The present application relates to a drive circuit for an ignition element of a safety system, in particular of an occupant protection system of a motor vehicle, such as an airbag or seatbelt pretensioner, for example.
If an accident event occurs which requires triggering of a passenger protection system, i.e. for example opening of the airbag or pretensioning of the seatbelts, such a drive circuit drives the ignition element in such a way that a triggering current is applied to it for a predetermined time duration. In this connection, said time duration and the amplitude of the current are chosen such that ignition of the ignition element and hence triggering of the protection system are achieved as reliably as possible.
The ignition element can only be used once and is destroyed when the protection system is triggered. In order, after an accident event, to make it possible to analyze the way the accident happened, it is necessary to obtain information about a current that flowed through the ignition element.
A drive circuit for an ignition element of a safety system according to one embodiment of the invention comprises at least one ignition element terminal for connection of the ignition element, a controllable current or voltage source coupled to the at least one ignition element terminal, and a sensor arrangement. The sensor arrangement has at least one detector element which is connected between the current or voltage source and the at least one ignition element terminal and has a sensor material varying color indirectly or directly dependent on a current flowing between the at least one ignition element terminal and the ignition element.
Embodiments of the invention are explained in more detail below with reference to figures.
In the figures, unless specified otherwise, identical reference symbols designate identical parts with the same meaning.
A drive circuit for an ignition element of a safety system according to one embodiment includes at least one ignition element terminal for connection of the ignition element, a controllable current or voltage source coupled to the at least one ignition element terminal, and a sensor arrangement. The sensor arrangement has at least one detector element which is connected between the current or voltage source and the at least one ignition element terminal and has a sensor material varying color indirectly or directly dependent on a current flowing between the at least one ignition element terminal and the ignition element.
The sensor material may be an irreversible thermochromic material, which are generally known. Irreversible thermochromic materials have a transition temperature at which an irreversible change in the color of the material occurs if the material is heated to this temperature.
After triggering of the ignition element by a current flowing from the current or voltage source, the use of an irreversible thermochromic material as sensor material in the drive circuit indirectly yields information regarding said current. This indirect information consists in a heating of the surroundings of the sensor material caused by said current.
The thermochromic sensor material of the detector element is applied for example to an electrically conductive carrier that is connected between the at least one ignition element terminal and the controllable current or voltage source and is directly heated by the ignition current that flows. In this case, the heating of the carrier, and hence of the sensor material, is dependent on the electrical power converted into heat in the carrier. Said power is in turn dependent on the carrier's electrical resistance, which is known or can be determined in a simple manner, and the ignition current that flows.
Customary thermochromic materials have only one transition temperature at which a color transition from a first color to a second color takes place, so that no further color transition takes place in the event of a further increase in temperature beyond said transition temperature. In order to obtain more differentiated information about the temperature in the event of the triggering of the ignition element—and hence about the ignition current—the detector element may comprise a plurality of thermochromic sensor materials having different transition temperatures.
Instead of a thermochromic material applied to an electrically conductive carrier, an electrically conductive thermochromic polymer may be used, which is then connected directly into a connecting line of the ignition element between the current or voltage source and the ignition element.
Furthermore an electrochromic material as sensor material of the detector element may be used. Such electrochromic materials are generally known. Electrochromic materials have the property of changing their color depending on an electric field to which they are exposed.
The electrochromic sensor material is for example part of an electrochromic cell having two electrodes between which the electrochromic sensor material is arranged and which generate, under the influence of an electrical charge stored on the electrodes, an electrical field that influences the color of the sensor material. Said cell is for example connected in parallel with an electrical resistance connected between the current or voltage source and the ignition element, with the result that the electrodes are charged in the case of an ignition current that flows.
The controllable source 10 comprises, referring to
A customary ignition element of an airbag system ignites if a current of between 1 A and 2 A is applied to it for a time duration of between 0.5 ms and 3 ms.
In order, after the ignition element 30 has been driven by an ignition current provided by the controlled current or voltage source 10, subsequently to obtain information about the amplitude and/or duration of the ignition current Iout that flowed, a detector element 20 is provided in the drive circuit. In the example in accordance with
The detector element 20 has a sensor material designed to vary its color indirectly or directly dependent on a current Iout flowing between the current or voltage source 10 and the ignition element 30.
