Abstract
A high-pressure fuel pump which is suitable above all for use in internal
combustion engines with direct gasoline injection, in which the pressure
surge upon opening of a check valve between the high-pressure line
and the pumping chamber of the fuel feed pump is limited by structural
provisions.
Claims
We claim:
1. A high-pressure fuel pump with a variable delivery quantity
for an internal combustion engine, comprising a piston (10) actuated
by a camshaft (12) having a plurality of cams (13) therein, wherein
the piston (10) aspirates fuel from a low-pressure line (15) into
a pumping chamber (14) and then pumps it into a high-pressure line
(16), and a quantity control valve (19) connecting the pumping chamber
(14) and the low-pressure line (15), and a separate suction valve
(18) disposed between the low-pressure line (15) and the pumping
chamber (14), a separate suction valve (18) is disposed, the regulation
of the delivery quantity being effected by opening the quantity
control valve (19) during the pumping stroke of the piston.
2. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 1, wherein each
cam (13) of the camshaft (12) has at least a first rotational angle
range (1), a second rotational angle range (2) and a third rotational
angle range (3), the bottom dead center (BDC) of the piston (23)
being located within the first rotational angle range (1); that
after reaching BDC, in the first rotational angle range (1), the
piston (10) is imparted a positive acceleration by the cam (13);
that within the second rotational angle range (2) the stroke speed
(V.sub.r) of the piston (10) is approximately constant; that the
quantity control valve (19) opens while the cam (13) is passing
through the second rotational angle range; and that within the third
rotational angle range (3), the stroke speed (v.sub.r) of the piston
(10) increases until a maximum value (V.sub.max) is reached.
3. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 2, wherein the
acceleration of the piston (10) in the first rotational angle range
(1), at the allowable maximum rpm of the high-pressure fuel pump,
is limited essentially by the forces of inertia of the piston (10).
4. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 2, wherein in
the second rotational angle range (2), at the allowable maximum
rpm of the high-pressure fuel pump, the piston (10) experiences
a lesser positive acceleration compared to the acceleration in the
first rotational angle range (1).
5. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 2, wherein the
acceleration of the piston in the fourth rotational angle range
(4) at the allowable maximum rpm of the high-pressure fuel pump
is limited by the maximum allowable Hertzian pressure at the contact
point between the cam (13) and the piston (10).
6. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 3, wherein the
acceleration of the piston in the fourth rotational angle range
(4) at the allowable maximum rpm of the high-pressure fuel pump
is limited by the maximum allowable Hertzian pressure at the contact
point between the cam (13) and the piston (10).
7. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 4, wherein the
acceleration of the piston in the fourth rotational angle range
(4) at the allowable maximum rpm of the high-pressure fuel pump
is limited by the maximum allowable Hertzian pressure at the contact
point between the cam (13) and the piston (10).
8. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 2, wherein each
cam (13) comprises a fourth rotational angle range (4), a fifth
rotational angle range (5), and a sixth rotational angle range (6);
that the top dead center (TDC) of the piston (10) is located between
the fourth rotational angle range (4) and the fifth rotational angle
range (5); that the positive acceleration of the piston (10) by
the cam (13) is reduced to zero in the fourth rotational angle range
(4); that in the fifth rotational angle range (5), the piston (10)
is imparted a negative acceleration by the cam (13); and that within
the sixth rotational angle range (6), the stroke speed (v.sub.r)
of the piston (10) is negative and approximately constant.
9. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 3, wherein each
cam (13) comprises a fourth rotational angle range (4), a fifth
rotational angle range (5), and a sixth rotational angle range (6);
that the top dead center (TDC) of the piston (10) is located between
the fourth rotational angle range (4) and the fifth rotational angle
range (5); that the positive acceleration of the piston (10) by
the cam (13) is reduced to zero in the fourth rotational angle range
(4); that in the fifth rotational angle range (5), the piston (10)
is imparted a negative acceleration by the cam (13); and that within
the sixth rotational angle range (6), the stroke speed (v.sub.r)
of the piston (10) is negative and approximately constant.
10. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 4, wherein each
cam (13) comprises a fourth rotational angle range (4), a fifth
rotational angle range (5), and a sixth rotational angle range (6);
that the top dead center (TDC) of the piston (10) is located between
the fourth rotational angle range (4) and the fifth rotational angle
range (5); that the positive acceleration of the piston (10) by
the cam (13) is reduced to zero in the fourth rotational angle range
(4); that in the fifth rotational angle range (5), the piston (10)
is imparted a negative acceleration by the cam (13); and that within
the sixth rotational angle range (6), the stroke speed (v.sub.r)
of the piston (10) is negative and approximately constant.
11. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 5, wherein each
cam (13) comprises a fourth rotational angle range (4), a fifth
rotational angle range (5), and a sixth rotational angle range (6);
that the top dead center (TDC) of the piston (10) is located between
the fourth rotational angle range (4) and the fifth rotational angle
range (5); that the positive acceleration of the piston (10) by
the cam (13) is reduced to zero in the fourth rotational angle range
(4); that in the fifth rotational angle range (5), the piston (10)
is imparted a negative acceleration by the cam (13); and that within
the sixth rotational angle range (6), the stroke speed (v.sub.r)
of the piston (10) is negative and approximately constant.
12. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 8, wherein in
the fourth and fifth rotational angle range (4, 5), the change in
speed of the piston (10) is approximately constant.
13. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 1, wherein said
quantity control valve (19) is a magnet valve that is open when
without current.
14. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 1, wherein the
quantity control valve (19) is regulated by a control unit as a
function of the rpm, load, and temperature of the internal combustion
engine, the voltage of the on-board electrical system, and the temperature
of the aspirated air and the pressure in the common rail.
15. The high-pressure fuel pump according to claim 1, wherein before
the transition from the sixth rotational angle range (6) to the
first rotational angle range (1), the intake speed decreases slowly.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] 1. Field of the Invention
[0002] The invention relates to a high-pressure fuel pump with
a variable delivery quantity for an internal combustion engine,
having a camshaft-actuated piston that aspirates fuel from a low-pressure
line into a pumping chamber and then pumps it into a high-pressure
line, and having a quantity control valve connecting the pumping
chamber and the low-pressure line.
[0003] 2. Description of the Prior Art
[0004] In a high-pressure fuel pump of the type with which this
invention is concerned, which is known from European Patent Disclosure
EP 481 964 B2, the delivery quantity is regulated by providing that
the quantity control valve is closed at the onset of the pumping
stroke and is opened during the pumping stroke. Because of the idle
volume in the pumping chamber, at the instant of opening of the
outlet valve (onset of pumping in the high-pressure line and rail),
the piston already has a high speed. Because of the liquid column
available at this instant in the high-pressure line, which column
has to be accelerated, this leads to a pressure surge. This pressure
surge makes exact quantity metering in the injection of fuel into
the combustion chamber more difficult and moreover causes a pulsating
load on the high-pressure line and the common rail. In addition,
the mechanical stresses on the high-pressure fuel pump and the camshaft,
because of the surgelike load at the onset of fuel pumping into
the high-pressure line, are very high.
OBJECT AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0005] It is the object of the invention to furnish a high-pressure
fuel pump with a variable delivery quantity, in which the pressure
surges in the high-pressure line and in the common rail are markedly
reduced, compared to the prior art, and the mechanical stresses
on the high-pressure fuel pump are reduced.
[0006] According to the invention, this object is attained by a
high-pressure fuel pump with a variable delivery quantity for an
internal combustion engine, having a piston actuated by a camshaft,
wherein the piston aspirates fuel from a low-pressure line into
a pumping chamber and then pumps it into a high-pressure line; between
the pumping chamber and the low-pressure line, a quantity control
valve and a separate suction valve are connected parallel, and the
regulation of the delivery quantity is effected by opening the quantity
control valve during the pumping stroke of the piston.
