US1400264A - Injector for internal-combustion engines - Google Patents

Injector for internal-combustion engines Download PDF

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US1400264A
US1400264A US293040A US29304019A US1400264A US 1400264 A US1400264 A US 1400264A US 293040 A US293040 A US 293040A US 29304019 A US29304019 A US 29304019A US 1400264 A US1400264 A US 1400264A
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fuel
air
combustion engines
reservoir
injector
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US293040A
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Charles Louis Auguste
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02MSUPPLYING COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL WITH COMBUSTIBLE MIXTURES OR CONSTITUENTS THEREOF
    • F02M67/00Apparatus in which fuel-injection is effected by means of high-pressure gas, the gas carrying the fuel into working cylinders of the engine, e.g. air-injection type
    • F02M67/10Injectors peculiar thereto, e.g. valve less type
    • F02M67/12Injectors peculiar thereto, e.g. valve less type having valves

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  • This invention has for its object to provide an improved apparatus for injecting liquid fuel into the cylinders of internal combustion engines, more particularly of the Diesel type, which is designed to allow of using the fuel under the best conditions for efliciency in all internal combustion engines, and more particularly in engines working at a high angular s eed, and subjected to widely varying ii uctuations of speed and load. This is more particularly the case with engines for airplanes, airships, motor tractors, marine tow boats, etc.
  • the improved injector comprises a compressed air chamber 1, adapted to be closed by a needle valve 2, and a fuel chamber 3 adapted to be closed likewise by a needle valve 4.
  • the two needle valves are normally held against their seats by springs 5 and 6 respectively, and they extend respectively through stufiing boxes 7, 8 that serve to close in the upper ends of the said chambers.
  • an intermediate fuel reservoir 9 which communicates through two inclined passages 10 and 11 with a converging-diverging duct 12 arranged in the axis of and below the compressed air orifice. This duct opens at its lower end into the cylinder.
  • These two passages that establish communication between the intermediate reservoir and the converging-diverging duct are inclined in such a manner that the maximum quantity of fuel which is to be injected into each cylinder charge is situated at rest in the reservoir 9, and will not flow into the con-.
  • the fuel needle valve 4 is lifted (during a determined period of the cycle wherein the pressure in the cylinder 1s less than the atmospheric pressure), the fuel will be caused to flow by the action of its own head and the diminution of pressure at the orifice, into the intermediate reservoir 9, whereupon the fuel needle valve 4 will close immediately the quantity of fuel has passed through which is suitable for the load on the engine at that moment.
  • the compressed air needle valve 2 will then open at the end of the compression period, and the carry the fuel into the injection air duct verging-diverging duct.
  • the inclined passage 11 establishes communication between the converging portion of the duct 12 and the upper part of the intermediate fuel reservoir 9 (above the level of the liquid), so that the pressure acting upon the upper level of the fuel is practically equal to that,
  • the improved injection apparatus has the air flowing in the con-- always the advantage of not admitting any and 11, a difference of pressure that would be sufficient to produce an outflow of fuel from the intermediate reservoir 9.-
  • Injecting apparatus forinternal combustion engines comprising a passage for the compreed air, a needle forming a valve in this passage, a convergent divergent air passage of continuously varying cross section arranged below the needle and emptying directly into the motor, a the non-compressed fuel, a nee 1e forming a valve in said fuel passage, an intermedi-- ate, reservoir below the last mentioned needle for the fuel, two passages establishing assage for communication between the intermediate a reservoir and the convergent divergent air passage respectively above and below the narrowest cross section, the two passages being parallel and inclined in a direction reverse to the air current, and two cams of variable profile controlling the two needles distributing the air and fuel.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Fuel-Injection Apparatus (AREA)

