The invention relates to systems and method for controlling the speed of a pump motor.
In one embodiment, the invention provides a pump system comprising a pump configured to move liquid through the pump system and a pump controller. The pump includes a pump motor. The pump controller is configured to control the actual motor speed of the pump motor by adjusting a current applied to the motor based on the difference between the actual motor speed and the target motor speed according to a gain setting. The pump controller applies a first gain value as the gain setting when the difference between the actual motor speed and the target motor speed does not exceed a first threshold. However, the pump applies a second, higher gain value as the gain setting when the difference between the actual motor speed and the target motor speed exceeds the first threshold. Increasing the value of the gain setting causes the pump controller to adjust the current applied to the motor with greater sensitivity in response to the difference between the actual motor speed and the target motor speed.
In some embodiments, the pump controller is configured to apply the first gain value as the gain setting whenever the actual motor speed is less than the target motor speed and to apply the second, higher gain value only when the actual motor speed exceeds the target motor speed by the first threshold.
In another embodiment, the invention provides a motor controller comprising a processor and a memory. The memory stores instructions that are executed by the processor to controller the operation of the motor controller. The motor controller controls the actual speed of a motor by adjusting a current applied to the motor based on the difference between an actual motor speed and a target motor speed according to a gain setting. Increasing the gain setting causes the pump controller to adjust the current applied to the motor with greater sensitivity in response to the differences between the actual motor speed and the target motor speed. The motor controller applies a first value as the gain setting when the difference between the actual motor speed and the target motor speed does not exceed a first threshold. A second gain value is applied when the difference between the actual motor speed and the target motor speed exceeds the first threshold, but does not exceed a second threshold. A third gain value is applied as the gain setting when the difference between the actual motor speed and the target motor speed exceeds both the first threshold and the second threshold. The second gain value is greater than the first gain value, but less than the third gain value.
Other aspects of the invention will become apparent by consideration of the detailed description and accompanying drawings.
Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways.
The electronic pump control unit 101 receives a target speed setting from a user 101. Alternatively, the target speed can be predefined or defined automatically by the pump controller based on observed performance characteristic of the system. The speed controller 103 receives the target speed setting and outputs a current demand value to the current controller 105. The current controller 105 then controllably applies a voltage to the motor 109. The speed of the motor 109 varies based on the load applied to the motor and the current of the motor (based on the voltage applied by the current controller 105).
As the load applied to the motor changes, the current required to operate the motor at the defined target speed also changes. As illustrated in
In order provide the adjustment illustrated in
Current Adjustment=Speed Deviation×Gain Setting
Similarly, the current controller is configured to monitor the current of the pump motor and adjust the voltage applied to the pump motor to cause the actual motor current to approach the target motor current. In some constructions, the current controller is programmed to know the resistance of the pump motor and, therefore, can calculate the voltage required to achieve the desired current without a further measurement of the actual current. The voltage adjustment is implemented using a device such as, for example, a potentiometer or variable resistor.
As illustrated in
The period of time required for the actual speed to again reach the target speed after the valve is closed is directly related to the value of the gain setting applied by the pump controller. A higher gain setting value would cause the controller to be more sensitive to change in pump speed. As a result, the current applied to the pump motor (and, therefore, the actual speed) is reduced at a greater pace. However, a higher gain setting value also causes the pump controller to react more sensitively to relatively minor changes in actual pump speed. The result is a more noticeably, near sinusoidal periodic fluctuation in the actual speed of the pump above and below the target pump speed.
The method illustrated in
System with mechanisms for making multiple adjustments to the gain setting may be implemented in situations where multiple valves are used to control multiple applications with the same pump—for example, a system with one valve providing fluid return from a pool and a second valve provide fluid return from a spa. If only one valve is closed, the load is reduced. However, if both valves are closed at substantially the same time, the load reduction is greater and an even larger gain setting value can enable the pump speed to return to the target pump speed more quickly.
In the examples above, the system is used to account for increases in the pump motor speed caused by closing a valve and reducing the load on the pump motor. The same method can be used to account for decreases in the pump speed caused by opening a valve and increasing the load on the pump motor. However, in some situations, the increased sensitivity of the pump controller resulting from increasing the value of the gain setting may only be desired to control over-speed conditions (i.e., when the actual pump speed is greater than the target pump speed) as over-speed conditions may result in damage to the pump motor. In such cases, the pump controller 101 is configured to apply the second, higher gain setting only when the actual motor speed exceeds the target motor speed by the defined threshold. The first, lower gain setting value is used when the speed deviation is less than the threshold and wherever the actual speed is less than the target speed.
Thus, the invention provides, among other things, a system and method for controlling the speed of a pump motor to more rapidly adapt to changes in load by adjusting a gain value. Various features and advantages of the invention are set forth in the following claims.
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