Multi-fuel system for internal combustion engines
09784152 · 2017-10-10
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02M2200/95
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/0027
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M43/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01M13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B3/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/0025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D19/0647
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M43/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T10/30
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
F01M13/0011
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2250/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B43/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01M13/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M25/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D19/081
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02M21/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M43/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B43/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01M13/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D19/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D19/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M43/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01M13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
In a multi-fuel system for diesel engines, natural gas is mixed with diesel fuel and conditioned in a mixing chamber before being injected into the mixing chamber of the engine. Filtered blow-by gas may also be introduced into the combustion chamber. A computerized controller is used to determine and control the proportion of diesel fuel, natural gas fuel, the mixing and conditioning of these fuels, and the supply of filtered blow-by gas.
Claims
1. A multi-fuel engine system, comprising: a diesel engine having a diesel tank fluidly connected to a combustion chamber by a first supply line; a natural gas tank fluidly connected to the combustion chamber by a second supply line; a mixing chamber disposed in-line with the first and second supply lines, wherein diesel fuel from the diesel tank is combined with natural gas from the natural gas tank to form a multi-fuel mixture before the combustion chamber; a microcontroller coupled to the mixing chamber and a sensor monitoring an operational characteristic of the diesel engine, wherein the microcontroller selectively modulates an amount of diesel fuel entering the mixing chamber from the first supply line and an amount of natural gas entering the mixing chamber from the second supply line to form the multi-fuel mixture; a diesel level sensor in the diesel tank wirelessly connected to the microcontroller and a natural gas level sensor in the natural gas tank wirelessly connected to the microcontroller, wherein the microcontroller is configured to selectively modulate formation of the multi-fuel mixture responsive to signals from the diesel level sensor and the natural gas level sensor; and a blow-by gas system including a PCV valve disposed in-line with a recirculating line extending from a crankcase of the diesel engine to the mixing chamber.
2. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 1, wherein the microcontroller is configured to increase the amount of diesel fuel entering the mixing chamber from the first supply line in response to increased torque, increased load, or increased altitude of the engine.
3. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 2, wherein increased torque, increased load, or increased altitude of the engine is determined by analysis of the operational characteristic of the diesel engine by the sensor.
4. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 1, wherein the diesel fuel is combined with the natural gas in the mixing chamber in a range from pure diesel to a 1:1 ratio, in response to a signal from the microcontroller.
5. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 1, wherein the natural gas tank comprises a puncture resistant material or carbon fiber.
6. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 1, wherein the natural gas tank and the second supply line are pressurized.
7. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 1, wherein the operational characteristic monitored by the sensor comprises engine temperature, battery charge, engine RPMs, rate of acceleration, exhaust features, and/or PCV valve position.
8. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 1, wherein the recirculating line of the blow-by gas system further comprises an oil filter between the crankcase and the PCV valve.
9. The multi-fuel engine system of any of claims 1-8, further comprising a fuel injector rail on the diesel engine and a fuel injector extending from the fuel injector rail to the combustion chamber, wherein the fuel injector is responsive to the microcontroller.
10. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 1, further comprising a display device wirelessly connected to the microcontroller, diesel level sensor, and natural gas level sensor, wherein the display device is configured to display a level of diesel fuel in the diesel tank, a level of natural gas in the natural gas tank, and a ratio of diesel fuel to natural gas in the multi-fuel mixture in the mixing chamber.
11. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 10, wherein the display device comprises a smart phone or a dashboard mounted monitor.
12. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 10, wherein the display device is configured to receive user input and transmit control signals to the microcontroller to manually modulate formation of the multi-fuel mixture.
13. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 12, wherein the display device is configured to receive user input by touch screen, button, or voice recognition.
14. A multi-fuel engine system, comprising: a diesel engine having a diesel tank fluidly connected to a combustion chamber by a first supply line; a natural gas tank fluidly connected to the combustion chamber by a second supply line; a mixing chamber disposed in-line with the first and second supply lines, wherein diesel fuel from the diesel tank is combined with natural gas from the natural gas tank in a range from pure diesel to a 1:1 ratio to form a multi-fuel mixture before the combustion chamber, and wherein the multi-fuel mixture is processed by aerating, heating, or cooling in the mixing chamber; a blow-by gas system comprising a PCV valve disposed in-line with a recirculating line extending from a crankcase of the diesel engine to the mixing chamber; a microcontroller coupled to the mixing chamber and a sensor monitoring an operational characteristic of the diesel engine, wherein the microcontroller selectively modulates an amount of diesel fuel entering the mixing chamber from the first supply line and an amount of natural gas entering the mixing chamber from the second supply line to form the multi-fuel mixture, and wherein the mixing chamber is responsive to the microcontroller for processing the multi-fuel mixture; a diesel level sensor in the diesel tank wirelessly connected to the microcontroller and a natural gas level sensor in the natural gas tank wirelessly connected to the microcontroller, wherein the microcontroller is configured to selectively modulate formation of the multi-fuel mixture responsive to signals from the diesel level sensor and the natural gas level sensor; and a display device wirelessly connected to the microcontroller, diesel level sensor, and natural gas level sensor, wherein the display device is configured to display a level of diesel fuel in the diesel tank, a level of natural gas in the natural gas tank, and a ratio of diesel fuel to natural gas in the multi-fuel mixture in the mixing chamber.
15. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 14, wherein the natural gas tank comprises a puncture resistant material or carbon fiber.
16. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 14, wherein the natural gas tank and the second supply line are pressurized.
17. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 14, wherein the operational characteristic monitored by the sensor comprises engine temperature, battery charge, engine RPMs, rate of acceleration, exhaust features, and/or PCV valve position.
18. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 14, wherein the recirculating line of the blow-by gas system further comprises an oil filter between the crankcase and the PCV valve.
19. The multi-fuel engine system of any of claims 14-18, further comprising a fuel injector rail on the diesel engine and a fuel injector extending from the fuel injector rail to the combustion chamber, wherein the fuel injector is responsive to the microcontroller.
20. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 14, wherein the display device comprises a smart phone or a dashboard mounted monitor.
21. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 14, wherein the display device is configured to receive user input and transmit control signals to the microcontroller to manually modulate formation of the multi-fuel mixture.
22. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 21, wherein the display device is configured to receive user input by touch screen, button, or voice recognition.
23. A multi-fuel engine system, comprising: a diesel engine having a fuel injector rail, a fuel injector extending from the fuel injector rail into a combustion chamber, and a diesel tank fluidly connected to the combustion chamber by a first supply line through the fuel injector rail and fuel injector; a natural gas tank fluidly connected to the combustion chamber by a second supply line; a mixing chamber disposed in-line with the first and second supply lines, wherein diesel fuel from the diesel tank is combined with natural gas from the natural gas tank in a range from pure diesel to a 1:1 ratio to form a multi-fuel mixture before the combustion chamber; a microcontroller coupled to the mixing chamber, the fuel injector, and a sensor monitoring an operational characteristic of the diesel engine, wherein the microcontroller selectively modulates an amount of diesel fuel entering the mixing chamber from the first supply line and an amount of natural gas entering the mixing chamber from the second supply line to form the multi-fuel mixture, and the fuel injector is responsive to the microcontroller for adding the multi-fuel mixture to the combustion chamber; a diesel level sensor in the diesel tank wirelessly connected to the microcontroller and a natural gas level sensor in the natural gas tank wirelessly connected to the microcontroller, wherein the microcontroller is configured to selectively modulate formation of the multi-fuel mixture responsive to signals from the diesel level sensor and the natural gas level sensor; and a blow-by gas system comprising an oil filter and a PCV valve disposed in-line with a recirculating line extending from a crankcase of the diesel engine to the mixing chamber.
24. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 23, wherein the natural gas tank comprises a puncture resistant material or carbon fiber, and the natural gas tank and the second supply line are pressurized.
25. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 23, wherein the operational characteristic monitored by the sensor comprises engine temperature, battery charge, engine RPMs, rate of acceleration, exhaust features, and/or PCV valve position.
26. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 23, further comprising a display device wirelessly connected to the microcontroller, diesel level sensor, and natural gas level sensor, wherein the display device is configured to display a level of diesel fuel in the diesel tank, a level of natural gas in the natural gas tank, and a ratio of diesel fuel to natural gas in the multi-fuel mixture in the mixing chamber.
27. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 26, wherein the display device comprises a smart phone or a dashboard mounted monitor.
28. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 26, wherein the display device is configured to receive user input and transmit control signals to the microcontroller to manually modulate formation of the multi-fuel mixture.
29. The multi-fuel engine system of claim 28, wherein the display device is configured to receive user input by touch screen, button, or voice recognition.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The accompanying drawings illustrate the invention. In such drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(13) As shown in the accompanying drawings, for purposes of illustration, the present invention resides in a dual diesel and natural gas system for a diesel combustion engine. In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, a diesel engine system is converted into a multiple fuel engine which operates on a combination of diesel fuel and natural gas fuel. In a preferred embodiment, the multiple fuel system operates on diesel as a first fuel and natural gas as a second fuel, being combined with diesel to lessen emissions. The system of the present invention can also potentially cause a dramatic increase in engine efficiency, such that the user can keep his car fueled for much less than it would cost to fuel a standard diesel engine.
