This application is based on Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-172394 filed on Jun. 10, 2004 the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a controller for an internal combustion engine that detects an ignition timing (timing of starting combustion) of an internal combustion engine on the basis of outputs of a cylinder pressure sensor and a crank angle sensor.
In an internal combustion engine such as a diesel engine and a gasoline engine, it is important to detect the ignition timing of fuel in a cylinder in order to optimally control a timing of injecting fuel into a cylinder. This ignition timing of fuel can be determined by comparing a cylinder pressure waveform when fuel is combusted with a cylinder pressure waveform when fuel is not combusted (referred to as a motoring waveform) (see JP-2001-55955A). Here, the motoring waveform can be calculated by the use of a well-known polytropic equation (PVn=constant, where P is cylinder pressure and V is cylinder volume).
Specifically, as shown in
By the way, the motoring waveform when fuel is not combusted is calculated (estimated) by the use of the above-described polytropic equation, but a coefficient used in this polytropic equation (polytropic exponent n) varies because of variations in internal combustion engines or varies because of variations in the operating state of the internal combustion engine (engine speed, boost pressure, cooling water temperature) and the like, for example, for each combustion cycle. For this reason, a method of providing the polytropic exponents n in a map has been conventionally used.
Further, to sense the above-described ignition timing Tburn of fuel, the correct crank position (angle) of the internal combustion engine needs to be found and hence a crank angle sensor is used for that purpose.
However, there is presented a problem that when a position where the crank angle sensor is mounted or variations in the engines cause an error in the value sensed by the crank angle sensor (crank angle), as shown in
In contrast to this, JP-11-210546A discloses a method of correcting the sensing error of a crank angle by the cylinder pressure of the internal combustion engine (referred to as cylinder pressure). That is, there is provided a method of correcting the crank angle in the following manner: as shown in
However, the method of sensing an ignition timing disclosed in JP-2001-55955 A presents the following problem.
That is, when a polytropic exponent “n” is found from a map, a change in the operating state of the internal combustion engine, in particular, variations in the internal combustion engines cannot be sufficiently corrected and hence the motoring waveform cannot be correctly estimated (calculated) to cause a sensing error in the ignition timing. Moreover, because the exponent of the polytropic equation needs to be calculated, a calculation load is made heavy. Hence, it is difficult for an ECU (electronic control unit) mounted on an actual vehicle to calculate the exponent of the polytropic equation at high speed for each combustion cycle. Therefore, it is difficult to employ the method described in JP-2001-55955 A.
On the other hand, according to the publicly known technology disclosed in JP-11-210546A, as shown in
The present invention has been made on the basis of the above-described circumstances. The first object of the invention is to estimate a motoring waveform in an actual operating state with high accuracy irrespective of the operating state of an internal combustion engine or variations in the engines and to sense an ignition timing in a short time with high accuracy by reducing a calculation load for estimating the motoring waveform. The second object of the invention is to sense a correct compression top dead center (TDC) without the effect of noises at the time of correcting the angle error of a crank angle sensor by a cylinder pressure in the internal combustion engine sensed by a cylinder pressure sensor.
The present invention includes ignition timing detecting means for sensing the ignition timing of an internal combustion engine on the basis of information obtained from a cylinder pressure sensor and a crank angle sensor, and the ignition timing detecting means includes cylinder pressure converting means, cylinder volume converting means, cylinder pressure waveform logarithm display means, motoring waveform estimating means, determination line computing means, and ignition timing determining means.
The cylinder pressure converting means has a conversion map P for logarithmically converting a previously set pressure and converts such a cylinder pressure at least from a compression stroke to a combustion and expansion stroke that is sensed by the cylinder pressure sensor to a logarithmic value log P by the conversion map P.
The cylinder volume converting means has a conversion map V for logarithmically converting a cylinder volume corresponding to a previously set crank angle and converts a cylinder volume corresponding to such a crank angle at least from a compression stroke to a combustion and expansion stroke that is sensed by the crank angle sensor to a logarithmic value log V by the conversion map V.
