Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6831471
-
Patent Number
6,831,471
-
Date Filed
Thursday, November 14, 200222 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, December 14, 200419 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Deb; Anjan
- Teresinski; John
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 324 693
- 324 609
- 324 691
- 204 425
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
An oxygen sensor interface circuit is configurable on the fly by an electronic controller such as an engine controller to support oxygen sensors having unique interface requirements, to reliably identify various oxygen sensor faults, and to enable rapid detection of a warmed up sensor. The interface circuit is configurable in a first respect to enable operation with any of a number of different sensors, and in a second respect to enable more reliable fault detection, including measurement of leakage to ground or battery.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD
This invention relates to a circuit for interfacing an electronic engine control unit (ECU) to an exhaust gas oxygen sensor, and more particularly to a circuit that can be configured by the ECU to work with different types of oxygen sensors and to diagnose the operation thereof
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In a motor vehicle engine control system, engine fueling is controlled by a closed-loop control system that includes one or more exhaust gas oxygen sensors, and a corresponding number of circuits for interfacing the oxygen sensors with an electronic controller. Electrically, the oxygen sensor can be characterized as a two terminal analog device, and the interface circuit functions not only to develop a suitable input for the controller, but also to diagnose electrical faults such as shorts and open-circuits. See, for example, the U.S. Pat. No. 5,467,034 to Manlove et al., issued on Nov. 14, 1995, assigned to the assignee of the present invention, and incorporated herein by reference. As described in Manlove et al., the interface circuit can include RC filter elements to remove unwanted noise and a bias voltage to diagnose cold sensor and open-circuit fault conditions. However, oxygen sensors produced by different manufacturers require unique interface circuitry, and leakage paths between the sensor terminals and ground and/or battery make it difficult or impossible to reliably distinguish a normally operating rich-condition sensor from an open-circuit. Accordingly, what is needed is an improved interface circuit that is flexible enough to work with sensors produced by different manufacturers and to reliably diagnose sensor failures.
SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
The present invention is directed to an improved oxygen sensor interface circuit that is configurable on the fly by an electronic controller such as an engine controller to support oxygen sensors having unique interface requirements, to reliably identify various oxygen sensor faults, and to enable rapid detection of a warmed up sensor. According to the invention, the interface circuit is configurable in a first respect to enable operation with any of a number of different sensors, and in a second respect to enable more reliable fault detection, including measurement of leakage to ground or battery.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a diagram of a motor vehicle powertrain, including pre-catalyst and post-catalyst oxygen sensors, an engine control module, and configurable oxygen sensor interface circuits according to this invention.
FIG. 2
is a diagram of a configurable oxygen sensor interface circuit according to this invention.
FIG. 3
is a diagram of a switched capacitor implementation of a configurable input impedance circuit for the oxygen sensor interface circuit of FIG.
2
.
FIG. 4
is a flow diagram of a software routine executed by the engine control module for configuring the oxygen sensor interface circuit of
FIG. 2
to diagnose sensor operation according to this invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to
FIG. 1
, the interface circuit of the present invention is disclosed in the context of a motor vehicle powertrain
10
including an internal combustion engine
12
having a throttle valve
14
for receiving intake air and an output shaft
15
connected to drive the vehicle. The intake air is combined with fuel supplied by a fuel controller (FC)
34
, and supplied to engine cylinders for combustion, with the exhaust gases being collected in an exhaust manifold
16
and passed through a catalytic converter (CC)
20
for emission control purposes. Feedback signals for air/fuel ratio control are developed by a first exhaust gas oxygen sensor
24
located upstream of the converter
20
and a second exhaust gas oxygen sensor
26
located downstream of the converter
20
. Oxygen sensor interface circuits (OSIC)
28
,
30
couple the respective oxygen sensors
24
,
26
to A/D input ports of a microprocessor-based engine control module (ECM)
32
, and the ECM
32
regulates the operation of fuel controller
34
based in part on the feedback signals. According to the present invention, the interface circuits
28
,
30
are configurable to support oxygen sensors having unique interface requirements and to reliably identify and distinguish various oxygen sensor faults, and the ECM
32
includes outputs
36
,
38
for individually configuring the interface circuits
28
,
30
as described below.
