This application claims priority under 35 USC 119 AND/OR 365 to EUROPE application No. 07425347.7 filed on Monday, Jun. 4, 2007.
The present invention relates to a control method of a fuel feeding system in a bi-fuel internal combustion engine.
A bi-fuel internal combustion engine is capable of indifferently running on two different types of fuel (typically gasoline and LPG or gasoline and methane). A modern bi-fuel internal combustion thermal engine uses two different types of injectors, each of which is capable of injecting a corresponding fuel type.
Two separate electronic control units, each of which independently controls the other with a corresponding group of injectors, are always used for after-market adaptations of the thermal engine; however, such solution is costly because it requires the installation of two separate and independent electronic control units.
In the case of a thermal engine which is designed to be of the bi-fuel type, it has been suggested to use a single common electronic control unit, which may electrically drive both groups of injectors by means of a switching device which receives as input the command signals from the common electronic control unit and outputs the electric driving signals to both groups of injectors, instead of using two separate, independent electronic control units. For example, the switching device may comprise a plurality of electromagnetic relays, each of which is adapted to electrically connect at least one corresponding injector to the common electronic control unit.
The use of a single common electronic control unit in combination with a switching device provided with electromechanical relays allows to reduce the costs of the fuel feeding system; however, the switching times of the switching device provided with electromechanical relays present a high dispersion with respect to the nominal value because in addition to depending on the manufacturing tolerances they are also heavily affected by the running temperature, the power voltage and the age of the component (i.e. the number of switches performed during the life of the component). Consequently, the common electronic control unit cannot estimate the real switching times with sufficient precision and therefore either a feed overlap (i.e. for a short time both fuels are concurrently supplied into the cylinders) which determines a torque peak or a feeding gap (i.e. for a short period no fuel is fed into the cylinders) which determines a torque gap may easily occur during the fuel changeover (i.e. during the passage from one fuel to the other). In both cases, an irregular operation of the thermal engine occurs with a random, pulsing variation of the engine speed (increase of engine speed in case of feeding overlap or decrease of the engine speed in case of feeding gap).
It is the object of the present invention to provide a control method of a fuel feeding system in a bi-fuel internal combustion engine, which control method is free from the above-described drawbacks, and specifically, is easy and cost-effective to make.
According to the present invention, a control method of a fuel feeding system in a bi-fuel internal combustion engine is provided as claimed in the attached claims.
The present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings which illustrate a non-limitative example of embodiment thereof, in which:
In
Internal combustion engine 1 is provided with a number of cylinders 2 (only one of which is shown in
Intake manifold 3 receives fresh air (i.e. air from the external environment) through a feeding pipe 7 regulated by a butterfly valve 8 and is connected to cylinders 2 by means of corresponding intake pipes 9 (only one of which is shown in
Each cylinder 2 comprises a spark plug (not shown), which is arranged on the roof of cylinder 2 and is cyclically driven to ignite the mixture at the end of the compression step (i.e. at TDC—Top Dead Centre). In the embodiment shown in
A common electronic control unit 13 governs the operation of thermal engine 1. As shown in
Injectors 12, common electronic control unit 13, and switching device 14 belong to a fuel feeding system 15 of thermal engine 1, which is indifferently capable of feeding either fuel types.
In the embodiment shown in
As shown in
It has been observed that the opening/closing times to/tc (i.e. the switching times) of each relay 16 present a high dispersion with respect to the nominal values because in addition to depending on the manufacturing tolerances they are also heavily affected by the working temperature, the power voltage, and the age of the component (i.e. the number of switches performed during the life of the component). Specifically, closing times tc (generally between 2 and 8 msec) are generally shorter than opening times to (generally between 6 and 21 msec) and are those most subject to variations induced by external factors, mainly running temperature and energizing voltage. Other manufacturing features intrinsic to relays 16, such as for example the electric resistance of coil 17, the air gap size, and the elastic features of the foil, additionally affect the closing times of relays 16. The opening times of relays 16 are instead mainly related to the manufacturing features and present a low variability induced by external factors. Furthermore, the opening times of relays 16 are also subject to a variation during the life of relays 16, e.g. by effect of electric contact wear and of reduced flexibility of the foil; specifically, the opening times of relay 16 increase as the number of switches increases.