[0007] In the high-pressure fuel pump of the invention, a pressure
increase takes place in the pumping chamber at the onset of the
pumping stroke. As soon as the pressure force in the pumping chamber
is greater than the sum of the pressure force in the high-pressure
line, which force is decoupled from the pumping chamber by an outlet
valve, and the spring force of the outlet valve, the high-pressure
fuel pump begins to pump fuel into the high-pressure line. As soon
as enough fuel has been pumped into the high-pressure line, the
quantity control valve opens, so that the pressure in the pumping
chamber collapses, and the outlet valve between the high-pressure
line and the pumping chamber closes. Since in the above-described
quantity regulation the pressure increase in the pumping chamber
always takes place from bottom dead center (BDC) of the piston onward,
the pressure course in the pumping chamber and hence also in the
high-pressure line can be designed, independently of the rpm and
the operating point of the internal combustion engine, in such a
way that the pressure surges in the high-pressure line and in the
common rail and the surgelike loads on the high-pressure fuel pump
are reduced. The magnitude of the pressure surge depends on the
speed of the cam at the instant of opening of the outlet valve.
[0008] In a variant of the invention, it is provided that each
cam of the camshaft has at least a first rotational angle range,
a second rotational angle range and a third rotational angle range,
the bottom dead center (BDC) of the piston being located within
the first rotational angle range; that after reaching BDC, in the
first rotational angle range, the piston is imparted a positive
acceleration by the cam; that within the second rotational angle
range the stroke speed VH/omega of the piston is approximately constant;
that the outlet valve of the high-pressure pump opens while the
cam is passing through the second rotational angle range; and that
within the third rotational angle range, the stroke speed of the
piston increases until a maximum value is reached.
[0009] The second rotational angle range, with an approximately
constant stroke speed V.sub.H/omega that is as low as possible,
has the advantage that regardless of the delivery quantity, that
is, the instant at which the outlet valve opens, depends essentially
only on the rpm of the camshaft. It is thus possible, by the choice
of a low stroke speed, to limit the pressure surge P.sub.S to an
allowable amount, even at maximum high-pressure fuel pump rpm and
maximum pressure in the high-pressure line. As a result, the injection
quantity can be controlled with greater accuracy, and the aforementioned
pulsating loads and surgelike loads are reduced.
[0010] In a further feature of the invention, the acceleration
of the piston in the first rotational angle range, at the allowable
maximum rpm of the high-pressure fuel pump, is limited essentially
by the forces of inertia of the piston, so that the first rotational
angle range can be kept as small as possible. This allows making
the second rotational angle range correspondingly larger. Since
at the onset of the pumping stroke, the piston causes only a pressure
increase of the fuel in the pumping chamber and need not perform
pressure increasing work counter to the pressure in the high-pressure
line, the acceleration of the piston in the first rotational angle
range can assume a very high value.
[0011] In a further feature of the invention, in the second rotational
angle range, at the allowable maximum rpm of the high-pressure fuel
pump, the piston experiences no positive acceleration or a positive
acceleration that is less than the acceleration in the first rotational
angle range. Compared to a constant stroke speed V.sub.H/omega,
it is possible by means of a slight positive acceleration--on the
condition that the allowable pressure surges P.sub.S in the high-pressure
line are not exceeded--to increase the stroke speed of the piston
in the second rotational angle range as well and thus to attain
the same pumping stroke within a smaller rotational angle range.
By this provision, the maximum stroke speed of the piston can be
reduced, which at high rpm of the high-pressure fuel pump leads
to a reduction in flow losses at the quantity control valve upon
diversion and thus enhances pump efficiency.
[0012] In a further feature of the high-pressure fuel pump of the
invention, the acceleration of the piston in the third rotational
angle range at the allowable maximum rpm of the high-pressure fuel
pump is limited by the maximum allowable pressure, so that on the
one hand the maximum piston speed in the pumping stroke is reached
as quickly as possible, and on the other, no allowable stresses
on the high-pressure fuel pump occur. In the third rotational angle
range, the piston does have to perform work counter to the pressure
in the high-pressure line.
