Title of Invention

FUEL INJECTION VALVE FOR INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES

Abstract ABSTRACT 146/MAS/96 The present invention relates to a fuel injection valve for internal combustion engines, with a valve body firmly fastened to a valve-holding body in which a valve member is guided in axially displaceable fashion in a hole and the upper section of said hole is designed as a guiding section and said guiding section is adjoined by a radially enlarged pressure space into which there opens at least one feed passage which runs through the valve body next to the guiding hole and with a clamping nut which rests by means of an inner annular shoulder of conical design aghast a conical annular offset arranged on the valve body on a level with the pressure space referring to the bore and braces the valve body against the valve-holding body clamping device which acts axially on the valve-holding body and, by abutment of a bearing surface formed on that end face of the clamping nut which faces away from the valve holding body braces the fuel injection valve against a counterstop formed in the housing of the internal combustion engine, characterized in that the bearing surface of the clamping nut and the counterstop in the housing of the internal combustion engine is provided with a tonicity for transmitting a radial clapping force component, in addition to the axial bracing force to the valve body at the level of the pressure space
Full Text



The present invention relates to a fuel injection valve for internal combustion engines having a piston like valve member
PRIOR ART
The invention is based on a fuel injection valve for internal combustion engines. In conventional fuel injection valves of this type, the fuel inlet conduit extends in the valve body obliquely to the center axis, next to the guide bore for the valve member (nozzle needle) extending coaxially with the center axis and laterally intersects the pressure chamber, which is embodied as an undercut. Because of the slanting course of the inlet conduit, the wall of the valve body has only a slight thickness between the inlet conduit and the guide bore, near where the inlet conduit discharges into the pressure chamber. A further factor is that the wall of the valve body surrounding the pressure chamber, because of the width needed for distributing the fuel, has the least thickness and strength. At injection pressures of up to 400 bar no significant damage occurs in known fuel injection valves. At higher injection pressures, which in modern direct-injection internal combustion engines have been increased to about 1800 bar, breakage at the end of the partition between the guide bore and the inlet conduit (that is, in the nip) of the pressure chamber can occur, which progresses over time and can lead to the destruction of the valve body of the injection valve. Such breaks are due especially to the high dynamic internal pressure load, compared with the static tension with which the valve body is pressed by the adjusting nut against the valve retaining body, and the injection valve itself is pressed by the adjusting nut against a counterpart stop in the engine housing. In fuel injection valves that are combined directly with a high-pressure pump, which are known as unit fuel injectors, a further factor is that in the pressure buildup, the axial housing pressure of the pump is transmitted to the valve member body via the retaining body.

To lessen the danger of breakage of the valve body in the region of the pressure chamber, it is known to weaken the wall surrounding the pressure chamber as little as possible. To that end, instead of the circular widening of the pressure chamber, an eccentric recess is disposed only at the discharge region of the fuel inlet conduit (U.S. Pat. No. 3,511,442), so that the inclined guidance of the fuel inlet conduit can be made as steep as possible. It is also known to guide the fuel inlet conduit parallel to the guide bore, up to the level of the pressure chamber, and from there on to connect it to the relatively closely guided pressure chamber through a radial, or only slightly steep, or curved connecting conduit (European patent disclosures EP-A 425 236 and EP-A 363 142). Producing such a connecting conduit, however, is complicated and very expensive.
From German Patent Disclosure DE-OS 41 42 430, a fuel injection valve is also known in which the annular shoulder of the adjusting nut that axially braces the valve body against the retaining body is embodied conically on the end of the nut remote from the retaining body. However, this known fuel injection valve also has the disadvantage that widening of the adjusting nut can occur from the axial strain caused when the entire fuel injection valve is fastened in the housing of the engine, so that the compressive force exerted by the adjusting nut in the direction of the pressure chamber cannot contribute substantially to stabilizing the valve body wall.
ADVANTAGES OF THE INVENTION
The fuel injection valve according to the invention for internal combustion engines has the advantage over the prior art that even at very high pressures about 1800 bar in the pressure chamber, breakage of the valve body can be reliably avoided.