Common electronic control unit 13 controls relays 16 of switching device 14 in order to switch the fuel fed to thermal engine 1; specifically, common electronic control unit 13 closes relay 16a and opens relay 16b so as to drive injectors 12a and inject a first fuel type; instead, common electronic control unit 13 opens relay 16a and closes relay 16b so as to drive injectors 12b and inject a second fuel type.
In order to account for the variability of the opening/closing times of relays 16, the real opening time and the real closing time of both relays 16 are stored in a non-volatile memory of common electronic control unit 13. When common electronic control unit 13 is new, such real opening/closing times are initially assumed as equal to the average expected values resulting from experimental tests performed on relays 16; the real opening/closing times are cyclically updated later during the life of common electronic control unit 13. The updating of the previously determined real opening/closing times (i.e. historical and stored in the non-volatile memory of common electronic control unit 13) of a relay 16 contemplates measuring the opening/closing times during a switching performed by relay 16 and then updating the previously determined real opening/closing times using the new measurements by means of a weighed average (obviously, the previously determined real opening/closing times have a higher weight than the new measurement).
The real opening/closing time to/tc of a relay 16 is determined by detecting the instant in which the opening/closing command is sent to relay 16 and detecting the instant in which a change of state occurs in auxiliary terminals 21 (i.e. the instant in which the state of relay 16 actually switches). In relation to the above, real closing time tc of each relay 16 is determined according to the running temperature (i.e. the temperature of the coolant liquid of thermal engine 1 and/or the external temperature) and to the power voltage (i.e. to the voltage at the terminals of the battery of thermal engine 1). Instead, the real opening time to of each relay 16 is not parameterized according to external functions.
As shown in the charts in
Specifically, the charts in
state Sa of relay 16a according to time—state Sa of relay 16a goes from open to closed in the desired switching instant tcomm;
state Ca of the command signal of relay 16a generated by common electronic control unit 13 according to time—state Ca of the command signal of relay 16a is changed in advance with respect to the desired switching instant tcomm thus equalising the real closing time tc of relay 16a;
state Sb of relay 16b according to time—state Sb of relay 16b goes from closed to open in the desired switching instant tcomm;
state Cb of the command signal of relay 16b generated by common electronic control unit 13 according to time—state Cb of the command signal of relay 16b is changed in advance with respect to the desired switching instant tcomm thus equalising the real opening time ta of relay 16b.
By proceeding as described above, the real switching of both relays 16 occurs at switching instant tcomm; in this manner, a feed overlap (i.e. for a short time both fuels are concurrently fed into cylinders 2) which determines a torque peak and a feeding gap (i.e. for a short period no fuel is fed into cylinders 2) which determines a torque gap are both avoided. Obviously, if the engine control so requires, a feed overlap or, more rarely, a feeding gap, may be voluntarily performed in certain situations; for example, a feed overlap may be performed for short times for obtaining a particularly high generation of motive torque with an effect similar to that of an overboost.
In other words, being certain about the instant in which relay 16 switches, common electronic control unit 13 may correctly modify the injection times, because generally the two fuels require two different injection times the engine position being equal.
According to a preferred embodiment, common electronic control unit 13 uses the signal read on auxiliary terminals 21 of each relay 16 also to verify the correct operation of relay 16 itself; in other words, if relay 16 does not switch within a given time interval once the switching command has been sent, then common electronic control unit 13 outputs a “stuck” or “jammed” diagnosis of relay 16.
The above-described feeding system presents numerous advantages, because it is simple and cost-effective to make and above all because it allows to make each relay switch exactly in the required instant with an extremely low error margin; in this manner, the fuel switchover occurs smoothly during the operation of thermal engine 1 and is thus not perceived by the driver. Furthermore, as manufacturing tolerances and deviations may be compensated in time, relays 16 of lower quality (and thus lower cost) which present a higher dispersion of performances with respect to nominal values may be used.
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