[0013] In another feature of the invention, it is also provided
that each cam has a fourth, a fifth, and a sixth rotational angle
range; that the top dead center (TDC) of the piston is located between
the fourth rotational angle range and the fifth rotational angle
range; that the positive acceleration of the piston by the cam becomes
negative in the fourth rotational angle range; that in the fifth
rotational angle range, the piston is imparted a negative acceleration
by the cam; and that within the sixth rotational angle range, the
stroke speed of the piston is negative and approximately constant.
As a result, the intake stroke is made possible with reduced mechanical
stress on the fuel pump and less cavitation. This advantage is still
greater if in the fourth and fifth rotational angle range, the change
in speed of the piston is approximately constant.
[0014] In one embodiment of the high-pressure fuel pump, the quantity
control valve is a magnet valve that is open when without current,
so that impermissible pressures in the fuel feed pump are prevented
even if the quantity control valve or its triggering fails.
[0015] In a further feature of the invention, at the transition
from the sixth rotational angle range to the first rotational angle
range, the intake speed decreases slowly, so that the overflow losses
from excessively late closure of the inlet valve are reduced.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0016] The invention will be better understood and further objects
and advantages thereof will become more apparent from the ensuing
detailed description of a preferred embodiment taken in conjunction
with the drawings, in which:
[0017] FIG. 1 is a schematic view of a high-pressure fuel pump
in three different operating states, with a graph plotting the stroke
and the rotational angle;
[0018] FIG. 2 shows the contour of a cam according to the invention;
and
[0019] FIG. 3 shows the course of the cam stroke, the cam speed
and acceleration, the outlet valve stroke, the pumping chamber pressure,
and the status of the quantity control valve, plotted over the rotational
angle of the camshaft.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0020] In FIG. 1, an injection pump comprising a piston 10, which
is guided in a cylinder 11 and is driven by a camshaft 12 with two
cams 13, is shown schematically. The piston 10 defines a pumping
chamber 14, into which a low-pressure line 15 and a high-pressure
line 16 discharge. Between the high-pressure line 16 and the pumping
chamber 14, an outlet valve 17 is provided, which prevents a return
flow of the fuel, located in the high-pressure line 16, to the pumping
chamber 14. The high-pressure line 16 can discharge into a common
rail, not shown, or can communicate directly with injectors or injection
nozzles.
[0021] The fuel present in the low-pressure line 15 can be aspirated
via a suction valve 18 into the pumping chamber 14 when the piston
10 moves downward, as shown in FIG. 1a, and thus increases the size
of the pumping chamber 14. Alternatively, via a quantity control
valve 19, a hydraulic communication can be established between the
pumping chamber 14 and the low-pressure line 15. In FIG. 1a, the
quantity control valve 19, embodied as a magnet valve, is closed.
When the piston 10 moves from a top dead center (TDC), not shown
in FIG. 1a, in the direction of the arrow 20 toward bottom dead
center (BDC), also not shown in FIG. 1a, fuel flows from the low-pressure
line 15 via the suction valve 18 into the pumping chamber 14. The
quantity control valve 19 is closed during the intake stroke. As
soon as the camshaft 12 has rotated far enough that point 21 touches
the piston 10, BDC has been reached. The pumping stroke then begins.
[0022] As the piston 10 passes through BDC, the same pressure prevails
in both the pumping chamber 14 and the low-pressure line 15, so
that the spring-loaded suction valve 18 closes. As soon as the piston
10 moves upward in the direction of the arrow 22 (FIG. 1b), the
pressure in the pumping chamber 14 increases. Once the pressure
force in the pumping chamber 14 is greater than the sum of the pressure
force prevailing in the high-pressure line 16 and the spring force
of the outlet valve 17, the outlet valve 17 opens, and the pumping
of fuel into the high-pressure line 16 begins. This state is shown
in FIG. 1b. The suction valve 18 and the quantity control valve
19 are closed.
[0023] Once enough fuel has been pumped out of the pumping chamber
14 into the high-pressure line 16, the quantity control valve 19
is opened. As a result, the pressure in the pumping chamber 14 collapses,
and the outlet valve 17 closes. The pumping of fuel out of the pumping
chamber 14 into the high-pressure line 16 is thus ended. Until TDC
is reached, the piston 10 pumps fuel out of the pumping chamber
14 into the low-pressure line 15. Because the pressure in the low-pressure
line 15 is only slight, the pumping work of the piston 10 in this
switching state (FIG. 1c) is very slight.