The cylinder pressure waveform logarithm display means has a logarithm map having coordinate axes of a logarithmic value log V of the cylinder volume corresponding to the crank angle and a logarithmic value log P of the cylinder pressure and reads the logarithmic value log P and the logarithmic value log V in the logarithm map to display a change in the cylinder pressure at least from a compression stroke to a combustion and expansion stroke as a logarithmically converted cylinder pressure waveform on the logarithm map.
The motoring waveform estimating means estimates a non-combustion cylinder pressure waveform (referred to as “motoring waveform”) which is obtained by subtracting a pressure rise developed by combustion in the cylinder of the internal combustion engine from the logarithmically converted cylinder pressure waveform, that is, corresponds to a state of non-combustion.
The determination line computing means computes the determination line of an ignition timing on the basis of the base line of the estimated motoring waveform.
The ignition timing determining means determines the ignition timing on the basis of the computed determination line and the logarithmically converted cylinder pressure waveform.
According to the above-described construction, such a cylinder pressure at least from a compression stroke to an expansion stroke that is sensed by the cylinder pressure sensor and the cylinder volume corresponding to a crank angle at least from a compression stroke to an expansion stroke that is sensed by the crank angle sensor are converted to the logarithmic value log P and the logarithmic value log V by the conversion map P and the conversion map V, respectively, and then by reading the logarithmic value log P and the logarithmic value log V in the logarithm map, a change in the cylinder pressure at least from a compression stroke to an expansion stroke can be displayed as the logarithmically converted cylinder pressure waveform on the logarithm map. Thus, it is possible to estimate the motoring waveform by the logarithmically converted cylinder pressure waveform without using a polytropic equation requiring an exponential computation and hence to reduce a computation load.
Further, according to the present invention, a conventional method of searching a map for a polytropic exponent n according to the operating state of the internal combustion engine, or variations in the internal combustion engines is not employed, but the logarithmically converted cylinder pressure waveform is found for each combustion cycle of the internal combustion engine and the motoring waveform is estimated from the found cylinder pressure waveform. Hence, the motoring waveform is not affected by a change in the operating state of the internal combustion engine, in particular, a change in the variations in the internal combustion engines. As a result, it is possible to estimate the motoring waveform for each combustion cycle with high accuracy and hence to improve the sensing accuracy of the ignition timing.
Further, the present invention includes compression top dead center sensing means that senses a compression top dead center by the sensing value (cylinder pressure) of the cylinder pressure sensor in a specific operating state where the cylinder pressure changes according to only the reciprocating motion of the piston without being affected by a combustion pressure developed by combustion in the cylinder, and TDC correcting means that corrects a TDC signal outputted by the crank angle sensor on the basis of the sensed compression top dead center.
The compression top dead center sensing means is characterized in that it has the sensing value of the cylinder pressure sensor (referred to as “base pressure”), which is sensed at a certain base crank angle (referred to as “base angle”) when the piston moves up in the cylinder, inputted thereto and then senses a crank angle (referred to as “objective angle”) at which the sensing value of the cylinder pressure sensor becomes equal to the base pressure when the piston moves down in the cylinder, and thereby senses a middle point between the base angle and the objective angle as the compression top dead center.
According to the above-described construction, a base angle is set at which a change in the cylinder pressure to the crank angle becomes large as compared with a change in the vicinity of the TDC and the cylinder pressure is sensed at the base angle. Hence, noises are less likely to cause errors in the sensing value of the cylinder pressure sensor. Therefore, it is possible to sense a correct TDC (compression top dead center).
The preferred embodiments for implementing the present invention will be described in detail by the following embodiments.