Referring to
Alongside many others, suitable thermochromic materials are for example ammonium vanadate (NH4VO3), which changes its color from white to brown at a transition temperature of between 140° C. and 150° C., or cobalt ammonium phosphate (CoNH4PO4.H2O), which changes its color from violet to blue at a transition temperature of between 165° C. and 175° C. Suitable adhesives or binders are for example polymeric binders, such as acrylic resins.
After triggering of the drive circuit, that is to say after generation of an ignition current Iout for the ignition element 30, the irreversible thermochromic sensor material 24 indirectly yields information about the current that flowed to the ignition element Iout or the time duration during which said current flowed. The detector element 20 enables a statement to be made about whether the temperature of the detector element 20, due to the ignition current Iout flowing through the detector element 20, exceeded a predefined threshold value, which is determined by the transition temperature of the thermochromic material used. In this case, the thermochromic sensor material 24 should be chosen such that its transition temperature is very high in comparison with customary operating temperatures to which the drive circuit is exposed during customary operation. In this case, when the transition temperature of the sensor material is exceeded, which can be identified through a change in color of the sensor material, it can be assumed that this exceeding of the transition temperature is critically caused by the electrical power converted into heat in the detector element 20. In this case, the electrical power converted into heat in the detector element is given by:
Pw=Iout2·R21 (1).
In this case, Pw denotes the electrical power converted into heat, Iout denotes the ignition current and R21 denotes the electrical resistance of the carrier element 21. With knowledge of the thermal capacity of the electrically conductive carrier element 21 and with knowledge of the transition temperature, after a change in color of the sensor material 24 it is possible to make a statement about the electrical power converted into heat in the carrier 21 and hence about the ignition current Iout that flowed previously.
One possibility for the realization of the detector element 20 is illustrated in detail in
In order to prevent the transition temperature of the thermochromic sensor material 24 from being exceeded during the production of the soldering connections 42, in the production of the detector element 20 illustrated in
In order to enable a more differentiated statement about the heating of the detector element 20 due to an ignition current Iout flowing from the current or voltage source 10 to the ignition element 30, a plurality of different thermochromic sensor materials 24A-24C having different transition temperatures may be applied to the carrier 21. If the transition temperatures of the individual sensor materials 24A-24C are ordered according to magnitude, then two adjacent transition temperatures in each case form a temperature range. If the sensor material having the lower of said two transition temperatures changes color, while the sensor material having the higher transition temperature remains with its color unchanged, then the information that the temperature has risen into this temperature range, but not beyond it, can be derived from this.
A further differentiation of the temperature conditions after the flowing of an ignition current is made possible, referring to
The further detector element 20′ is heated exclusively via the ambient temperature. If the evaluation of the color of the further detector element 20′ then reveals that the ambient temperature upon triggering of the ignition element was within a first temperature range and the temperature of the second detector element 20 was within a second temperature range, then this yields the information that the temperature difference between these two temperature ranges is due to the ignition current Iout, which heats the detector element 20 connected into the current path further by comparison with the ambient temperature.
The electric field to which the electrochromic sensor material 282 is exposed is caused by an electrical charge stored on the electrodes 281, 283.
In the detector element 20, the electrochromic cell 28 is connected in parallel with a resistance element 26, across which the ignition current Iout brings about a voltage drop V26. A further resistor 284 is optionally connected upstream or downstream of the electrochromic cell, said further resistor having a very large value in comparison with the resistor 26 and having the effect that a current flow through the electrochromic cell 28 is very small in comparison with the ignition current Iout.
In the case of this detector element in accordance with
The color change procedure is reversible in the case of customary electrochromic sensor materials. In order still to enable a statement about the ignition current Iout that flowed previously even after the ignition current Iout has been turned off, it is necessary to permanently store the electrical charge in the electrochromic cell 28. Assuming low leakage currents, this is achieved by means of a rectifier element, for example a diode 27, which is connected upstream or downstream of the electrochromic cell 28 and which enables the electrochromic cell 28 to be charged but prevents said electrochromic cell from being discharged.
Referring to
In the exemplary embodiments of the drive circuit according to the invention that have been explained up to now, the at least one detector element 20 present is connected directly into the current path between the current or voltage source 10 and the ignition element 30. With the provision of a thermochromic cell in the detector element, part of the ignition current is in this case branched off for charging the electrochromic cell. With the provision of a detector element having a thermochromic sensor material, the electrical resistance of the current path increases due to the electrically conductive carrier 21 that is heated up.
A possibility for realization in which a direct loading of the current path between the current or voltage source and the ignition element 30 is avoided is illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102006017579.4-21 | Apr 2006 | DE | national |