(14) In accordance with the invention, existing diesel engines can be retrofitted with as little modification to the standard diesel engine as possible. For example, the only additions required to the standard diesel engine would be a tank for the natural gas and fuel line, a mixing chamber for the mixing of the fuels, a microcontroller, and in one embodiment a PCV valve and a blow-by gas filter. Although calibrated fuel injectors may be used, these are not necessary, and no additional alterations are needed for the actual engine.
(15) With reference now to
(16) Normally, a fuel injection system only functions with one type of fuel. The dual fuel system of the present invention functions with both standard diesel as well as natural gas fuels. The dual fuel system 10 can be retrofitted into an existing vehicle, or it can be factory installed into a new vehicle. The vehicle 12 illustrated in
(17) The system 10 of the present invention requires both the standard diesel tank 16 as well as a separate natural gas tank 18. The natural gas tank 18 may be made of carbon fiber or some other material that is puncture resistant and capable of transporting materials under pressure. Typically, the vehicle is retrofit, such that the natural gas tank 18 is mounted within a sufficiently large space of the vehicle, the undercarriage of the vehicle 12, or any other place where the tank 18 will fit without compromising the safety and functionality of the vehicle 12.
(18) With reference now to
(19) The fuel injector 26 is supplied by the fuel supply line 50 from the expansion and mixing chamber 20, which is supplied the diesel fuel 52 from tank 16 and/or the natural gas 54 from tank 18. Typically, the engine will run on either diesel fuel from supply line 52 alone, or a combination of diesel fuel from line 52 and natural gas from line 54.
(20) Hoses or fuel supply lines 28 interconnect the diesel and natural gas tank 16 and 18 with a mixing and expansion chamber 20. With reference now to
(21) With reference now to
(22) With reference now to
(23) As shown in
(24) The microcontroller 60 may also include an antenna 60a to permit wireless communication. The microcontroller 60 may wirelessly receive fuel level information from the sensors 16a, 18a and use that information to control the proportion of diesel fuel to natural gas fuel introduced to the mixing chamber 20 based upon the amounts of each left. The dash mounted monitor or smart phone 116 may also receive manual input, as by touch screen, buttons, or similar input devices, to transmit control signals to the microcontroller 60 so as to manually control the proportion of diesel fuel to natural gas in the mixing chamber 20. The dash mounted monitor or smart phone 116 may be provided with an app to give a graphical user interface to permit manual control of the fuel proportions. The same app may also be programmed to respond to voice commands to control switching of the fuel proportions without requiring physical manipulation.
(25) The system may also use the engine sensors 62-72 to detect engine conditions such as increased torque, increased load, or increased altitude. In such instances, the microcontroller 60 may adjust the proportions of diesel fuel and natural gas fuel to a more advantageous mixture. Such engine conditions would benefit from a greater amount of diesel fuel in a mixture. The system may be configured to automatically switch to fuel proportions based upon the sensing of one or more of increased torque, increased load, and/or increased altitude.
(26) With reference again to
(27) With reference to
(28) As illustrated in
(29) The oil filter 76 illustrated in the figures herein is typically in addition to the regular oil filter, wherein the oil itself is filtered to remove contaminants. Instead, this filter 76 is for the filtering of oil from the blow-by gas removed from the crankcase. The typically cylindrical filters 76 can be clamped in place or threaded into place as needed. Off-the-shelf after market separators or oil filters or the uniquely designed filter 76 illustrated and described herein can be used. While impurities from the oil may be removed, such that the oil returned to the crankcase is filtered and will have better efficacy and life, it is the removal of the liquid oil from the blow-by gas which is of particular interest and concern in the present invention in order not to introduce the oil or contaminants into the combustion chamber, which would result in increased emissions instead of decreased emissions.
(30) With reference now to
(31) Once the piston 32 is at the bottom of the piston cylinder, the vacuum effect ends and air is no longer drawn into the combustion chamber 38 from the intake manifold 30. At this point, the piston 32 begins to move back up the piston cylinder 84, and the air in the combustion chamber 38 becomes compressed. In a diesel engine, fuel is injected directly into the combustion chamber 38 from the fuel line 50. This injection may be further aided by more compressed air from a compressed air line 90. The compressed air line 90 is not present in a gasoline engine. As the air and fuel in the combustion chamber 38 is compressed, it heats up until the fuel ignites and combustion occurs.
(32) The rapid expansion of the ignited fuel/air in the combustion chamber 38 causes the piston 36 to move downwardly within the cylinder 84. After combustion, an exhaust camshaft 44 opens an exhaust valve 92 to allow escape of the combustion gasses from the combustion chamber 38 out an exhaust manifold 46.