This is advantageously achieved by the combination of the two conically embodied fuel introduction faces (two chamfers) between the adjusting nut and the valve body and the engine housing and the valve body; as a result, both the bracing force of the adjusting nut when the valve body is braced against the retaining body and the fastening force when the entire injection valve is fastened into the housing of the engine are introduced to the valve body in such a way that there they jointly counteract the compressive force of the pressure chamber, which is at high fuel pressure, especially in the region of the nip at the inlet to the fuel inlet conduit.
The conical embodiment of the contact face on the adjusting nut and of the counterpart stop face in the engine housing has the effect in particular that a large portion of the fastening force exerted on the fuel injection valve is converted into a radial component, which is transmitted directly to the conical annular step of the valve body in the region of the nip, thus counteracting a possible upsetting deformation of the valve body in the critical region caused by the very high dynamic compressive strains.
In this way, the resultant force component originating in the pressure chamber is effectively intercepted by the fastening forces brought to bear, so that the danger of breakage of the valve body can be minimized, which considerably increases the durability of the entire fuel injection valve at high operating pressure.
In addition, because of the conical embodiment of the contact face between the adjusting nut and the engine housing, widening of the adjusting nut from the fastening forces is counteracted.

For optimal fuel transmission, it is advantageous if the conical faces are embodied as uniform conical
Accordingly the present invention provides a field injection valve for internal combustion engines, with a valve body firmly stoned to a valve-holding body in which a valve member is guided in axially displaceable fashion in a hole. the air section of said hole is designed as a guiding section and said guiding section is adjoined by a radially enlarged pressure space into which there opens at least one feed passage which runs through the valve body next to the guiding hole and with a clamping nut which rests by means of an inner annular shoulder of conical design against a conical annular offset arranged on the valve body on a level with the
of the internal combustion engine, characterized in that the bearing surface of the clamping nut and the counterstop in the housing of the internal combustion engine is provided with a iconicity for transmitting a radial clapping force component, in addition to the axial bracing force to the valve body at the level of the pressure space .
Further advantageous features of the subject of the invention can be learned food the specification, drawings and claims.
An exemplary embodiment of the field injection valve according to the invention for internal combustion engines is shown in the accompanying drawings and will be described in detail hereinafter.
Fig. 1 shows the installation position of the fuel injection valve into the
engine housing;
Fig. 2 is a longitudinal section through the portion of the fuel injection
valve towards the combustion chamber, and
Fig. 3 shows a detail of the fuel injection valve of Fig. 2 on a larger scale.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENT
Fig. 1 shows a cylindrical fuel injection valve 1, who-ii is inserted into a receiving bore 3_

of a housing 5 of the internal combustion engine to be supplied. The receiving bore 3 is embodied as a stepped bore, whose conically embodied cross-sectional transition forms a counterpart stop face 7. The fuel injection valve 1 is axially braced against this counterpart stop 7 by a fastening device 11. by means of a conical contact face 9 likewise formed by a cross-sectional constriction. The fastening device 11 to that end. in the exemplary embodiment described, has a tightening plate 15, which acts upon an end face 13 remote from the housing of the fuel injection valve 1 and can be fastened to the housing 5 by means of a plurality of tightening screws 17 distributed over its circumference, and which thus firmly fastens the fuel injection valve 1 so that it is axially braced against the counterpart stop 7 in the housing 5 of the engine.
The fuel injection valve 1, shown in FIG. 2 in a section in its region toward the combustion chamber, has a valve body 19. which is secured to a valve retaining body 25 with the interposition of a shim 21 and a sleeve like adjusting nut 23. A valve member 27 (valve needle) in the form of a stepped piston is displaceable in an axial bore 29 of the valve body 19; the valve member 27 has a conical valve sealing face 31, on its end toward its combustion chamber, with which it cooperates with an inward-pointing valve seat 33 in a cusp 35 toward the combustion chamber of the valve body 19; a plurality of injection openings 37 follow the valve seat on the downstream side.
rotationally symmetric thick portion
39 and a lower, slender portion 41, whose end toward the combustion chamber is closed off by the cusp 35. The part of the bore 29 located in the upper portion 39 is embodied as a guide portion 43 for a guide portion 45 of larger cross section of the valve member 27. The part of the bore 29 extending in the lower portion 41, together with the shaft 47 of the valve member 27, defines an annular gap 49 that extends as far as the valve seat 33. In the upper portion 39 of the valve body 19, near the lower portion 41 and between the guide portion 43 of the bore 29 and the annular gap 49, there is an undercut pressure

