Internal-combustion engines – Poppet valve operating mechanism – Electrical system
Reexamination Certificate
2000-10-24
2002-07-23
Pelham, Joseph (Department: 3742)
Internal-combustion engines
Poppet valve operating mechanism
Electrical system
C123S090150, C123S090160, C123S1980DA, C251S129100
Reexamination Certificate
active
06422185
ABSTRACT:
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
The present application claims the right of foreign priority of German Application No. DE 199 51 315.5 filed Oct. 25, 1999, the subject matter of which is incorporated herein by reference.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
An electromagnetic valve train for actuating a cylinder valve in a piston-type internal-combustion engine essentially comprises two electromagnets, which are spaced from one another, and between which an armature that is connected to the cylinder valve can move back and forth, corresponding to the alternating supply of current to the electromagnets. In the respective end positions, i.e., when the armature rests against a pole face of one of the electromagnets, the associated cylinder valve is correspondingly located in its closed or open position. To capture the armature, the relevant electromagnet is acted upon with a higher, capturing current. As soon as the armature has reached its end position at the electromagnet, the supply of current to the electromagnet is reduced to a lower, retaining current.
Disturbances in the actuation of the current supply, such as a capturing current that is too low, or a retaining current that has been adjusted down too far, or the effect of external influences, can prevent the armature from coming into contact with the pole face, or cause it to detach prematurely from the pole face and, without further measures, move back into a central position between the two electromagnets due to the force of the restoring spring associated with the respective end position, so the affected cylinder valve remains in a half-open position. Because such actuators operate according to the resonance principle, that is, the full restoring force of the spring and the properly-timed activation of the capturing current at the other electromagnet are required for proper function, it is not possible to return the armature to the operating cycle with the normal control of the current supply to the electromagnets.
Aside from the fact that the piston-type internal-combustion engine operates with one less cylinder in the event of a failure of this cylinder valve, the failure of a cylinder valve severely hampers operation in spark-ignited, piston-type internal-combustion engines, which are typically provided with a catalytic exhaust-gas purification device. If one of the cylinder valves remains in the half-open position, both gas passages, that is, cylinder valves on the gas-intake side and the gas-outlet side, are open simultaneously over the course of further operating cycles, so air laden with unburned fuel or, when the injection is shut off, at least air enters the exhaust-gas tract, thereby skewing the values of the lambda control, which in turn leads to changes in the fuel supply that negatively impact the operation of the piston-type internal-combustion engine and effect an inadequate conversion of the catalytic converter. Furthermore, the vibrations in the suction or exhaust-gas system are changed by the failure of an actuator or cylinder.
It is the object of the invention to restart an electromagnetically-actuatable cylinder valve as quickly as possible following a functional failure during the operation of a piston-type internal-combustion engine.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
To operate a piston-type internal-combustion engine with electromagnetic valve trains for actuating the cylinder valves, which respectively have an armature that can move between two electromagnets, counter to the force of restoring springs, and is connected to a cylinder valve, the valves being completely variably actuatable by an electronic engine timing, the invention proposes to accomplish the object through the detection of the function of the electromagnetic valve trains of each cylinder valve in the engine timing during operation. In particular, when a functional failure of a cylinder is ascertained, the electromagnet of the failed electromagnetic valve train is acted upon by a capturing current, which brings the armature into the end position at an electromagnet; and, from this end position, the electromagnetic valve train is actuated for the ongoing operating cycle of the cylinder.
To minimize the maximum current, the electromagnets of the individual electromagnetic valve trains are brought from the above-described half-open position into the fully-open position through the alternating supply of current at the resonant frequency of the spring-mass system comprising the armature, valve and restoring springs, or through the supply of a high current, for starting a piston-type internal-combustion engine. The starter can thus rotate the crankshaft practically without any compression resistance until the individual cylinder valves are moved into the open or closed position in the relevant sequence of the operating cycle due to the corresponding actuation of the associated electromagnetic valve trains, and the fuel supply and possibly the ignition is or are initiated.
If a functional failure occurs during ongoing operation, the injection is already activated, in contrast to the first oscillation buildup during starting, and a wall film of fuel is present in the intake passage. Furthermore, residual gas from the previous operating cycle is present in the cylinders, and the lambda control is activated, so measures must be implemented that have a small impact on the operation of the engine due to the actuator failure.
Because saving electrical energy is not an issue during ongoing operation, but remedying the functional failure of only one cylinder valve as quickly as possible is a focus, according to the invention, the engine timing actuates the electromagnet relevant for the next capturing process immediately after detecting the functional failure, or after recognizing a defect, it actuates the second-to-next capturing process with a correspondingly-high capturing current, so the armature is brought into one of its end positions against one of the pole faces of the capturing electromagnet in the shortest possible time. Depending on the work cycle of the relevant operating cycle, the valves are moved into the closed or open position in a defined manner, so the cylinder can either still be operated in an emergency mode, or if the valves are closed or partially closed, the cylinder can no longer be used for the power output, and exerts the smallest possible influence on the engine and catalytic-converter operation due to the switching of the other valves of the cylinder. From this end position, the current supply to the retaining electromagnet is controlled such that the relevant cylinder valve is moved again in the ongoing work cycle, or, in the case of a defective magnet, it is held in the end position.
Because a corresponding sensor assembly in the engine timing control unit can pinpoint the time of the failure relative to the operating cycle, the turn-on point for the capturing current specified for the piston movement can also be established with a corresponding programming of the electronic engine timing control unit, so the armature can be moved into the next open or closed position in the operating cycle in the shortest possible time. The actuation of the cylinder valves of the relevant cylinder must be changed in the engine timing control unit such that the valves of the one gas-conduction side (gas-intake side) and the other gas-conduction side (gas-outlet side) are not open simultaneously during a functional failure.
In an advantageous embodiment, it is provided that, during an ascertained functional failure, at least the fuel supply to the affected cylinder is cut off. Because inadequate compression keeps the affected cylinder from operating in the event of the failure of a cylinder valve, regardless of whether a gas-intake valve or gas-outlet valve fails, unburned fuel is prevented from being forced into the exhaust-gas tract and “overloading” the converter with hydrocarbons, because the lambda control additionally detects this operating situation as a “too lean” mixture, causing the fuel supply to the other, properly-functioning
Duesmann Markus
Kemper Hans
Salber Wolfgang
Dahbour Fadi H.
FEV Motorentechnik GmbH
Kunitz Norman N.
Pelham Joseph
Vanable
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