(33) Typically, during the combustion cycle, excess exhaust gasses slip by a pair of piston rings 94 mounted in the head 96 of the piston 32. These “blow-by gasses” enter the crankcase 34 as high pressure and temperature gasses. Over time, harmful exhaust gasses such as hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, nitrous oxide and carbon dioxide can condense out from a gaseous state and coat the interior of the crankcase 34 and mix with the oil 95 that lubricates the mechanics within the crankcase 34. As discussed above, the PCV valve 74 is designed to recycle these blow-by gasses from the crankcase 34 to be re-burned by the engine 14. This is accomplished by using a pressure differential between the crankcase 34 and the intake manifold 30. This process may be digitally regulated by a micro-controller.
(34) PCV valve 74 includes a one-way check valve (not shown) that opens to allow blow-by gasses through the valve 74 when the vacuum between the intake manifold 30 and the crankcase 34 is strong enough. With the check valve open, blow-by gasses pass through the PCV valve 74 to be recycled through the intake manifold 30. The check valve can also be controlled by a microcontroller for added fuel efficiency.
(35) Blow-by gasses are not pure fuel vapors. Rather, when the un-ignited fuel is pulled into the crankcase 34, past the piston rings 94, the fuel vapors mix with the oil 95 that lubricates the mechanics within the crankcase 34. Over time, harmful exhaust gasses such as hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, nitrous oxide and carbon dioxide can condense out from a gaseous state to mix with the oil 95 and the fuel vapors. Thus, the resulting blow-by gasses contain harmful impurities making them unsuitable for re-burning in the engine. In a diesel engine, diesel fuel contains more oil than gasoline, so the blow-by gasses are significantly oilier. Oily and sludgy blow-by gasses are not only non-suitable for re-burn, they also tend to gum up the PCV valve 74 making it impossible for the blow-by gasses to be recycled at all.
(36) Thus, the present invention incorporates a filter 76 to clean the impurities out of the blow-by gasses before they enter the PCV valve 74. The blow-by filter 76 also returns filtered engine oil 95 back into the crankcase 34 by return line 77 for further use. In one embodiment, a check valve is used in the return of the oil back into the crank case. This prevents untreated oil from entering into the oil drainage port of the filter 76. Sensors may be used to detect if the filter 76 becomes too full, and a purging system may be used to resort back to the OEM. A warning system, including alarms, LED lights, etc. may be used to notify the operator of such a situation.
(37) The blow-by filter 76 is particularly illustrated in
(38) As illustrated in
(39) With reference now to
(40) In operation, unfiltered blow-by gasses are received by the blow-by intake port 104 in the closed top portion 100 of the canister 98. The blow-by gasses begin to circulate through the layers of metal mesh 86 in the canister 98. Different contaminants and impurities are trapped at each layer of metal mesh 86 depending on the gauge of the mesh and type of the metal. Larger contaminants are filtered by larger gauges of metal mesh 86. Smaller contaminants and impurities are filtered by the finer gauges of metal mesh 86. Likewise, some impurities may be trapped by certain types of metal. As the blow-by gasses work through the filtering assembly 114, contaminants and impurities are trapped leaving two main byproducts, namely, cleansed engine oil 95 and purified fuel vapor. The cleansed engine oil 95 eventually collects in the bottom portion 102 of the canister 98, where it drains via the oil drainage port 112 back to the crankcase 34 of the engine 14. The purified fuel vapor is vented through the fuel vapor exhaust port 106 in the closed top portion 100 of the canister 98 to pass to the PCV valve 74 to be recycled through the intake manifold 30 or added to the diesel and/or natural gas fuel mixture in the expansion chamber before being introduced into the combustion chamber 38 of the engine 14.
(41) When the filtering assembly 114 requires periodic cleaning and maintenance, it can be easily removed from the canister 98 by unlatching the clamps 110 and removing the lid 108 from the bottom portion of the canister 98. It will be appreciated that the blow-by oil filter 76 may include sealing gaskets and the like as necessary to create a seal between the canister 98 and the removable lid 108, so as to prevent oil and other contaminants from leaking out. The present invention contemplates that priming might be involved when changing the oil separator/filter elements of the filtering assembly 114.
(42) The computerized controller 60 can be used to monitor the filtering process of the blow-by gasses and the PCV valve 74 and so as to control whether and to what degree the purified blow-by gasses pass through the PCV valve 74 and into either the fuel line 50, the expansion and mixing chamber 20 or directly into the air intake manifold 30 or air line 78. In any event, the blow-by gas which has been filtered presents a much cleaner gas which produces less undesirable emissions.
(43) Although several embodiments have been described in detail for purposes of illustration, various modifications may be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is not to be limited, except as by the appended claims.