chamber 51 of widened diameter, whose outer boundary 53 is preferably curved and merges with the annular gap 49.
A valve closing spring 57 disposed in a blind bore 55 of the valve retaining body 25 presses the valve member 27 onto the valve seat 33 in the closing direction, in the closed state of the injection valve 1.
For fuel delivery, a fuel inlet conduit 59 that can be made to communicate with a high-pressure injection line, not shown, extends through the valve retaining body 25, the shim 21, and the upper, thick portion 39 of the valve body 19, begriming at the upper face end thereof, extending beside the guide portion 43 of the bore 29 to the pressure chamber 51, The fuel inlet conduit 59 intersects the pressure chamber 51 laterally at the top, forming a nip; the fuel inlet conduit 59 extends obliquely to the guide portion 43, so that the diameter of the pressure chamber 51 can be kept as small as possible and so the cross section at the mouth can be kept as large as possible.
The adjusting nut 23, embodied as a union nut, which fits over the upper portion 39 of the valve body 19, is screwed by a female thread 61 onto a male thread 63 on the valve retaining body 25 and has an inner annular shoulder 65, on which the valve body 19 is braced with an annular step 67 at the transition from the upper portion 39 to the slender portion 41. The annular shoulder 65 and the annular step 67 are conical, and preferably frustoconical, that is, shaped like truncated cones, with the same angle of inclination a (FIG. 3) to a radial plane 69 that intersects the axis of the valve member 27 at a right angle.
According to the invention, in addition, the stop face 9 of the fuel injection valve 1 formed on the end face toward the combustion chamber of the adjusting nut 23 and the counterpart stop face 7, shown in FIG. 1 and forming part of the receiving bore 3, in the housing 5 of the engine are embodied conically, preferably frustoconically. The angle of

inclination .beta., shown on a larger scale in FIG. 3, of these conical surfaces to a radial plane 69 that intersects the axis of the valve member 27 at a right angle should preferably be equal to the angle of inclination .alpha, at the annular shoulder 65 and the annular step 67. The angles .alpha, and .beta, should be embodied such that a vertical to the conical surfaces 65, 67, 7, 9 points in the direction of the transition from the guide portion 43 of the bore 29 to the pressure chamber 51, or the inlet opening of the fuel inlet conduit 59 into the pressure chamber 51. The angles of inclination .alpha, and .beta, to that end have a size ranging from lO.degree. to 60.degree., preferably 30.degree., from the radial plane 69.
When the valve body 19 is axially braced against the valve retaining body 25 by the adjusting nut 23, and when the entire fuel injection valve 1 is axially fastened firmly in the housing 5 of the engine by the fastening device 11, not only the axial bracing forces but also radial forces are introduced to the valve body 19 because of the conical contact faces 65, 67, 7, 9, acting as force introduction faces, and these forces counteract the compressive forces and strains produced as pressure is imposed on the field injection valve 1 by the internal pressure in the pressure chamber 51. Because of the embodiment of the angles .alpha, and .beta, at the conical surfaces, these opposed forces are in particular carried into the region of the nip that is especially critical for breakage, near the mouth of the fuel inlet conduit 59 into the pressure chamber 51.
It is thus possible in a structurally simple way with the fuel injection valve of the invention to reduce the danger of fatigue breakage of the valve body in the region of the pressure chamber to a minimum, even at very high operating pressures, without increasing the wall thickness and thus to increase the service life of the entire fuel injection valve.
The foregoing relates to preferred exemplary embodiments 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.


