The invention concerns a method of determining the moment of extinction of an ignition spark of an ignition device for an internal combustion engine, wherein the ignition device has a high voltage transformer having a primary side and a secondary side, of which the primary side is connected to a high voltage source and the secondary side is connected to a spark path to provide the ignition spark and an ignition device for an internal combustion engine, comprising:
An aim to seek to achieve for reliable ignition and causing firing of the combustible mixture is an ignition spark burning duration which is as long as possible.
Fuel mixtures can be caused to fire with a wide range of different methods. In the case of combustion engines such as for example a gas engine in most cases the mixture is ignited by means of an ignition spark. There are a number of methods of ignition spark generation, primarily an ignition coil ignition system being used in that case. In that respect, for igniting the fuel mixture, it is primarily the plasma energy introduced by way of the spark passage (ionization and activation energy) that is decisive in terms of the quality of the subsequent combustion process. Besides the level of the ignition spark current, for ignition or firing of the fuel mixture, the ignition spark duration is substantially also decisive. Indirect and direct influences such as for example pressure, temperature, mixture composition and flow speeds in the combustion chamber, specifically in the region of the ignition spark plug electrodes or spark path, can considerably influence the ignition spark duration. Thus determining the ignition spark duration is decisive for assessing the effectiveness of an ignition process. As a possible way of measuring the ignition spark duration it is possible to employ the direct dependency in relation to the current in the high voltage circuit (secondary current of the ignition coil) which is to be equated to the spark current. Those possible ways of directly measuring the ignition spark duration are not possible with most ignition systems, more especially in the case of central ignition systems where only the primary side of the ignition coils is connected to the ignition system, and no measurement parameters can be passed back from the secondary side.
Some approaches for diagnosis of ignition events are known from the patent literature.
Thus EP 707 144 A2 (ROBERT BOSCH GMBH) describes the use of a current measuring clip-on instrument for the diagnosis of ignition events, wherein there is provided a first resonant circuit whose resonance frequency is matched to rapid changes in ignition current which occur during the beginning of the ignition spark, and there is a second resonant circuit whose resonance frequency is matched to slow changes in ignition current which occur during the ignition spark burning duration.
WO 1994/027043 (ROBERT BOSCH GMBH) proposes a method of detecting misfires. Here the transformed burning voltage on the primary side is used and a comparison is made with limit values for correct ignition.
The methods used at the present time do not provide any information about the spark burning duration itself but compare a parameter measured at the primary side (for example the burning voltage) to previously detected limit values for a correct ignition process.
Detection of the moment of extinction of the ignition spark is decisive for assessing the effectiveness of an ignition process.
A method of the general kind set forth is to be found in U.S. Pat. No. 6,283,103 B1.
Therefore the object of the present invention is to provide a method which permits detection of the moment of extinction of the ignition spark and to provide an ignition device which can operate in accordance with that method.
That object is attained by the method of claim 1 and an ignition device according to claim 9.
The present invention is based on measurement of the moment of extinction of the ignition spark by means of the primary current of a high voltage transformer, in the normal case an ignition coil.
Investigations in respect of the primary and secondary circuit parameters of an ignition coil and the ignition spark have shown that the moment of extinction of the ignition spark can be ascertained by means of the variation in the primary current of an ignition coil.
Advantageous configurations of the invention are defined in the appendant claims.
The ignition process can generally be subdivided into four phases:
1. Ionization phase—build-up of the necessary high voltage and ionization for breakdown
2. Breakdown phase—build-up of the spark passage
3. Spark burning phase—energy transfer into the fuel mixture by means of the plasma energy
4. Coil free-running phase—reduction of the energy stored in the coil after extinction of the spark.
Each of the individual phases of the ignition spark has a typical characteristic, which can be recognized for example on the basis of the different slope angles of the primary current, caused by the influencing parameters acting in those phases on the primary current of the ignition coil.
If for example straight lines (linear functions) are put into the current variation curves in phases 3 and 4 and those straight lines are caused to intersect, it is then possible for the moment of extinction of the ignition spark to be determined in a very simple fashion from the position of the intersection points. The use of other functions is also conceivable.
For determining the ignition spark duration measurement of the moment of extinction of the ignition spark according to the invention may be sufficient if the moment of occurrence of the ignition spark can be derived from other data or is simply presupposed as being known.
It can naturally also be provided that the moment of occurrence of the ignition spark is determined from the time variation in the primary current, more specifically by virtue of the transition from the ionization phase into the spark burning phase.
The ignition spark burning duration ascertained in that way can be used as a regulating parameter for the primary-side energy supply to the ignition coil in order to match the ignition spark characteristic to the conditions in the combustion chamber and thus to optimize the ignition and combustion process.
That prevents substantially slow or delayed combustion and further results in a lesser variance in the combustion process and thus more complete combustion of the fuel mixture, which is to be equated to a higher level of efficiency or an increase in the efficiency of the overall system of a combustion process.
Further advantages and details of the invention will be apparent from the Figures and the related specific description.
In the Figures:
The secondary side 5 of the high voltage transformer 3 is connected to a spark path 10 for producing the ignition spark.
As shown in
The piston-cylinder unit has a piston 14 which is arranged movably up and down in a cylinder 15. It is possible to see a spark path 10 which here is in the form of a spark plug 16 and which is electrically connected by way of a lead 17 to the secondary side 5 of a high voltage transformer 3 (here: ignition coil). The primary side 4 of the high voltage transformer 3 is electrically connected by way of a lead 18 to a high voltage source 6 through 9.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 1328/2010 | Aug 2010 | AT | national |