PISTON FOR INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE, AND COOLING CHANNEL CORE
20170314504 ยท 2017-11-02
Inventors
- In Cheol YOO (Gyeonggi-do, KR)
- Woo Seok SHIM (Gyeonggi-do, KR)
- Sang Hyuk JUN (Gyeonggi-do, KR)
- Jeong Keon LEE (Incheon, KR)
- Kwan Ho RYU (Gyeonggi-do, KR)
- Jun Kui YANG (Seoul, KR)
Cpc classification
F02F3/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P3/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02F2200/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02F3/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
Provided is a piston for an internal combustion engine, the piston including a body having a piston pin boss for inserting a piston pin thereinto, and a skirt corresponding to a cylinder wall, and a cooling channel provided in the body to allow a refrigerant for cooling the body, to flow therethrough, and having a ring shape including a first channel provided from a refrigerant inlet to a refrigerant outlet along a first outer circumferential direction of the body, and a second channel provided from the refrigerant inlet to the refrigerant outlet along a second outer circumferential direction of the body.
Claims
1. A piston for an internal combustion engine, the piston comprising: a body comprising a piston pin boss for inserting a piston pin thereinto, and a skirt corresponding to a cylinder wall; and a cooling channel provided in the body to allow a refrigerant for cooling the body, to flow therethrough, and having a ring shape comprising a first channel provided from a refrigerant inlet to a refrigerant outlet along a first outer circumferential direction of the body, and a second channel provided from the refrigerant inlet to the refrigerant outlet along a second outer circumferential direction of the body, wherein, in the cooling channel, to increase a supply speed and a discharge speed of the refrigerant by inducing the refrigerant supplied through the refrigerant inlet, toward the refrigerant outlet, a first space cross-sectional area of a first part of the first channel located relatively close to the refrigerant inlet is less than a second space cross-sectional area of a second part of the first channel located relatively far from the refrigerant inlet, and a third space cross-sectional area of a third part of the second channel located relatively close to the refrigerant outlet is less than a fourth space cross-sectional area of a fourth part of the second channel located relatively far from the refrigerant outlet.
2. The piston of claim 1, wherein the cooling channel has a ring shape in which a lower surface height is equal at every part, an upper surface height of the first part is greater than an upper surface height above the refrigerant inlet, and an upper surface height of the second part is greater than the upper surface height of the first part, and wherein the first channel and the second channel have point symmetry with respect to a center point of a virtual line connected between the refrigerant inlet and the refrigerant outlet.
3. The piston of claim 2, wherein the space cross-sectional area of the second part is 1.05 to 1.30 times greater than the space cross-sectional area of the first part.
4. The piston of claim 2, wherein a height of an upper surface of the cooling channel is continuously changed from above the refrigerant inlet to the first part.
5. The piston of claim 4, wherein an instantaneous tilt angle of a tangent to the upper surface is rapidly increased from above the refrigerant inlet to the first part.
6. The piston of claim 2, wherein a height of an upper surface of the cooling channel is continuously changed from the first part to the second part.
7. The piston of claim 6, wherein an instantaneous tilt angle of a tangent to the upper surface is slowly reduced from the first part to the second part.
8. The piston of claim 1, wherein the cooling channel has a shape in which an upper surface height is equal and a lower surface height is also equal at every part, and a width of a space cross-section of the second part is greater than a width of a space cross-section of the first part.
9. The piston of claim 1, wherein the first channel has a space cross-sectional area gradually increased from the refrigerant outlet to the refrigerant inlet, and wherein the second channel has a space cross-sectional area gradually increased from the refrigerant inlet to the refrigerant outlet.
10. The piston of claim 1, wherein the first channel and the second channel have an equal channel width, and wherein extensions having an extended width or an extended length greater than the channel width are provided under the refrigerant inlet and the refrigerant outlet.
11. A cooling channel core comprising: a core body inserted into a casting mold in a piston casting operation to generate a cooling channel, and having a ring shape comprising a refrigerant inlet's counterpart provided at a side thereof, a refrigerant outlet's counterpart provided at another side thereof, a first channel's counterpart provided from the refrigerant inlet's counterpart to the refrigerant outlet's counterpart along a first outer circumferential direction, and a second channel's counterpart provided from the refrigerant inlet's counterpart to the refrigerant outlet's counterpart along a second outer circumferential direction; a first part's counterpart provided in the first channel's counterpart of the core body, located relatively close to the refrigerant inlet's counterpart, and having a first cross-sectional area; a second part's counterpart provided in the first channel's counterpart of the core body, located relatively far from the refrigerant inlet's counterpart, and having a second cross-sectional area greater than the first cross-sectional area; a third part's counterpart provided in the second channel's counterpart of the core body, located relatively close to the refrigerant outlet's counterpart, and having a third cross-sectional area; and a fourth part's counterpart provided in the second channel's counterpart of the core body, located relatively far from the refrigerant outlet's counterpart, and having a fourth cross-sectional area greater than the third cross-sectional area.
