The present invention relates to a bus module for connecting electrically triggered fluidic valves to a data bus having an electrical circuit configuration, which evaluates address data and user data from data telegrams transmitted on the data bus and which triggers the fluidic valve determined by the address data in accordance with the user data of the data telegram.
Such a bus module is manufactured and distributed e.g. by Murrelektronik GmbH under the name “MVK Metall”. Details of this bus module are described in particular in the printed publication “Impulse NEWS” (date 03/11, edition 03/5,000) of the Murrelektronik GmbH. The bus module is used to connect up to eight stations in the form of actuators, such as e.g. electrically triggerable fluidic valves, or sensors to a data bus, in particular to a field bus. The bus modules have an electrical circuit configuration, which evaluates data telegrams transmitted on the data bus and which triggers an actuator determined by the address data in accordance with the user data of the data telegram. Such a data telegram is made up of address data, which identify a station, and user data, which transmit commands in the case of actuators or contain status data in the case of sensors. Such bus modules are widespread in pneumatics. The bus modules are designed according to the power requirement of pneumatic valves, which is lower than the power requirement of hydraulic valves. In order to take into account the higher power requirement of hydraulic valves compared to pneumatic valves, triggering hydraulic valves requires special designs, whose electrical components are designed for the higher current flow of these valves. This results in an increase of manufacturing costs and is also one reason that bus modules are not widely use for triggering hydraulic valves.
The present invention is based on the objective of creating by simple measures a bus module of the type mentioned at the outset, which is suitable both for triggering pneumatic valves as well as hydraulic valves on account of a reduced current load.
Since the pull-up current required for a control valve flows only briefly and since afterward only the holding current continues to flow, which is reduced with respect to the pull-up current on account of the pulse width modulation, the electrical components of the electrical circuit configuration, which would be underdimensioned for the pull-up current as continuous current, are not unduly heated.
Instead of a control valve, it is possible to connect to the bus module according to the present invention a proportional valve operated as a controlling valve having a valve piston whose deflection is controllable by the pulse control factor of a pulse width modulated voltage. The deflection of the valve piston determines the passage cross section of the proportional valve. In order for the current load on the components not to become too high, in such an approach the pulse control factor of the pulse width modulation must not exceed a maximum value predefined by the load capacity of the electrical components of the bus module. This means that the valve piston of the proportional valve may be deflected from its rest position only within a partial range. The brief application of the full supply voltage to the proportional valve before the pulse width modulation becomes effective makes it possible to accelerate the response of a proportional valve.
The duration of the gate-controlled rise time and the pulse control factor as well as the frequency or period duration of the pulse width modulation are stored as parameters in the electrical circuit configuration, then switch-on commands and switch-off commands transmitted on the data bus are sufficient for triggering actuators connected to the bus module. Thus no reprogramming is necessary in systems in which the control valves are controlled by a programmable controller, generally called “SPS”, by switch-on commands and switch-off commands. If the duration of the gate-controlled rise time, the pulse control factor as well as the frequency or the period duration of the pulse width modulation of actuators connected to the bus module are to be of different magnitude from case to case, then it is advantageous to transmit the corresponding values together with the switch-on command to the bus module in a data telegram. The frequency or the period duration of the pulse width modulation is either stored in the bus module as a parameter or alternatively it is contained as a further parameter in the user data of the data telegram for a switch-on command.
The SPS 13 as well as bus modules 15.1 and 15.2 are stations of bus system 10. In this exemplary embodiment, SPS 13 is also used as master, i.e. it determines which of the stations connected to data bus 11 is allowed to send a data telegram at which point in time. A data telegram is made up of address data and user data. The address data determine for which hydraulic valve the user data are intended. The user data contain e.g. a switch-on or switch-off command for a hydraulic valve.
A supply voltage Uv is supplied to bus modules 15.1 and 15.2 via energy line 12. The supply voltage is normally a direct voltage having a nominal value of 12 V or 24 V. In the exemplary embodiment shown in
Bus module 15.1 has an electronic circuit 20.1, which evaluates the data telegrams transmitted on data bus 11. When receiving a data telegram that is intended for a hydraulic valve 16.1.1 through 16.1.4 connected to bus module 15.1, electronic circuit 20.1 triggers the corresponding hydraulic valve in accordance with the information contained in the user data of the data telegram.
The following will consider the case in which bus module 15.1 has received a switch-on command for hydraulic valve 16.1.2. Following the reception of the switch-on command, indicated by reference numeral 30, at time to, as shown in
In the exemplary embodiment described above, the duration Δt1 of the gate-controlled rise time as well as pulse control factor T% and frequency f of the subsequent pulse width modulation are stored as parameters in electronic circuit configuration 20.1. For this purpose it is possible either to assign the same parameters to all hydraulic valves 16.1.1 through 16.1.4 connected to bus module 15.1 or to provide special parameters for each of the connected hydraulic valves and store them in electronic circuit configuration 15.1. Such a bus system has the advantage that, when using bus modules designed according to the present invention, as when using the known bus modules, SPS 13 only has to output switch-on and switch-off commands since parameters Δt1, T% und f are stored in the electronic circuit configuration.
By contrast, if a bus system is desired, in which duration Δt1 of the gate-controlled rise time, pulse control factor T% and/or frequency f of the pulse width formulation may be freely selected for each hydraulic valve at each switch-on command, then the SPS 13 is programmed in such a way that the user data of the data telegram for switching on an hydraulic valve in addition to the switch-on command contain the desired values for Δt1, T% and f as parameters. It is also possible to transmit only duration Δt1 of the gate-controlled rise time and pulse control factor T% of the pulse width modulation as parameters in the user data of a switch-on command and to store frequency f of the pulse width modulation in the electronic circuit configuration as a parameter.
Hydraulic valves 16.1.1 through 16.1.4 and 16.2.1 through 16.2.4 are controlling valves either in the form of pure control valves or of proportional valves operated as control valves. While pure control valves only have two switching positions (rest position or working position), the passage cross section of a proportional valve can assume an arbitrary number of values as a function of the pulse control factor of a pulse width modulated supply voltage. Within the scope of the present invention, the proportional valve is either supplied with no supply voltage (rest position) or it is supplied with the supply voltage in pulse width modulated form having a predetermined pulse control factor (working position). While in the case of a pure control valve the gate-controlled rise time is required so that the valve switches reliably, a gate-controlled rise time is generally not required in the case of a proportional valve, although it can be advantageous in the case of a proportional valve to accelerate the switch-on process in the manner of a lead.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 029 549 | Jun 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/006288 | 6/11/2005 | WO | 00 | 2/28/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/124161 | 12/29/2005 | WO | A |
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