This application claims priority under 35 USC 119 to German Patent Appl. No. 10 2015 105 921.5 filed on Apr. 17, 2015, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention. The invention relates to a cooling system for a vehicle.
2. Description of the Related Art. The invention relates to a cooling system that comprises a plurality of cooling circuits, and with the individual cooling circuits having different temperature levels. Each cooling circuit typically has a dedicated equalizing container via which the cooling circuits can ventilate to avoid additional loading for one of the cooling circuits being produced by an interaction with the other cooling circuits, for example by way of a transfer of heat. As a result, a comparatively large amount of installation space is required and the overall weight is increased. Moreover, each equalizing container must be equipped with blow-off valves and/or coolant level sensors. During manufacture, moreover, the individual equalizing containers also make individual and therefore complicated filling necessary.
Furthermore, the prior art includes cooling systems in which the cooling circuits share a common equalizing container for ventilation. However, the actuation and control of individual electric switching valves has to ensure in a complicated manner that the individual cooling circuits are separated from one another at least temporarily.
It is an object of the invention to provide a simple cooling system for a vehicle in which plural cooling systems can share a common equalizing container without comparatively great complexity.
The object of the present invention is achieved by way of a cooling system for a vehicle having a first cooling circuit, in which a first pressure prevails, and a second cooling circuit, in which a second pressure prevails. The first cooling circuit and the second cooling circuit share a common equalizing container for ventilating. The cooling system has a passive element that separates the first cooling circuit from the second cooling circuit if the first pressure is lower than the second pressure.
The passive element of the cooling system of the invention ensures that the first cooling circuit is separate from the second cooling circuit in an operation-induced manner to avoid or suppress additional loads of the first cooling circuit by way of the second cooling circuit. At the same time, the passive element ensures that the separation between the cooling circuits is canceled in those situations, in which no or only few interactions, for example unilateral thermal loads, are to be expected and thus permits the ventilating the first cooling circuit with utilization of the common equalizing container. The passive element utilizes a pressure difference or a pressure gradient between the first and the second cooling circuit for the independent separation. As a result, complicated actuation of valves is dispensed with. The cooling system also permits a reduction in the number of equalizing containers.
Passive elements are to be understood to mean those which fix their state as a result of an environmental variable, that is to say as a result of a physical parameter or parameter set that describes the environment of the passive element. The environmental variables may change their value when the cooling system or a part of the cooling system, in particular the second cooling circuit, is heated. Thus, the passive element reacts in a pressure-sensitive manner to its environment, namely the environmental variable, and ensures the separation of the cooling circuits independently if required by the operation-induced situation. For example, the first and second cooling circuits of the cooling system may comprise a cooling circuit for cooling the engine and a coling circuit for intercooling or for cooling high-voltage components. A temperature level of the first cooling circuit is at least temporarily different from the temperature level of the second cooling circuit.
The passive element may comprise a check valve that reliably separates the first cooling circuit from the second cooling circuit if the first pressure is lower than the second pressure. In particular, the passive element ensures a closure between the first and second cooling circuits.
The cooling system may further comprise an active element to keep the second pressure higher than the first pressure in a first operating state. As a result, the separation can be maintained in those situations in which the pressure difference that is required for the separation is not achieved without the active element, but canceling of the separation is undesired. This is the case, for example, if the pressure in the second cooling circuit is dependent on the engine speed. For example, a situation can arise in a traffic jam or during stop and go driving in which a temperature of the second cooling circuit lies above a temperature threshold value, but a speed threshold value that ensures the second pressure required for the separation in the second cooling circuit is not exceeded by the engine due to a rotational speed dependence of the pressure. Here, the speed fluctuations, for example in the use of a mechanical water pump, occur in the second cooling circuit. The active element in the second cooling circuit in the region of the passive element avoids the additional loading of the first cooling system in situations of this type. The speed threshold value may lie at 2000 rpm and the temperature threshold value may lie at approximately 40° C.
The active element may be deactivated in a second operating state of the vehicle. For example, the vehicle may be in the second operating state if the engine speed lies above the speed threshold value and the temperature of the second cooling circuit lies above the temperature threshold value. Since the engine speed lies above the speed threshold value, the second pressure that is provided for the desired separation of the first and second cooling circuits can be achieved without the action of the active element.
The separation by way of the passive element may be canceled if the vehicle is in a third operating state. For example, the vehicle may be in the third operating state if the engine speed lies below the speed threshold, preferably below a further speed threshold, and the temperature lies below the temperature threshold. In the third operating state, the risk of additional loading for the first cooling circuit is reduced and the first and/or the second cooling circuit are/is given the option of ventilation via the common equalizing container by canceling the separation by way of the passive element.
The active element may have an exhaust gas turbocharger afterrun pump, the second cooling system may be provided for engine cooling, and the first cooling system may be a low temperature cooling circuit. The pressure jump of the exhaust gas turbocharger afterrun pump can advantageously be utilized to ensure a closure of the check valve in the first operating state, thereby effectively ruling out an input of heat.
The invention is a method for operating the above-described cooling system. In accordance with the method, a first cooling circuit is separated from the second cooling circuit in first and second operating states by means of the passive element, and the separation by the passive element is canceled in the third operating state.
In a further embodiment of the method, the first cooling circuit is separated from the second cooling circuit in the first operating state by way of the direct or indirect action of the active element on the passive element.
The method may comprise ventilating the first cooling circuit and/or the second cooling circuit via the common equalizing container at a temperature of the second cooling circuit that lies below the temperature threshold.
Further details, features and advantages of the invention arise from the drawings and the following description of preferred embodiments using the drawings. Here, the drawings illustrate merely exemplary embodiments of the invention which do not restrict the essential concept of the invention.
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