[First Embodiment]
An internal combustion engine of the present embodiment is, for example, a multi-cylinder diesel engine 1 employing an accumulator fuel-injection system as shown in
In this diesel engine 1, a piston 4 is received in a cylinder 3 formed in a cylinder block 2 and the motion of the piston 4 reciprocating in the cylinder 3 is transmitted as a rotational motion to the crankshaft (not shown) of the diesel engine 1 via a connecting rod 5.
To the top end surface of the cylinder block 2 is fixed a cylinder head 7 forming a combustion chamber 6 above the top of the piston 4. The cylinder head 7 has an intake port 8 and an exhaust port 9 which are open to the combustion chamber 6.
The intake port 8 and the exhaust port 9 are opened or closed by an intake valve 10 and an exhaust valve 11 which are respectively driven by cams (not shown).
An intake pipe 12 for sucking outside air via an air cleaner (not shown) is connected to the intake port 8 and when the piston 4 moves down in the cylinder 3 to produce a negative pressure in the cylinder in an intake stroke in which the intake valve 10 opens the intake port 8, the outside air sucked through the intake pipe 12 flows into the cylinder 3 through the intake port 8.
Moreover, an exhaust pipe 13 for exhausting the combustion gas is connected to the exhaust port 9 and the combustion gas pushed out of the combustion chamber 6 (cylinder) by the moving-up piston 4 is exhausted to the exhaust pipe 13 through the exhaust port 9 in an exhaust stroke in which the exhaust valve 11 opens the exhaust port 9.
An accumulator fuel-injection system is provided with a common rail 14 for accumulating fuel of a high pressure corresponding to an injection pressure, a fuel supply pump (not shown) for sending the high-pressure fuel to this common rail 14, an injector 15 for injecting the high-pressure fuel accumulated in the common rail 14 into the combustion chamber 6 of the diesel engine 1, and is controlled by an electronic control unit (referred to as ECU 16).
The common rail 14 accumulates the high-pressure fuel supplied by the fuel supply pump to a target rail pressure and supplies the accumulated high-pressure fuel to the injector 15 through a fuel pipe 17. The ECU 16 determines the target rail pressure of the common rail 14. Specifically, the operating state of the diesel engine 1 is detected by an accelerator position (engine load), an engine speed, and the like, and then a target rail pressure suitable for the operating state is set.
The injector 15 is provided with a solenoid valve electronically controlled by the ECU 16 and a nozzle for injecting fuel by the valve opening action of this solenoid valve and is fixed to the cylinder head 7 in a state where the tip of this nozzle is protruded into the combustion chamber 6.
The ECU 16 has sensor information sensed by various kinds of sensors (crank angle sensor 18, accelerator position sensor 19, fuel pressure sensor 20, cylinder pressure sensor 21, intake air pressure sensor 22, and the like) inputted thereto and controls the operating state of the diesel engine 1 on the basis of the information of these sensors.
The crank angle sensor 18 is disposed near a pulser 23 rotating in synchronization with the crankshaft of the diesel engine 1 and outputs a plurality of pulse signals corresponding to the number of teeth formed on the outer periphery of the pulser 23 while the pulser 23 rotates one along with the crankshaft. That is, the crank angle sensor 18 outputs a pulse signal for each predetermined crank angle (for example, 1° CA). A specific pulse signal is outputted as a TDC signal when the piston 4 reaches the top dead center in a compression stroke (compression top dead center: TDC). The ECU 16 measures the time interval of the pulse signals outputted from the crank angle sensor 18 to sense an engine speed NE.
The accelerator position sensor 19 senses the amount of operation (the amount of depression) of an accelerator pedal 24 operated by a driver and outputs it to the ECU 16.
The fuel pressure sensor 20 is fixed to the common rail 14 and senses the fuel pressure (actual rail pressure) accumulated in the common rail 14 and outputs it to the ECU 16.
The cylinder pressure sensor 21 is fixed to the cylinder head 7 and senses the cylinder pressure of the diesel engine 1 and outputs it to the ECU 16.