12. The cooling channel core of claim 11, wherein the first part's counterpart and the second part's counterpart have an equal lower surface height, wherein an upper surface height of the first part's counterpart is greater than an upper surface height above the refrigerant inlet's counterpart, wherein an upper surface height of the second part's counterpart is greater than the upper surface height of the first part's counterpart, and wherein the first channel's counterpart and the second channel's counterpart have point symmetry with respect to a center point of a virtual line connected between the refrigerant inlet's counterpart and the refrigerant outlet's counterpart.
13. The cooling channel core of claim 11, wherein the cooling channel core has a shape in which the first part's counterpart and the second part's counterpart have an equal upper surface height and an equal lower surface height, and a width of a cross-section of the second part's counterpart is greater than a width of a cross-section of the first part's counterpart.
14. The cooling channel core of claim 11, wherein the first channel's counterpart has a space cross-sectional gradually increased from the refrigerant outlet's counterpart to the refrigerant inlet's counterpart, and wherein the second channel's counterpart has a space cross-sectional area gradually increased from the refrigerant inlet's counterpart to the refrigerant outlet's counterpart.
15. The cooling channel core of claim 11, wherein the first channel's counterpart and the second channel's counterpart have an equal channel width, and wherein extensions having an extended width or an extended length greater than the channel width are provided under the refrigerant inlet's counterpart and the refrigerant outlet's counterpart.
16. The cooling channel core of claim 11, wherein the core body is a ceramic-based or salt-based core body.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0024] The above and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent by describing in detail embodiments thereof with reference to the attached drawings in which:
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
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[0039]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0040] Hereinafter, the present invention will be described in detail by explaining embodiments of the invention with reference to the attached drawings.
[0041] The invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as being limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the concept of the invention to one of ordinary skill in the art. In the drawings, the thicknesses or sizes of layers are exaggerated for clarity.
[0042] As mentioned herein, a piston for an internal combustion engine may linearly reciprocate in a cylinder, provide motive power generated due to a high-temperature and high-pressure gas, to a crankshaft through a connecting rod to generate a rotational force in a combustion process, and operate by receiving power from the crankshaft in suction, compression, and exhaust processes.
[0043]
[0044] As illustrated in
[0045] For example, the body 10 may include a piston pin boss 11 for inserting a piston pin (not shown) thereinto, and a skirt 12 corresponding to a cylinder wall. Specifically, for example, the piston pin is a pin for connecting the piston pin boss 11 to a small end of a connecting rod (not shown), and may provide great power received by the piston 100, to a crankshaft through the connecting rod and, at the same time, reciprocate together with the piston 100 at high speed in a cylinder.
[0046] As illustrated in
[0047] As illustrated in
[0048] More specifically, for example, the cooling channel 20 may be a ring-shaped channel including a first channel 21 and a second channel 22.
[0049] Here, the first channel 21 may be provided from the refrigerant inlet H1 to the refrigerant outlet H2 along a first outer circumferential direction of the body 10 in such a manner that a portion of the refrigerant supplied through the refrigerant inlet H1 flows in the first outer circumferential direction to cool the body 10 and then is discharged through the refrigerant outlet H2.
[0050] The second channel 22 may be provided from the refrigerant inlet H1 to the refrigerant outlet H2 along a second outer circumferential direction of the body 10 in such a manner that another portion of the refrigerant supplied through the refrigerant inlet H1 flows in the second outer circumferential direction to cool the body 10 and then is discharged through the refrigerant outlet H2.
[0051] As illustrated in
[0052] Here, a space cross-sectional area may refer to a cross-sectional area of a space defined when the first channel 21 or the second channel 22 is cut along a direction perpendicular to the direction of dominant flow of the refrigerant.
[0053] As illustrated in
[0054] Accordingly, the first part P1 and the second part P2 may be provided near the refrigerant inlet H1 and the third part P3 and the fourth part P4 may be provided near the refrigerant outlet H2 to have point symmetry with respect to the center point P.
[0055] Therefore, a refrigerant supplied through the refrigerant inlet H1 may experience a minimum resistance to the initial inflow of the refrigerant as the space cross-sectional areas increase along the first part P1 and the second part P2, and may experience a minimum resistance to the outflow of the refrigerant when flowing through the third part P3 and the fourth part P4. Then, the refrigerant may be guided along an inclined surface of an upper surface of the cooling channel 20 by the movement of the piston 100 according to an embodiment of the present invention, and then may be easily discharged through the refrigerant outlet H2.
[0056] Specifically, as illustrated in
[0057] More specifically, for example, as illustrated in an enlarged part of
[0058] As illustrated in another enlarged part of
[0059] According to the above-described shape, since an upper surface height varies while a lower surface height is fixed, the height of the cooling channel 20 may be increased near the refrigerant inlet H1 from the refrigerant inlet H1 toward the refrigerant outlet H2, i.e., in the first channel 21, and thus a space cross-sectional area may be gradually increased.