[0024] In the top half of FIG. 1, the stroke 23 of the piston 10
is plotted schematically over the rotational angle .phi..sub.NW
of the camshaft 12. The states shown in FIGS. 1a, 1b and 1c are
associated by means of lines 24, 25 and 26 with the corresponding
portions in the above graph. In the graph in FIG. 1, the switching
position of the quantity control valve 19 is also shown. This clearly
shows that by the opening of the closed quantity control valve 19,
the pumping of fuel into the high-pressure line 16 is terminated.
[0025] As a function of the load state of the engine that is equipped
with the high-pressure fuel pump of the invention, the opening of
the quantity control valve 19 can be varied as shown within a range
27 between BDC and TDC.
[0026] The camshaft 12 has two cams 13, so that two intake and
pumping strokes can be performed by the piston 10 per camshaft revolution.
[0027] In FIG. 2, the camshaft 12 is shown in somewhat greater
detail. The contour of the cam 13 has been subdivided into six rotational
angle ranges 1-6, which will be described below in detail in conjunction
with FIG. 3.
[0028] FIG. 3a shows the stroke 23 of the cam 13 in the radial
direction, and thus also shows the stroke of the piston 10, plotted
over the rotational angle (PNW of the camshaft 12. In FIG. 3b, the
speed v.sub.r of the cam 13 in the radial direction is plotted.
The speed v.sub.r corresponds to the speed of the piston 10. In
FIG. 3c, the acceleration a of the piston 10 is shown plotted over
the rotational angle .phi..sub.NW of the camshaft 12. In FIG. 3d,
the position of the outlet valve 17 is shown. FIG. 3e shows the
course of the pressure P.sub.F in the pumping chamber 14 plotted
over the rotational angle .phi..sub.NW, while in FIG. 3f, the switching
position of the quantity control valve 19 is shown.
[0029] Beginning at BDC, the pressure P.sub.F in the pumping chamber
rises sharply. After the opening of the outlet valve 17, the liquid
column in the line between the high-pressure fuel pump and the rail
is accelerated abruptly, in accordance with the cam speed at the
instant of the overflow. As the rotary speeds rise, the result is
an overelevation of pressure in the pumping chamber 14. This overelevation
of pressure reaches a maximum, marked Ps in FIG. 3e, and then, once
the outlet valve 17 is opened, proceeds in the form of a pressure
surge through the high-pressure line 16. When this pressure surge
reaches the common rail, an injection nozzle, or an injector, it
can lead to imprecise fuel meterings in injection. Moreover, the
overelevation of pressure leads to a severe load on the cam drive
of the pump. The overelevation of pressure in the pumping chamber
14 should therefore be as slight as possible, compared to the rail
pressure P.sub.cr prevailing in the high-pressure line 16. That
is, the difference between P.sub.S and P.sub.cr should be as slight
as possible. This goal can be attained, with the design of the cam
13 as described below.
[0030] As a function of the pressure P.sub.cr in the high-pressure
line 16, the outlet valve 17 opens earlier or later. Because of
the volumetric losses between the piston 10 and the cylinder 11
and because of the compressibility of the fuel located in the pumping
chamber and the elasticity of the wall, not shown in FIG. 1, of
the injection pump surrounding the pumping chamber 14, a certain
pumping stroke is necessary in order to build up a pressure in the
pumping chamber 14. With knowledge of the properties of a specific
high-pressure fuel pump, a rotational angle range can thus be indicated
within which the outlet valve 17 will not open in any case. This
rotational angle range is marked 1 in FIG. 3a.
[0031] The rotational angle range 1 is smaller, the lower the pressure
P.sub.cr in the high-pressure line and the smaller the volume in
the pumping chamber 14 and the greater the elasticity of the wall
surrounding the pumping chamber 14.
