assist in ignition of directly injected fuel including by causing or enhancing compression-ignition. In the
[0017] Referring also now to
[0018] Referring also now to
[0019] Hotspot fuel igniter 50 may further include a plug 76, and an insulator 74 extending at least partially around core 72. In the illustrated embodiment insulator 74 extends between core 72 and plug 76. Insulator 74 may be a solid phase insulator, such as a ceramic or other non-metallic material, or a cermet or other composite material, insulating core 72 from heat transfer with the piston crown material. Also in the illustrated embodiment, an air gap clearance is defined between hotspot fuel igniter 50 and the piston material of piston 22. The subject air gap clearance may include an axial air gap clearance 90 and a radial air gap clearance 92. The terms axial and radial are understood relative to a plug axis 80 defined by plug 76. Hotspot fuel igniter 50 may be attached to piston crown 52, such as by interference-fitting within a bore 78 extending inwardly into piston crown 52 from piston crown surface 53.
[0020] Focusing now on
[0021] As can also be seen from
[0022] As noted previously, hotspot fuel igniter 50 may ignite or assist in igniting a fuel in a spray plume of fuel. The promotion of ignition by hotspot fuel igniter 50 may occur based on retained heat of core 72. During combustion, a piston crown will often be the hottest part of the overall combustion chamber. It is contemplated that by insulating hotspot fuel igniter 50 from material of piston crown 52, cooling of core 72 as compared to material of piston crown 52 may be reduced. Put differently, core 72 may cool less during an engine cycle than other parts of piston 22, and thus retain more heat generated by the combustion of fuel than other parts of piston 22. By selective placement of one or more hotspot fuel igniters in piston 22, the retained heat can promote ignition over what might be otherwise observed, including compression-ignition of certain lower cetane fuels as discussed above.
[0023] Returning focus to
[0024] Looking again to
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0025] Referring to the drawings generally, as explained above engine system 10 can be operated in an engine cycle whereby piston 22 moves up and down in combustion cylinder 20, intake and exhaust valves 38 and 40 are opened and closed at appropriate timings, and fuel is injected by way of fuel injector 24 to produce a plurality of fuel spray plumes. Movement of piston 22 toward a top-dead-center position increases pressure in combustion cylinder 20 toward an autoignition threshold of the injected fuel. Injection of the fuel may take place before, at, or after a top-dead-center position of piston 22 but will typically occur when piston 22 is closer to top-dead-center than to bottom-dead-center in an engine cycle. As the fuel spray plumes advance outwardly and impinge upon hot spot fuel igniters 50,150, the retained heat of combustion of cores 72 can assist in heating the fuel and, in conjunction with the perturbation to the flow of the fuel by impingement upon fuel-impingement edges 82, cause ignition to occur. As will be apparent from the present disclosure, multiple points of compression-ignition of the fuel can occur corresponding generally to the plurality of locations of hotspot fuel igniters 50,150 in combustion cylinder 20.
[0026] When engine system 10 is started from a cold start condition it may be desirable or necessary to utilize ignition aid 42, assisting in achieving ignition or at least consistent ignition of the injected fuel. As engine system 10 warms up and more heat from combustion is retained in hotspot fuel igniters 50, 150, variability in ignition cycle to cycle may lessen to the point that ignition aid 42 is not required at all.
[0027] The present disclosure can be implemented as original equipment in a new engine to be placed in service. It is also contemplated that pistons, or even potentially other engine apparatus, can be provided as an aftermarket part or retrofit kit to be installed in an existing engine, such as an engine which is desired to transition to operation on a different fuel type. In an example, a diesel engine could be modified to operate on an alternative fuel type such as an alcohol fuel, and equipped according to the present disclosure with hotspot fuel igniters. Still other applications contemplate sale of loose hotspot fuel igniters themselves such as in a kit whereby existing pistons or other engine apparatus can be appropriately modified and equipped.
[0028] The present description is for illustrative purposes only, and should not be construed to narrow the breadth of the present disclosure in any way. Thus, those skilled in the art will appreciate that various modifications might be made to the presently disclosed embodiments without departing from the full and fair scope and spirit of the present disclosure. Other aspects, features and advantages will be apparent upon an examination of the attached drawings and appended claims. As used herein, the articles a and an are intended to include one or more items, and may be used interchangeably with one or more. Where only one item is intended, the term one or similar language is used. Also, as used herein, the terms has, have, having, or the like are intended to be open-ended terms. Further, the phrase based on is intended to mean based, at least in part, on unless explicitly stated otherwise.