[0060] On the contrary, in the second channel 22, the space cross-sectional area may not be changed or even may be reduced near the refrigerant inlet H1. Accordingly, if necessary, a refrigerant supplied through the refrigerant inlet H1 may be induced to the first channel 21 rather than the second channel 22 and may circulate along an arc direction due to inertia. Thus, the refrigerant may be more easily supplied and discharged.
[0061] If the difference in space cross-sectional area is excessively small, the refrigerant may not be appropriately induced. Otherwise, if the difference in the space cross-sectional area is excessively large, air bubbles may be generated or severe spatial restrictions may be caused. After repeated tests and simulations, the best results are achieved when the space cross-sectional area of the second part P2 is 1.05 to 1.30 times greater than the space cross-sectional area of the first part P1. For example, the space cross-sectional area may have a narrow upper part and a wide lower part as illustrated in
[0062] As illustrated in
[0063] Accordingly, the extensions E may have an inverted funnel shape to allow a high-pressure refrigerant sprayed from an oil spray nozzle (not shown), to be easily supplied into the cooling channel 20.
[0064]
[0065] As illustrated in
[0066] As illustrated in
[0067] As illustrated in
[0068] The first part's counterpart P10 may be provided in the first channel's counterpart 2100 of the core body 2000, may be located relatively close to the refrigerant inlet's counterpart, and may have a first cross-sectional area.
[0069] The second part's counterpart P20 may be provided in the first channel's counterpart 2100 of the core body 2000, may be located relatively far from the refrigerant inlet's counterpart, and may have a second cross-sectional area greater than the first cross-sectional area.
[0070] The third part's counterpart P30 may be provided in the second channel's counterpart 2200 of the core body 2000, may be located relatively close to the refrigerant outlet's counterpart, and may have a third cross-sectional area.
[0071] The fourth part's counterpart P40 may be provided in the second channel's counterpart 2200 of the core body 2000, may be located relatively far from the refrigerant outlet's counterpart, and may have a fourth cross-sectional area greater than the third cross-sectional area.
[0072] Specifically, for example, as illustrated in
[0073] As illustrated in
[0074] As illustrated in
[0075] Accordingly, as illustrated in
[0076] To guarantee durability against high temperature and high pressure of molten metal in the piston casting operation and to be easily discharged after the piston casting operation, the core body 2000 may be a ceramic-based or salt-based core body.
[0077] Therefore, cooling efficiency and flow of the refrigerant may be improved by inducing engine oil to flow from the refrigerant inlet H1 to the refrigerant outlet H2 in the cooling channel 20 of the piston 100.
[0078]
[0079] As illustrated in
[0080] As illustrated in
[0081] Accordingly, if necessary, a refrigerant supplied through the refrigerant inlet H1 may be induced to the first channel 21 rather than the second channel 22 and may circulate along an arc direction due to inertia. Thus, the refrigerant may be more easily supplied and discharged.
[0082]
[0083] As illustrated in
[0084] Here, a first channel 21 may have a space cross-sectional area gradually increased from a refrigerant outlet H2 to a refrigerant inlet H1, and a second channel 22 may have a space cross-sectional area gradually increased from the refrigerant inlet H1 to the refrigerant outlet H2.
[0085] Accordingly, if necessary, a refrigerant supplied through the refrigerant inlet H1 may be induced to the first channel 21 rather than the second channel 22 and may circulate along an arc direction due to inertia. Thus, the refrigerant may be more easily supplied and discharged.
[0086] As illustrated in
[0087] That is, a first channel's counterpart 2100 may have a width Wn and a space cross-sectional area gradually increased from a refrigerant outlet's counterpart to a refrigerant inlet's counterpart, and a second channel's counterpart 2200 may have a width Wn and a space cross-sectional area gradually increased from the refrigerant inlet's counterpart to the refrigerant outlet's counterpart.
[0088] As illustrated in
[0089] The first channel's counterpart 2100 and the second channel's counterpart 2200 may have an equal channel width CW, and extensions E having an extended length may be provided under the refrigerant inlet's counterpart and the refrigerant outlet's counterpart.
[0090] Therefore, a refrigerant may be supplied through the refrigerant inlet H1 with the minimum resistance of flow due to increasing space cross-sectional areas, may be induced along a slope of an outer circumferential surface of the cooling channel 20 due to motion of the piston 300 according to another embodiment of the present invention, and then may be easily discharged through the refrigerant outlet H2.
[0091] In addition, the refrigerant may sufficiently reach upper parts of the refrigerant inlet H1 and the refrigerant outlet H2 due to the ribs R and thus cooling efficiency of the refrigerant inlet's counterpart and the refrigerant outlet's counterpart may be improved.
[0092] As described above, according to an embodiment of the present invention, a piston for an internal combustion engine, and a cooling channel core, the piston and the cooling channel core capable of improving piston cooling performance by inducing engine oil to flow from an refrigerant inlet to a refrigerant outlet in a cooling channel of the piston. However, the scope of the present invention is not limited to the above effect.
[0093] While the present invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the following claims.