[0032] Regardless of the rpm, at otherwise identical peripheral
conditions, the outlet valve 17 opens at the latest when the pressure
P.sub.cr prevailing in the high-pressure line 16 is equivalent to
the maximum allowable operating pressure of the common rail. That
is, for each high-pressure fuel pump, a second rotational angle
range 2 can be indicated, dependent on the aforementioned parameters,
within which range the outlet valve 17 opens.
[0033] To prevent the aforementioned pressure surges, above all
at high rpm and high pressure P.sub.cr, from becoming excessively
strong, it is provided that the speed of is the piston stroke v.sub.r
is constant in the second rotational angle range 2. This plateau
can be seen clearly in FIG. 3b. As soon as the second rotational
angle range 2 has been traversed, the speed of the piston stroke
increases until it reaches a maximum V.sub.max.
[0034] The acceleration a in the third rotational angle range 3
is selected such that once the maximum allowable speed is reached,
and after the transition to a fourth range, the maximum negative
acceleration is such that at the contact point between the cam 13
and the piston 10, at the highest allowable pressure P.sub.cr, the
allowable Hertzian pressure is not exceeded. The pressure forces
that act on the piston and the forces of inertia must be taken into
account here.
[0035] Once the maximum speed v.sub.max is reached, a fourth rotational
angle range 4 begins, which is characterized by the fact that the
acceleration a becomes negative. The value of the acceleration is
limited by the maximum allowable Hertzian pressure. During virtually
the entire fourth rotational angle range 4 and an ensuing fifth
rotational angle range 5, the acceleration a is constantly negative,
which means that the speed of the piston 10 is decreasing. Once
TDC is reached, the speed becomes negative; that is, the intake
stroke begins. At the end of the fifth rotational angle range 5,
the piston 10 has a certain negative speed, which it maintains constantly
over a sixth rotational angle range 6. In the fifth rotational angle
range and the sixth rotational angle range, the aspiration of fuel
takes place out of the low-pressure line 15 into the pumping chamber
14. The sixth rotational angle range 6 is followed again by a first
rotational angle range 1. The rotational angle range 1 is characterized
in that the acceleration a of the piston 10 is selected to be as
high as possible. The possible acceleration is essentially limited
by the forces of inertia of the piston 10, since in the region of
BDC, hydraulic forces acting from the pumping chamber on the piston
10 are comparatively slight. For this reason, the maximum acceleration
in the first rotational angle range is markedly greater than the
maximum acceleration in the third rotational angle range 3.
[0036] Because the acceleration a of the piston 10 is maximized
in the first rotational angle range 1, the second rotational angle
range 2 can be correspondingly larger. In an alternative feature,
instead of a constant speed of the piston 10 in the second rotational
angle range 2, a slight acceleration of the piston 10 can also take
place. The precondition for this, however, is that in all operating
states, the pressure peak P.sub.S upon opening of the outlet valve
17 does not become excessively high. In the third rotational angle
range 3, it is recommended that the acceleration a of the piston
10 be selected to be as high as possible, so that the requisite
delivery quantity can be reached with the lowest possible maximum
speed v.sub.max of the piston 10. The lower the maximum speed v.sub.max
of the piston 10, the less are the flow losses upon diversion by
the quantity control valve 19. This improves the efficiency of the
high-pressure fuel pump.
[0037] The remarks above pertaining to the shape of the contour
of the cam 13 from the first rotational angle range 1 to the sixth
rotational angle range 6 can fundamentally be applied to all high-pressure
fuel pumps according to the invention. The specific design of the
contour of the cam 13, however, can be done only with knowledge
of the requisite operating pressures P.sub.cr in the common rail,
rotary speeds of the high-pressure fuel pump, compressibility of
the fuel, elasticity of the walls surrounding the pumping chamber
14, and other variables. However, one skilled in the art in the
field of high-pressure fuel pumps can accomplish this using simulation
calculations or other aids. The high-pressure fuel pump of the invention
is especially well suited for use in internal combustion engines
with direct gasoline injection.
[0038] The foregoing relates to a preferred exemplary embodiment
of the invention, it being understood that other variants and embodiments
thereof are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention,
the latter being defined by the appended claims.
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