The intake air pressure sensor 22 is fixed to the intake pipe 12 and senses an intake air pressure in the intake pipe 12 and outputs it to the ECU 16.
The ECU 16 performs an injection pressure control and an injection quantity control on the basis of the above-described sensor information. The injection pressure control is such that controls the fuel pressure accumulated in the common rail 14 and feeds back the quantity of discharge of a fuel supply pump (pump discharge) in such a way that the actual rail pressure sensed by the fuel pressure sensor 20 agrees with a target rail pressure.
The injection quantity control is such that controls the quantity of injection and the injection timing of the fuel injected from the injector 15, and computes the optimum quantity of injection and the optimum injection timing according to the operating state of the diesel engine 1, and drives the solenoid valve of the injector 15 according to the computation result.
Further, the ECU 16 is provided with the function of ignition timing detecting means for detecting an ignition timing Tburn of the fuel so as to optimally control the ignition timing of the injector 15. This ignition timing detecting means is constructed to include the functions of cylinder pressure converting means, cylinder volume converting means, cylinder pressure waveform logarithm display means, motoring waveform estimating means, determination line computing means, and ignition timing determining means of the present invention.
Hereafter, a method of detecting the ignition timing Tburn by the ECU 16 (ignition timing detecting means) will be described with reference to a flowchart shown in
At step S10, the sensing value (cylinder pressure P) of the cylinder pressure sensor 21 at least from a compression stroke to a combustion and expansion stroke and the sensing value (crank angle θ) of the crank angle sensor 18 are read.
At step S20, logarithmic values log P and log V corresponding to the cylinder pressure P and the crank angle θ from the compression stroke to the combustion and expansion stroke are read from a conversion map P and a conversion map V, respectively, and a cylinder pressure waveform which is logarithmically converted (hereafter referred to as logarithm conversion waveform) is made (displayed) in a logarithm map, as shown in
The conversion map P described at step S20, as shown in
The logarithm map, as shown in
At step S30, a base line X is calculated from the logarithm conversion waveform displayed in the logarithm map. This base line X shows a non-combustion cylinder pressure (motoring waveform) which is obtained by subtracting a pressure rise developed by cylinder combustion from the logarithm conversion waveform, that is, corresponds to a non-combustion state and is calculated by the following equation (1) on the basis of log P1, log V1 and log P2, log V2 at least at two previously set points (points “a” and “b” in the drawing), as shown in FIG. 2.
X=A×log Vx+B (1)
A=(log P1−log P2)/(log V1−log V2)
B=log P1−log V1×(log P1−log P2)/(log V1−log V2)
At step S40, a determination line Y for determining the ignition timing Tburn by the following equation (2) on the basis of the base line X calculated at step S30. This determination line Y can be found by moving the base line X in parallel by a threshold K in the direction of the vertical axis of the logarithm map (coordinate axis of a logarithmic value log P).
Y=A×log Vx+B+K (2)
At step S50, it is determined whether or not the logarithmic value log P read from the conversion map P at step S20 is larger than the determination line Y calculated at step S40. In other words, in the combustion cycle, it is determined whether or not a combustion waveform line Z that is continuous data of the logarithmic value log P read from the conversion map P at step S20 intersects the determination line Y.
Here, if it is determined that the following relationship (3) holds (determination result is YES), that is, the logarithmic value log P exceeds the determination line Y, the routine proceeds to the next step S60, and if it is determined that the following relationship (3) does not hold, that is, the logarithmic value log P does not exceed the determination line Y, the routine proceeds to step S70.
log P≧Y (3)
At step S60, the ignition timing is determined. Specifically, first, as shown in
Here, the vertical axis of the graph shown in
At step S70, it is determined whether or not the crank angle θ read at step S10 is larger than a previously set ignition determination finishing timing (crank angle θend). Here, if the following relationship (4) holds (determination result is YES), the routine proceeds to the next step S80, and if the following relationship (4) does not hold (determination result is NO), the routine returns to step S10.
