The present invention relates to camshaft phasers for varying the timing of combustion valves in internal combustion engines by varying the phase relationship between an engine's crankshaft and camshaft; more particularly, to oil-less camshaft phasers wherein an adjusting gear drive unit is controlled by an electric motor (eMotor) to vary the phase relationship, also referred to herein as an “electric variable cam phaser” (eVCP).
Camshaft phasers (“cam phasers”) for varying the timing of combustion valves in an internal combustion engines are well known. A first element, known generally as a sprocket element, is driven by a chain, belt, or gearing from an engine's crankshaft. A second element, known generally as a camshaft plate, is mounted to the end of an engine's camshaft.
When such cam phasers are electrically actuated, a triple shaft arrangement such as planetary gears or a harmonic drive arrangement is provided. Examples of three shafts transmissions suitable for use with a cam phaser comprise planetary gear systems, with a sun gear, planetary gears mounted on a planet carrier and a ring gear, or harmonic drive systems with a wave generator, flex-spline and circular spline.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,421,990 B2, herein incorporated by reference, discloses an eVCP comprising first and second harmonic gear drive units facing each other along a common axis of the camshaft and the phaser and connected by a common flexible spline (flexspline). The first, or input, harmonic drive unit is driven by an engine sprocket, and the second, or output, harmonic drive unit is connected to an engine camshaft.
A current tendency in the automotive industry is to optimize energy consumption in automotive vehicles.
It is a principal object of the present invention to provide an eVCP for optimization of energy consumption.
The present invention proposes an electrical camshaft phaser arrangement for controllably varying the phase relationship between a crankshaft and a camshaft in an internal combustion engine, comprising an adjusting gear drive unit formed as a three shafts transmission, comprising a drive shaft connected with the crankshaft, an output shaft connected with the camshaft, and an adjusting shaft connected with the control shaft of an electrical machine, the electrical machine allowing phasing the camshaft with regards to the crankshaft by increasing or decreasing control shaft speed, control shaft being spinning during phase holding modes, characterized in that the adjusting gear drive unit is configured such that an energy recovering mode is provided wherein a braking torque is applied to the control shaft in order to generate electrical energy, said braking torque being applied to the control shaft during phase holding modes, said braking torque compensating the camshaft friction torque on the control shaft.
Thanks to the invention, energy loss such as friction on the camshaft can be recovered through the adjusting gear drive unit. Thus, when a motoring torque on the control shaft is generated by friction in the driven mechanism (camshaft) and rotates in the same direction as the control shaft, the electrical machine switches from an electrical motor mode to a generator mode. In this configuration, electrical energy can be recovered.
According to advantageous features of the present invention:
the adjusting gear drive unit is configured such that the control shaft is rotating in an opposite direction to the camshaft in order to provide electrical energy generation by recovery of mechanical camshaft frictions losses;
the adjusting gear drive unit is a harmonic gear drive unit including a circular spline and a dynamic spline, a flexspline disposed within said circular spline and said dynamic spline, and a wave generator disposed within said flexspline, said electrical machine being connected to said wave generator;
at least one spring operationally connected to said circular spline and to said dynamic spline for urging one of said circular and dynamic splines to move the camshaft phaser to a default rotational position
said electrical machine is a DC axial-flux motor.
It has to be noted that, when a harmonic gear drive unit is used, it is easily possible to swap the arrangement of the circular spline with regard to the dynamic spline in order to choose in which functioning mode of the cam phaser arrangement energy loss will be recovered.
The present invention also proposes a control method for an electrical camshaft phaser arrangement as described above, comprising the steps of:
increasing or decreasing control shaft speed in order to phase the camshaft,
maintaining control shaft speed in order to hold a phase between the crankshaft and the camshaft,
characterized by the further step of energy loss recovering by applying a braking torque on the control shaft in order to generate electrical energy, said energy loss recovering step being implemented during phase holding in order to compensate camshaft friction torque.
