The present invention relates to a controllable electric solenoid valve of a brake system of a motor vehicle according to the preamble of the main claim.
German Patent Application 43 05 488 A1 has already described a control circuit for a solenoid valve. With this control circuit, the trigger current for the solenoid valve is controlled so that the valve closing body is braked shortly before being moved from its flow-through position to its closed position. This yields the result that the solenoid valve closes with very little noise and thus interfering sound waves are not transmitted through the brake system to the motor vehicle. The virtually noiseless closing is achieved by briefly turning off the trigger current to support the valve closing body in the end position with a holding current.
German Patent Application 197 07 960 A1 also describes a method and a device for regulating the pressure in a wheel brake, a regulator for pressure regulation forming a trigger signal from the pressure relationships prevailing at the valve arrangement. To improve the quality of regulation for the pressure regulation in the brake circuit, one valve arrangement is provided for pressure buildup and another for pressure reduction. By measuring the actual brake pressure and comparing it with the setpoint pressure, a difference is determined and taken into account with an altered trigger signal. The relationship between the trigger signal and the pressure relationships is stored as a characteristic curve for the pressure buildup and/or pressure reduction.
The control circuit according to the present invention for a controllable electric solenoid valve in a brake position system of a motor vehicle having the characterizing features of the main claim has the advantage over the related art that a regulator monitors the actual value of the controlled variable in question and optionally takes a corrective measure. It is especially advantageous here that the controlled variable for the actual value is always within a predetermined tolerance band. If the actual value leaves the predetermined tolerance band, a correction device additionally intervenes, returning the actual value to the range of the tolerance band through an appropriate change in the trigger current of the solenoid valve. This advantageously yields the result that in a brake system, for example, quiet or virtually noiseless closing of the solenoid valve is achieved, while on the other hand, the brake pressure in the brake circuit is adjustable independently of the function of the regulator.
Advantageous refinements of and improvements on the control circuit characterized in the main claim are possible through the measures characterized in the dependent claims. It is particularly advantageous that the correction device is designed to alter the field current as a function of the closing force of the solenoid valve. Through appropriate characteristic curves determined empirically in advance, the closing force of the valve closing body is adjustable at will and is selected by taking into account the pressure in the line system, so that the closing body, for example, does not open when there is an increase in the line pressure due to an altered controlled variable. For example, if a current/pressure characteristic curve (I/P characteristic curve) has been stored as the controlled variable, then the control current for a certain pressure value may be obtained to advantage according to the characteristic curve. It is also advantageous that to regulate the driving dynamics or the brake performance of a vehicle, for example, the braking deceleration, the vehicle speed and/or wheel slip values may be selected as the controlled variable. These controlled variables are needed in particular for an antilock brake system (ABS) or the Electronic Stability Program (ESP).
It is also advantageous that the correction device forms a brake intervention measure in combination with Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC), as is also used in combination with a speed regulator, when the setpoint value for the distance is too low for safety reasons with respect to the driving speed.
A memory is advantageously provided for storing the characteristic curves for the controlled variable and/or the tolerance band. A suitable memory is preferably an EEPROM, because this memory does not lose its information even in a power failure.
An advantageous implementation also involves the correction device having a computer which calculates the actual value by using a software program. Software programs have the great advantage that they are easily modifiable without requiring complex wiring. In particular, in a motor vehicle having an antilock brake system or a driving dynamics regulator, this yields the advantage that correction of the controlled variable is easily implementable through a corresponding expansion of the existing control programs.
One embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in the drawing and explained in greater detail in the following description.
For a better understanding,
The functioning of the present invention will now be explained in greater detail on the basis of the embodiment according to
Therefore, the implementation according to the present invention as shown in
The values for controlled variable f(t) and/or tolerance band 22 are stored in a suitable memory, e.g., an EEPROM, in the form of a table, a characteristic curve or in some other suitable form, and thus they may be accessed by regulator 11 at any time. Tolerance band 22 may be determined empirically or according to a worst case analysis.
In driving operation, regulator 11 according to
If the actual value for controlled variable f(t) is outside of tolerance band 22 according to the left-hand portion of the diagram in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
100 05 424 | Feb 2000 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/DE01/00078 | 1/11/2001 | WO | 00 | 2/7/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO01/58736 | 8/16/2001 | WO | A |
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43 05 488 | Aug 1994 | DE |
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Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20030173825 A1 | Sep 2003 | US |