θ≧θend (4)
It is determined at step S80 that the diesel engine 1 is in the state of misfire because the crank angle θ read at step S10 exceeds the ignition determination finishing timing θend, and the present routine is finished.
[Effect of First Embodiment]
In the first embodiment, the cylinder pressure P and the cylinder volume V corresponding to the crank angle θ at least from the compression stroke to the combustion and expansion stroke are converted to the logarithmic value log P and the logarithmic value log V from the conversion map P and the conversion map V, respectively, and the logarithmic value log P and the logarithmic value log V are read from the logarithm maps, whereby a change in the cylinder pressure P from the compression stroke to the combustion and expansion stroke can be expressed as a logarithmic conversion waveform. This logarithmic conversion waveform is expressed by a straight line having a given gradient before a pressure rise developed by combustion in the cylinder starts, that is, while the cylinder pressure P varies according to only the motion of the piston 4. Therefore, the motoring waveform can be easily estimated from the logarithmic conversion waveform by a linear approximation method.
Entering into details, the motoring waveform can be expressed by a straight line having a given gradient by logarithmically converting the cylinder pressure P and the cylinder volume V corresponding to the crank angle θ, and a parallel line shifted in parallel by a predetermined value K to this straight line is made a threshold as the determination line Y. Hence, a point of intersection of this determination line Y and the combustion waveform line Z changing irregularly can be obtained with stability. As a result, it is possible to produce an excellent result of detecting the ignition timing with high accuracy while reducing the computation load.
Further, according to this method, it is possible to estimate the motoring waveform without using the polytropic equation that requires an exponential calculation and hence to reduce the computation load.
Still further, according to the method of sensing the ignition timing described in the first embodiment, a conventional method of searching a map for a polytropic exponent n according to the operating state of the internal combustion engine, or variations in the internal combustion engines is not employed but the logarithmic conversion waveform is found for each combustion cycle of the diesel engine 1 and the motoring waveform is estimated from the found logarithmic conversion waveform. Hence, the motoring waveform is not affected by a change in the operating state of the diesel engine 1, in particular, a change in the variations in the diesel engines 1. As a result, it is possible to estimate the motoring waveform for each combustion cycle with high accuracy and hence to improve the sensing accuracy of the ignition timing.
[Second Embodiment]
In this second embodiment, one example will be described in which a plurality of injections are sprayed during one combustion stroke, for example, the second injection is sprayed after the first injection and in which an ignition timing Tburn to the second injection is sensed.
For example, as shown in
Hence, the base line X is corrected according to a command injection timing Tm for the main injection Qm and the determination line Y is computed on the basis of the corrected base line X. Specifically, as shown in
Further, as another example of sensing the ignition timing Tburn for the second injection, it is also recommendable to correct the base line X according to the combustion finishing timing of the first injection. Specifically, the base line X is corrected so as to pass the logarithmic value log P at the combustion finishing timing of the first injection (pilot injection Qp in the above-described example). The logarithmic conversion waveform is linearly approximated by the use of the logarithmic value log P at the combustion finishing timing of the first injection and the logarithmic value log P at the command injection timing Tm for the second injection (main injection Qm in the above-described example). Hence, by correcting the base line X so as to pass the logarithmic value log P at the combustion finishing timing of the first injection and by computing the determination line Y on the basis of the corrected base line X, the ignition timing Tburn for the main injection Qm can be sensed with high accuracy.
In this regard, the method described in this second embodiment can be applied to not only a case where two injections (the first injection and the second injection) are sprayed during one combustion stroke but also a case where a plurality of (three or more) injections are sprayed during one combustion stroke and where the plurality of (three or more) injections include the first injection and the second injection.
Further, the examples of the first injection and the second injection may include not only the pilot injection Qp and the main injection Qm but also, for example, the main injection Qm, or the first injection and a post injection Qpost, or the second injection after the main injection Qm.