The present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The exemplifications set out herein illustrate currently preferred embodiments of the invention. Such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
Referring to
Harmonic gear drive unit 12 comprises an outer first spline 28 which may be either a circular spline or a dynamic spline as described below; an outer second spline 30 which is the opposite (dynamic or circular) of first spline 28 and is coaxially positioned adjacent first spline 28; a flexspline 32 disposed radially inwards of both first and second splines 28,30 and having outwardly-extending gear teeth disposed for engaging inwardly-extending gear teeth on both first and second splines 28,30; and a wave generator 34 disposed radially inwards of and engaging flexspline 32.
Flexspline 32 is a non-rigid ring with external teeth on a slightly smaller pitch diameter than the circular spline. It is fitted over and elastically deflected by wave generator 34.
The circular spline is a rigid ring with internal teeth engaging the teeth of flexspline 32 across the major axis of wave generator 34.
The dynamic spline is a rigid ring having internal teeth of the same number as flexspline 32. It rotates together with flexspline 32 and serves as the output member. Either the dynamic spline or the circular spline may be identified by a chamfered corner 33 at its outside diameter to distinguish one spline from the other.
As is disclosed in the prior art, wave generator 34 is an assembly of an elliptical steel disc supporting an elliptical bearing, the combination defining a wave generator plug. A flexible bearing retainer surrounds the elliptical bearing and engages flexspline 32. Rotation of the wave generator plug causes a rotational wave to be generated in flexspline 32 (actually two waves 180° apart, corresponding to opposite ends of the major ellipse axis of the disc).
During assembly of a harmonic gear drive unit 12, flexspline teeth engage both circular spline teeth and dynamic spline teeth along and near the major elliptical axis of the wave generator. The dynamic spline has the same number of teeth as the flexspline, so rotation of the wave generator causes no net rotation per revolution therebetween. However, the circular spline has slightly fewer gear teeth than does the dynamic spline, and therefore the circular spline rotates past the dynamic spline during rotation of the wave generator plug, defining a gear ratio therebetween (for example, a gear ratio of 50:1 would mean that 1 rotation of the circular spline past the dynamic spline corresponds to 50 rotations of the wave generator). Harmonic gear drive unit 12 is thus a high-ratio gear transmission; that is, the angular phase relationship between first spline 28 and second spline 30 changes by 2% for every revolution of wave generator 34.
Of course, as will be obvious to those skilled in the art, the circular spline rather may have slightly more teeth than the dynamic spline has, in which case the rotational relationships described below are reversed.
Still referring to
Hub 20 is fastened to second spline 30 by bolts 48 and may be secured to camshaft 22 by a central through-bolt 50 extending through an axial bore 51 in hub 20, and capturing a stepped thrust washer 52 and a filter 54 recessed in hub 20. In an eVCP, it is necessary to limit radial run-out between the input hub and output hub. In the prior art, this has been done by providing multiple roller bearings to maintain concentricity between the input and output hubs. Referring to
Spring cassette 26 includes a bottom plate 56 and a top plate 58 disposed on opposite sides of spring 24. Shouldered spring spacers 60 extending between bottom and top plates 58 create an operating space for spring 24 and also provide an anchor for outer tang 62 on spring 24. Spring spacers 60 pass through top plate 58 and are secured by nuts 64. First and second retainer plates 66 may be used to secure cassette 26 to housing 36. For example, first and second retainer plates 66 may be positioned on top plate 58 by studs 68 and secured to bottom plate 56 by bolts 70. Retainer plates 66 may extend radially beyond the edges of top plate 58 to engage an annular groove or slots formed in sprocket housing 36, thereby axially positioning and locking cassette 26 in place on hub 20 such that the inner tang 72 of spring 24 engages one of two alternate detents 74 formed in hub 20. Retainer plates 66 exemplarily demonstrate only one arrangement for attaching cassette 26 to eVCP 10; obviously, all other alternative attaching arrangements are fully comprehended by the invention.
In the event of an eMotor malfunction, spring 24 is biased to back-drive harmonic gear drive unit 12 without help from eMotor 14 to a rotational position of second spline 30 wherein engine 18 will start or run, which position may be at one of the extreme ends of the range of authority or, in one aspect of the invention, intermediate of the phaser's extreme ends of its rotational range of authority. For example, the rotational range of travel in which spring 24 biases harmonic gear drive unit 12 may be limited to something short of the end stop position of the phaser's range of authority. Such an arrangement would be useful for engines requiring an intermediate park position for idle or restart.