WE CLAIM:
1. A fuel injection valve for internal combustion engines, with a valve body (19) firmly Mistuned to a valve-holding body (25) in a valve member (27) is guided in axially displaceable fashion in a hole (29) the upper section of said hole (29) is designed as a guiding section (43) and said guiding section (43) is adjoined by a radially enlarged pressure space (51) into which there opens at least one feed passage (59) which runs through the valve body (19) next to the guiding hole (29, 43X and with a clamping nut (23) which rests by means of an inner annular shoulder (65) of conical design against a conical annular offset (67) arranged on the valve body (19) on a level with the pressure space (51) referring to the bore (29) and braces the valve body against the valve-holding body (25), clamping device (11) which acts axially on the valve-holding body (25) and, by abutment of a bearing source (9) formed on that end face of the clamping nut (23) which faces away fix)m the valve-holding body (25) braces the fuel injection valve against a counterstop (7) formed in the housing (5) of the internal combustion engine, characterized in that the bearing source (9) of the clamping nut (23) and the counterstop (7) in the housing (5) of the internal combustion engine is provided with a iconicity for transmitting a radial clapping force component, in addition to the axial bracing to the valve body (19) at the level of the pressure space (51).

2. The fuel injection valve according to claim 1, wherein the
surfaces of the conical annular offset (67) of the valve body (19), the conical
annular shoulder (65) and the conical bearing surfece (9) on the clamping
nut (23) and the counterstop (7) of the housing (5) are designed such that a
vertical line relative to them points in a direction of a transition of the
guiding hole (29,43) into the pressure space (51).
3. The fuel injection valve according to claim 1, wherein the conical annular foist (67) of the valve body (19), the conical annular shoulder (65X the conical bearing surfece (9) of the clamping put (23) and the conical counterstop (7) of the housing ( 5) each have the same angle of inclination (a, p) relative to a radial plane (69) of the fuel injection valve intersecting the axis of the valve member (27) at right angles.
4. The fuel injection valve according to claim 3, wherein the angle of inclination (a, p) is in the region of 10® to 60*^10 the radial plane (69).
5. The fuel injection valve according to claim 4, wherein the angle of inclination (a, p) is preferably 30** to the radial plane (69).
6. Fuel injection valve according to claim 1, wherein the conical
annular shoulder (65) of the clamping nut (23) and the conical counterstop
(7) in the housing (5) are of internally frustoconical design, and the conical
annular otiose (67) of the valve body (19) and the conical bearing surface
(9) of the clamping nut (23) are of frustoconical design.

7. The fuel injection valve according to claim 1, wherein the
clamping device (11) has a component (15) which acts axially on the valve-
holding body (25) in the direction of the housing (5) of the internal
combustion engine and, for its part, is braced axially against the valve-
holding body (Z5) by at least one fastening means that can be screwed into
the housing (5), preferably a clamping screw (17).
8. Fuel injection valve for internal combustion engines
substantially as herein before described with reference to the accompanying
drawing.


Documents:

0146-mas-1996 abstract.pdf

0146-mas-1996 claims.pdf

0146-mas-1996 correspondence others.pdf

0146-mas-1996 correspondence po.pdf

0146-mas-1996 description (complete).pdf

0146-mas-1996 drawings.pdf

0146-mas-1996 form-1.pdf

0146-mas-1996 form-26.pdf

0146-mas-1996 form-4.pdf

0146-mas-1996 petition.pdf


Patent Number 193766
Indian Patent Application Number 146/MAS/1996
PG Journal Number 30/2009
Publication Date 24-Jul-2009
Grant Date
Date of Filing 30-Jan-1996
Name of Patentee ROBERT BOSCH GMBH,
Applicant Address POSTFACH 30 02 20, 70442 STUTTGART
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 FRIEDRICH BOECKING, MAINZER STR. 27, 70499 STUTTGART,
2 STEFAN HAUG, LANGWIESENSTR. 28, 70771 LEINFELDEN-ECHTERDINGEN
PCT International Classification Number F02M61/14
PCT International Application Number N/A
PCT International Filing date
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 NA