Description

L. A. CHARLES. INJECTOR FOR INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES. APPLICATION FILED APR. 26, 1919.
1,400,264, Patented Dec.13, 1921.
Fig.1
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
LOU IS AUGUSTE CHARLES, OF LEVALLOIS-PERRET, FRANCE.
INJECTOR FOR INTERNAL-COMBUSTION ENGINES.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Dec.13, 1921.
Application filed April 26, 1919. Serial No. 293,040.
To all 'whom it may co ncern Be it known that I, LOUIS AUGUSTE CHARLES, a citizen of the French Republic, residing at 18, Rue F azilleau, Levallois-Perret, Seine, France, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Injectors for Internal-Combustion Engines, of which the following is a specification.
This invention has for its object to provide an improved apparatus for injecting liquid fuel into the cylinders of internal combustion engines, more particularly of the Diesel type, which is designed to allow of using the fuel under the best conditions for efliciency in all internal combustion engines, and more particularly in engines working at a high angular s eed, and subjected to widely varying ii uctuations of speed and load. This is more particularly the case with engines for airplanes, airships, motor tractors, marine tow boats, etc.
In order to obtain the best result under all conditions from an internal combustion engine mounted in an airplane or airship, it is necessary to vary the amount of fuel that is injected, and'also the amount of air that is strictly necessary for said injection: (1) according to the load on the engine, and (2) according to the altitude, because the variations of the altitude entail the in-drawing of air of variable pressure and consequently a cylinder charge containing variable weights of air.
It has been proposed to attain the best possible yield by maintaining the cylinder charges of air at a constant degree of carburation' and of admittingat each injection only the airthat is strictly necessary. This result is effected according to the present invention by means of an injector constructed as follows: The fuel which is maintained with a low head at a distribution orifice, flows under the action of this head into a small intermediate reservoir during a determined period of the cycle where the pressure in the'cylinder is lower than the pressure of the atmosphere. This reservoir communicates through two pipes or passages of suitable dimensions and direction with a converging-divergingduct that is always in direct communication with the cylinder and into which flows during the period of injection, compressed air taken from a constantpressure reservoir. The two pipes connecting. the intermediate fuel reservoir to the converging-diverging open one above the other below the contracted neck of the said duct in such a manner that the said compressed air will flow equally through the two pipes opening into the intermediate reservoir, through the said reservoir, and will cylinder.
The phases of distribution of the fuel and the injection air'are-regulated by means of two cams of variable profile. The accompa-nying drawing illustrates by way of example a constructional form of this invention.
As shown, the improved injector comprises a compressed air chamber 1, adapted to be closed by a needle valve 2, and a fuel chamber 3 adapted to be closed likewise by a needle valve 4. The two needle valves are normally held against their seats by springs 5 and 6 respectively, and they extend respectively through stufiing boxes 7, 8 that serve to close in the upper ends of the said chambers. In the prolongation of, and at the lower part of the fuel orifice there is provided an intermediate fuel reservoir 9 which communicates through two inclined passages 10 and 11 with a converging-diverging duct 12 arranged in the axis of and below the compressed air orifice. This duct opens at its lower end into the cylinder. These two passages that establish communication between the intermediate reservoir and the converging-diverging duct are inclined in such a manner that the maximum quantity of fuel which is to be injected into each cylinder charge is situated at rest in the reservoir 9, and will not flow into the con-.
' 15 hav ng varying profiles.
IVhen the fuel needle valve 4 is lifted (during a determined period of the cycle wherein the pressure in the cylinder 1s less than the atmospheric pressure), the fuel will be caused to flow by the action of its own head and the diminution of pressure at the orifice, into the intermediate reservoir 9, whereupon the fuel needle valve 4 will close immediately the quantity of fuel has passed through which is suitable for the load on the engine at that moment. The compressed air needle valve 2 will then open at the end of the compression period, and the carry the fuel into the injection air duct verging-diverging duct.
air will be allowed to pass through into the converging-diverging duct. The inclined passage 11 establishes communication between the converging portion of the duct 12 and the upper part of the intermediate fuel reservoir 9 (above the level of the liquid), so that the pressure acting upon the upper level of the fuel is practically equal to that,
mean pressure at the upper level of the fuel (practically the pressure at the outlet of the compressed air), and if P be the mean pressure of the diverging portion communicating with the lower part of the intermediate reservoir, then as 1 is greater than P the fuel will flow in the diverging portion approximately with the pressure P, (having due regard to the variations of P during the flow), and with a speed equal to P P the fuel will then be carried into the cylinder by \The direction of the liquid jet in the, diverging portion incloses with the direction of outflow of the air an angle comprised between 11 and 12 which promotes the sub-"division of the fuel so that the latter enters in a vesicular state into the cylinder.
The improved injection apparatus has the air flowing in the con-- always the advantage of not admitting any and 11, a difference of pressure that would be sufficient to produce an outflow of fuel from the intermediate reservoir 9.-
What I claim is Injecting apparatus forinternal combustion engines comprising a passage for the compreed air, a needle forming a valve in this passage, a convergent divergent air passage of continuously varying cross section arranged below the needle and emptying directly into the motor, a the non-compressed fuel, a nee 1e forming a valve in said fuel passage, an intermedi-- ate, reservoir below the last mentioned needle for the fuel, two passages establishing assage for communication between the intermediate a reservoir and the convergent divergent air passage respectively above and below the narrowest cross section, the two passages being parallel and inclined in a direction reverse to the air current, and two cams of variable profile controlling the two needles distributing the air and fuel.
In testimony whereof I have signed my name to this specification.
LOUIS AUGUSTE CHARLES.
US293040A 1919-04-26 1919-04-26 Injector for internal-combustion engines Expired - Lifetime US1400264A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2555082A (en) * 1946-11-02 1951-05-29 Daniel And Florence Guggenheim Liquid oxygen and fuel feeding apparatus utilizing oxygen for scavenging

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2555082A (en) * 1946-11-02 1951-05-29 Daniel And Florence Guggenheim Liquid oxygen and fuel feeding apparatus utilizing oxygen for scavenging

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