Referring now to
Fail-safe performance of the harmonic gear drive unit in eVCP 10 is not identical in the two orientations. Thus, a desired orientation may be selected during installation to minimize the response time for eVCP 10 to return to a preferred default position when eMotor 14 is de-energized when the engine is shut down or as a fail-safe response when eMotor experiences a failure (unintentionally energized or de-energized). In both orientations, the output gear, which is second spline 30 rotates with respect to first spline 28. When the circular spline is first spline 28 and the dynamic spline is the second spline 30, as shown in
Referring to
Referring to
According to the present invention, the harmonic gear drive unit 12 is configured such that an energy recovering mode is provided wherein a braking torque is applied to the control shaft 45 of the eMotor 14 in order to generate electrical energy.
Advantageously, the braking torque is applied to the control shaft 45 during phase holding modes, said braking torque compensating the camshaft friction torque on the control shaft 45.
Preferably, the harmonic gear drive unit 12 is configured such that the control shaft 45 is rotating in an opposite direction to the camshaft 22 in order to provide electrical energy generation by recovery of mechanical camshaft frictions losses. This is the case with the baseline splines arrangement of
With the baseline splines arrangement, to keep the camshaft position fixed, (no phasing), the input shaft speed, i.e. control shaft speed, and the output shaft speed, i.e. camshaft speed, need to be equal by synchronizing the control shaft speed to the camshaft speed. Because of mechanical frictions on the camshaft 22, even if the sprocket 16 is driving the camshaft 22 in the direction of F1 (clockwise on
While the invention has been described by reference to various specific embodiments, it should be understood that numerous changes may be made within the spirit and scope of the inventive concepts described. More particularly, the fail-safe arrangement could be omitted or could be designed differently of the embodiment shown on the figures. Also, the three shafts transmission could comprise a planetary gear system instead of the harmonic drive system. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the described embodiments, but will have full scope defined by the language of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10154551 | Feb 2010 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2011/050861 | 1/21/2011 | WO | 00 | 9/10/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/104051 | 9/1/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3285099 | Parks, Jr. et al. | Nov 1966 | A |
4451098 | Farley et al. | May 1984 | A |
4770060 | Elrod et al. | Sep 1988 | A |
4771742 | Nelson et al. | Sep 1988 | A |
5417186 | Elrod et al. | May 1995 | A |
6257186 | Heer | Jul 2001 | B1 |
6302073 | Heer | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6328006 | Heer | Dec 2001 | B1 |
7421990 | Taye et al. | Sep 2008 | B2 |
7647904 | Farah et al. | Jan 2010 | B2 |
7673598 | Schaefer et al. | Mar 2010 | B2 |
20110030631 | David et al. | Feb 2011 | A1 |
20110030632 | David et al. | Feb 2011 | A1 |
20110277713 | David et al. | Nov 2011 | A1 |
20110315102 | David et al. | Dec 2011 | A1 |
20120024247 | David et al. | Feb 2012 | A1 |
20120145104 | David et al. | Jun 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 808 854 | Jul 2006 | CN |
2 194 241 | Jun 2010 | EP |
2009013074 | Jan 2009 | WO |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report dated Jun. 20, 2011. |
U.S. Appl. No. 13/112,199, entitled “Axially Compact Coupling for a Camshaft Phaser Actuated by Electric Motor”, filed May 20, 2011. |
U.S. Appl. No. 13/155,685, entitled “Harmonic Drive Camshaft Phaser Using Oil for Lubrication”, filed Jun. 8, 2011. |
U.S. Appl. No. 13/184,975, entitled “Harmonic Drive Camshaft Phaser With Lock Pin for Selectively Preventing a Change in Phase Relationship”, filed Jul. 18, 2011. |
U.S. Appl. No. 13/249,286, entitled “Harmonic Drive Camshaft Phaser With a Harmonic Drive Ring to Prevent Ball Cage Deflection”, filed Sep. 30, 2011. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20130008398 A1 | Jan 2013 | US |