[Third Embodiment]
In this third embodiment, a method of determining a combustion finishing timing will be described.
As described in the first embodiment, before a pressure rise developed by combustion in the cylinder starts, that is, while the cylinder pressure P changes according to only the motion of the piston 4, PVn=constant (where P is cylinder pressure and V is cylinder volume and n is polytropic exponent). For this reason, the logarithmic conversion waveform (motoring waveform) shown in the logarithm map, as shown in
Thereafter, when combustion occurs in the cylinder, a combustion pressure increases and the gradient of the logarithmic conversion waveform also increases rapidly to show a maximum value and then the combustion pressure decreases and the gradient of the logarithmic conversion waveform also decreases and converges on a constant value according to the above-described relationship of PVn=constant.
Hence, to determine the combustion finishing timing, as shown in
d log P=log P(i)−log P(i−1) (5)
d log V=log V(i)−log V(i−1) (6)
d log P/d log V (7)
The ECU 16 has a function of means for determining the combustion finishing timing in accordance with the present invention and determines that a timing when the gradient of the logarithmic conversion waveform computed by the above equation (7) becomes nearly constant after the combustion starts is a combustion finishing timing Tend (see
The determination of the combustion finishing timing Tend can be applied also when the combustion finishing timing of the first injection described in the above second embodiment is determined.
[Fourth Embodiment]
In this fourth embodiment, a method of computing the quantity of combustion in one combustion stroke in the diesel engine 1 will be described.
The quantity of combustion in one combustion stroke correlates to the product of the cylinder pressure P and the cylinder volume V. Hence, the quantity of combustion can be computed by finding the product of the cylinder pressure P and the cylinder volume V. The computation of the quantity of combustion is performed by the ECU 16 having a function of means for computing the quantity of combustion in accordance with the present invention.
Specifically, a shown in
The quantity of combustion=Δ log P+log V (8)
In the first embodiment to the fourth embodiment, methods of sensing the ignition timing Tburn, determining the combustion finishing timing, and computing the quantity of combustion on the basis of the logarithmic conversion waveform have been described. However, the logarithmic conversion waveforms described in the embodiments are strictly for the purpose of examples and, for example, when a combustion pattern varies according to an injection timing, the quantity of combustion, and the number of injections, needless to say, the logarithmic conversion waveforms also varies according to them.
Here, the logarithmic conversion waveforms according to various combustion patterns are shown in
[Fifth Embodiment]
In the first embodiment, a method of sensing the ignition timing Tburn of fuel on the basis of information obtained from the cylinder pressure sensor 21 and the crank angle sensor 18 has been described. However, when an error is caused in the sensing value of the crank angle sensor 18 by the position where the crank angle sensor 18 is mounted and the variations in the engines, the sensing accuracy of the ignition timing Tburn is inevitably affected by the error.
Hence, in this fifth embodiment, a method of sensing a more correct compression top dead center (TDC) on the basis of the sensing value of the cylinder pressure sensor 21 will be described.
The ECU 16 is provided with a function of means for sensing a compression top dead center. Hereafter, a method of sensing a compression top dead center by the ECU 16 (means for sensing a compression top dead center) will be described on the basis of a flowchart shown in
At step S100, it is determined whether or not an operating state to sense a compression top dead center holds. The sensing of a compression dead center is performed in a specific operating state where the cylinder pressure P varies according to only the reciprocating motion of the piston 4 without being affected by the combustion pressure by combustion in the cylinder.
The above-described “specific operating state” means, for example, a state of non-combustion where fuel injection is cut when a vehicle speed is decreased or the like, or a state where a combustion starting timing in the cylinder 3 is delayed more than usual.
When the determination result at this step S100 is YES, that is, when the specific operating state holds, the routine proceeds to the next step 110 and when the determination result is NO, the present processing is finished.
At step S110, the sensing value (crank angle θ) of the crank angle sensor 18 is read.