The interface circuits
28
,
30
of
FIG. 1
are identical, and
FIG. 2
depicts a top-level diagram of OSIC
28
. The input lines from oxygen sensor
24
are labeled
24
a
and
24
b,
as in
FIG. 1
, and additionally as Vin_high and Vin_low in FIG.
2
. Referring to
FIG. 2
, Vin_low is coupled to circuit ground
42
, while Vin_high is coupled to an interface circuit including a low-pass input filter comprising resistor
44
and capacitor
46
, and an amplifier comprising operational amplifier
48
and resistors
50
and
52
. The output voltage Vout of operational amplifier
48
on line
54
is applied as an input to an A/D input port of ECM
32
as shown in
FIG. 1
, and in the illustrated embodiment, the resistors
50
and
52
are selected to define an amplifier gain of 2.5.
The remaining circuit elements of OSIC
28
are selectively coupled to the above-described filter and/or amplifier by the switches
56
,
58
and
60
, depending on the operating characteristics of oxygen sensor
24
. If the oxygen sensor
24
is a so-called narrow-band sensor, the switch
56
is closed and the switches
58
and
60
are opened. If the oxygen sensor
24
is a so-called pumped-voltage reference sensor of the type manufactured by Robert Bosch. Corporation, the switch
58
is closed and the switches
56
and
60
are opened Finally, if the oxygen sensor
24
is a so-called pumped-current reference sensor of the type manufactured by Delphi Corporation, the switch
60
is closed and the switches
56
and
58
are opened. In practice, the switches
56
,
58
,
60
can be configured as semiconductor switches, the state of each such switch being controlled by the microprocessor of ECM
32
via a serial peripheral interface (SPI) circuit incorporated within ECM
32
.
In the case of a narrow-band sensor, the switch
56
couples input line
61
of operational amplifier
48
to a bias voltage source
64
through a configurable resistance (CR)
62
. The configurable resistance is remotely controlled by ECM
32
via line
58
, and acts like either a 480 kohm resistor or a 1.2 megohm resistor, depending on the signal Rsel impressed on line
58
by ECM
32
. At engine start-up when the sensor
24
is cold, its characteristic impedance is on the order of 5-10 megohms, and ECM
32
signals CR
62
to select the 1.2 megohm resistance to enable reliable cold sensor detection based on the output voltage Vout. Once the sensor
24
warms up and becomes operational, its characteristic impedance falls to a lower value (typically much less than 100 kohms), and ECM
32
signals CR
62
to select the 480 kohm resistance to enable reliable open-circuit detection accuracy, again based on the output voltage Vout. While the circuit may be implemented substantially as shown in
FIG. 2
, with switched discrete resistors in CR
62
, the combination of switch
56
, CR
62
and bias voltage source
64
is preferably implemented as a two-phase switched capacitor circuit coupled between a source voltage VCC and ground
42
, with ECM
32
providing a two-phase clock signal PH
1
, PH
2
, as shown FIG.
3
. Referring to
FIG. 3
, the capacitors
92
and
104
are joined at node
94
to form a capacitive divider, and the switch pairs
82
/
84
,
88
/
90
,
96
/
98
,
100
/
102
are turned on and off by the clock signals PH
1
, PH
2
as shown to alternately charge and discharge capacitors
92
and
104
at a switching frequency f
s
determined by ECM
32
. The switched capacitor circuit generates an equivalent bias voltage V
b
according to:
V
b
=VCC*[C
92
/(
C
92
30
C
104
)]
where C
92
and C
104
are the capacitances of capacitors
92
and
104
; in the illustrated embodiment, C
92
and C
104
are selected so that Vb is 0.45V. The equivalent resistance R
eq
of the circuit varies with the switching frequency f
s
, as follows:
R
eq
=1/[(
C
92
+C
104
)*
f
s
]
Given the capacitance values for achieving the desired bias voltage, the switching frequencies for achieving the alternate resistance values of 480 kohlms and 1.2 megohms are easily determined. When the sensor
24
is a pumped-voltage or pumped-current sensor, phase PH
2
can be maintained low to effectively duplicate the functionality of opening switch
56
.
In the case of a pumped-voltage reference sensor, the switch
58
couples Vin_high to a configurable high impedance reference voltage via the resistor
70
. The reference voltage is defined by an operational amplifier
66
configured as a voltage follower, the amplifier
66
receiving a reference voltage Vref from ECM
32
on line
68
. Although the manufacturer specifies a resistor value of 56.2 kohms and a reference voltage of 1.8V for open-circuit sensor detection, the reference voltage Vref is configurable by ECM
32
according to this invention to enable identification of sensor harness leakage, as explained below. When Vref is the specified value of 1.8V, an open-circuit or cold sensor
24
results in an output voltage Vout equal to the product (1.8V*2.5), or 4.5V.
In the case of a pumped-current reference sensor, the switch
60
couples Vin_high to a current source
74
via the resistor
70
. The current source
74
is powered by a 5V supply voltage as shown, and in the illustrated embodiment, sources a DC bias current of 8.5 uA. Should there be an open-circuit between input line
24
a
and sensor
24
, the output voltage Vout on line
54
becomes equal to the maximum output voltage of operational amplifier
46
(i.e., the positive source voltage for the circuit
28
), which indicates that the sensor
24
has either an open circuit or a short to battery.
Although the controlled switches
56
-
60
allow ECM
32
to configure the interface circuits
28
,
30
for use with any of a number of types of oxygen sensors as explained above, such configurability alone does not address the diagnostic ambiguity due to sensor leakage. For example, moisture or contamination in or near the sensor harness or circuit board, or even manufacturing variability, can result in a parasitic leakage path between the sensor line
24
a
and either ground or battery voltage (14V in a typical implementation). The leakage can cause an output voltage Vout that is indiscernible from the voltage one would expect with an operational sensor under rich fueling conditions, or the voltage one would expect with an open-circuit failure. Thus, the possibility of sensor leakage paths rules out reliable sensor diagnostic testing with the traditional diagnostic procedures.
The above-described problem of diagnostic ambiguity is addressed, according to this invention, by using the dynamic configurability of the interface circuits
28
,
30
in order to specifically access the sensor leakage. In general, the reference voltage Vref is configured so that the output Vout has a value of approximately one-half the dynamic range of operational amplifier
48
when the sensor
24
has an open-circuit failure. For example, if ECM
32
sets Vref to 1.1V using a D/A output port, Vout will have a value of (1.1V* 2.5), or 2.75V, when the sensor
24
is open-circuited. A sensor leakage path to battery will cause Vout to be higher than 2.75V, whereas a sensor leakage path to ground will cause Vout to be lower than 2.75V. In either case, ECM
32
can compute the effective resistance R
eff
of the leakage path based on Vref, Vout, and battery voltage Vbatt (which can be measured by ECM
32
) in the case of a detected leakage path to battery.
FIG. 4
depicts a simplified flow diagram for this procedure, wherein the block
120
initializes the lost by setting Vref to 1.1V, opening switches
56
and
60
, and closing switch
58
. Block
122
determines if Vout is within a calibrated value (CAL) of 2.75V. If so, the block
124
sets the OPEN SENSOR flag to TRUE, completing the routine. If not, there is significant sensor leakage, and block
126
determines whether the leakage path is to ground or battery. If the leakage path is to ground, block
126
will be answered in the affirmative; in this case, block
128
sets the LEAKAGE PATH TO GROUND flag to TRUE, and block
130
computes the effective leakage resistance Reff as a function of Vref and Vout. If R
eff
is low enough to prevent reliable sensor diagnostic detection, the block
132
will be answered in the affirmative, and block
134
sets a suitable diagnostic flag. If the leakage path is to battery, block
126
will be answered in the negative; in this case, block
136
sets the LEAKAGE PATH TO BATTERY flag to TRUE, reads the battery voltage Vbatt, and computes the R
eff
as a function of Vref, Vout and Vbatt. If Reff is low enough to prevent reliable sensor diagnostic detection, the block
138
will be answered in the affirmative, and block
140
sets a suitable diagnostic flag. The calibration value CAL takes into account variation in the reference voltage Vref, as it will typically be subject to a tolerance of ±5%; however, an additional configurable switch
150
as shown in phantom in
FIG. 2
may be added to enable ECM
32
to measure Rref via operational amplifier
48
and eliminate error due to tolerance variation, if desired.
In summary, dynamically configuring an oxygen sensor interface circuit as described herein allows a single interface circuit to be used with different types of oxygen sensors, and significantly improves diagnostic reliability by selecting circuit components that are well suited to the diagnostic test and by ruling out false diagnostic indications due to sensor harness leakage. In a typical implementation, the ECM
32
will configure the interface circuit for the specified oxygen sensor
24
, and conduct traditional cold-sensor diagnostic tests at engine turn-on to identify the moment at which the sensor warms up and becomes operational. When a presumed rich operational sensor is detected, the ECM
32
configures the interface circuit
38
,
40
to measure the sensor harness leakage as described in reference to FIG.
4
. If the leakage is too high to reliably diagnose proper sensor operation, a diagnostic flag is activated. If the leakage is insufficient to introduce diagnostic ambiguity, a warmed-up operational sensor is confirmed, and in the case of a narrow band sensor, CR
62
is configured to optimize open-circuit diagnostics. Since warmed-up sensor operation is detected quicker and more reliably, ECM
32
can begin closed-loop fuel control sooner than possible with conventional interface circuitry and diagnostic procedures.
While described in reference to the illustrated embodiment, it is expected that various modifications in addition to those mentioned above will occur to persons skilled in the art. For example, the invention is not limited to the illustrated types of oxygen sensors, the component and voltage values may differ in a given application, and soon. Accordingly, it Should be understood that interface circuits incorporating such modifications may fall within the scope of this invention, which is defined by the appended claims.
Claims
- 1. An interface circuit coupled to an electronic control unit and an exhaust gas oxygen sensor, comprising:an amplifier having an input coupled to the oxygen sensor and an output coupled to the electronic control unit; a plurality of different bias circuits for diagnosing the oxygen sensor, said bias circuits being designed in accordance with diagnostic requirements of different types of oxygen sensors; and dynamically configurable means controlled by the electronic control unit for connecting a selected one of said different bias circuits to the amplifier input so that the selected bias circuit is designed in accordance with diagnostic requirements of the oxygen sensor that is coupled to said interface circuit, wherein at least one of said bias circuits receives a reference voltage from said electronic control unit that is adjustable for diagnostic purposes when such bias circuit is selected by said dynamically configurable means, and said electronic control unit includes diagnostic means for setting said reference voltage to a diagnostic value that produces a known output of said amplifier when there is no electrical leakage path between said sensor and another electrical potential, and for diagnosing the existence of an electrical leakage path when the output of said amplifier is different than said known value.
- 2. The interface circuit of claim 1, wherein said electronic control unit is connected to a storage battery, and said diagnostic means diagnoses a leakage path between said sensor and said storage battery when the output of said amplifier is higher than said known value.
- 3. The interface circuit of claim 2, wherein said diagnostic means determines an effective resistance of the diagnosed leakage path as a function of said diagnostic value, a measured voltage of said storage battery, and the output of said amplifier.
- 4. The interface circuit of claim 1, wherein said electronic control unit is connected to a ground potential, and said diagnostic means diagnoses a leakage path between said sensor and said ground potential when the output of said amplifier is lower than said known value.
- 5. The interface circuit of claim 4, wherein said diagnostic means determines an effective resistance of the diagnosed leakage path as a function of said diagnostic value and the output of said amplifier.
US Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
5405521 |
Nakamori et al. |
Apr 1995 |
A |
6547955 |
Hada et al. |
Apr 2003 |
B1 |