At step S120, when the piston 4 moves up in the cylinder 3, the sensing value (referred to as base pressure “Pbase”) in the cylinder pressure sensor 21 sensed at a certain base crank angle (referred to as “base angle θ1”) is read. Here, as shown in
At step S130, it is determined whether or not the crank angle θ is larger than a crank angle θtdc at the TDC. Here, when the following relationship (9) holds (determination result is YES), that is, when the crank angle θ is larger than the crank angle θtdc at the TDC, the routine proceeds to the next step S140, and when the following relationship (9) does not hold (determination result is NO), step S130 is repeatedly executed until the following relationship (9) holds.
θ≧θtdc (9)
At step S140, the sensing value (cylinder pressure P) of the cylinder pressure sensor 21 is read.
At step S150, it is determined whether or not the base pressure Pbase read at step S120 is not less than the cylinder pressure P read at step S140. Here, when the following relationship (10) holds (determination result is YES), that is, when the cylinder pressure P is less than the base pressure Pbase, the routine proceeds to the next step S160 and when the following relationship (10) does not hold (determination result is NO), the routine return to step S140.
P≦Pbase (10)
At step S160, a crank angle (referred to as “an objective angle θ2”) when the cylinder pressure P becomes equal to the base pressure Pbase is sensed.
At step S170, the quantity of error of TDC (Δθtdc) is computed. Here, as shown in
Δθtdc=θtdc−(θ1+θ2)/2 (11)
[Effect of Fifth Embodiment]
In this fifth embodiment, the base angle θ1 is set in a region where the cylinder pressure P increases largely with respect to the crank angle θ (for example, 10° CA before the TDC) and a middle point of this base angle θ1 and the objective angle θ2 is sensed as a TDC. Hence, as compared with the publicly known technology described in JP-11-210546A, the sensing error of the cylinder pressure sensor 21 caused by the effect of noises can be reduced and hence the TDC can be sensed more correctly.
[Sixth Embodiment]
There is a case where when the sensing value (analog signal) of a cylinder pressure sensor 21 is inputted through a filter circuit 25, as shown in
Hence, in this sixth embodiment, the TDC is sensed by the use of a signal of another system that is not processed by the filer circuit 25. That is, when the ECU 16 senses a TDC, the ECU 16 reads an analog signal outputted from the cylinder pressure sensor 21 without filtering the analog signal and senses the TDC by the use of the analog signal that is not subjected to the filtering processing. With this, a real TDC can be sensed without causing a delay in phase.
[Seventh Embodiment]
In the above sixth embodiment, a method of sensing a TDC by the use of a signal of another system that is not processed by the filter circuit 25 has been described. However, even when a TDC is sensed by the use of a signal subjected to the filtering processing, by removing the quantity of delay in phase caused by the filtering processing, a TDC can be correctly sensed. In this seventh embodiment, this method will be described.
In general, the characteristic of the filter circuit 25 has a tendency that the higher the frequency of a signal processed by the filter circuit 25, the larger the quantity of shift (delay) in phase (see
The frequency of signal of the cylinder pressure P used for sensing a TDC is proportional to an engine speed. Hence, TDCs are sensed at different engine speeds, for example, as shown in
Specifically, the filter characteristic (correlation between the frequency of the signal and the phase delay) is obtained from the TDC sensed at the first engine speed A and the TDC sensed at the second engine speed B, whereby the quantity of delay according to the filter characteristic at an engine speed X can be found. According to this method, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-172394 | Jun 2004 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4800500 | Tanaka | Jan 1989 | A |
5611311 | Tomisawa | Mar 1997 | A |
6367317 | Jaye | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6598468 | Zur Loye et al. | Jul 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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4216058 | Nov 1993 | DE |
2508635 | Apr 1996 | JP |
11-210546 | Aug 1999 | JP |
2001-55955 | Feb 2001 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050274358 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |