An electronic controlled rotary fluid device according to the present disclosure improves robustness of the device identified in U.S. Patent Publication Number 2010/0021313 for systems in which the variation in performance due to external factors such as fluid temperature is to be reduced.
Some or all of the above needs and/or problems may be addressed by certain examples of the disclosure. Certain examples of the disclosure can include systems and methods for controlling a rotary fluid device. A control methodology can be applied to single motor-pump configurations and multiple motor-pump configurations. In addition, the single and multiple motor-pump configurations may only require a single pressure sensor for an entire power pack system. The single pressure sensor can be integrated into a control loop to periodically provide pressure data used to reduce variation in the performance of the system. Accordingly, the sensed pressure data may initiate an updating step causing a recalculation to the parameters used to control the fluid device system.
Other facets of the control methodology can be implemented by a controller that allows for the system to further refine current commands sent to a motor by using a dynamic current command update. In an example, the dynamic current command update can be applied to maintain steady state operation, when a flow demand or system pressure may cause the fluid device system to operate in a transient state. In controlling the system, the periodic sampling of the pressure sensor of system can be used to determine if an update to the operating parameters should be made. For example, when the desired system pressure and the sensed system pressure exceed a predetermined threshold, the operating parameters may be updated to minimize the difference between the current and desired system pressure. In the proceeding system operations, updates may serve as the system parameters. However, the control methodology also possesses fail safe mechanisms, wherein when certain operating parameters exceed predetermined thresholds the system may revert back to initial factory settings.
In other examples, the controller uses updated operating parameters to perform control operations on multi-motor pump systems. For example, the controller can maintain and update a lookup table for each motor-pump configuration in the system. In the process of maintaining the lookup tables, the controller can recalibrate the lookup table for each configuration. When the system output flow is sensed by the pressure sensor and the flow can be isolated to a single motor-pump configuration, the recalibrations can be completed. The controller can also be configured to determine the operation of the pressure sensor by comparing the operation of the sensor by alternating the active motor-pump configuration. In another example, the controller can be configured to statistically differentiate the current operation from the initial operation of the system using the system operating parameters to determine the useful life of system components. In addition, the statistical calculations may be used to predict component failure. Further, the controller can operate the system in a power savings mode, wherein various configurations and alternating activity of multi-motor-pumps can be used to maximize the useful life of the motor-pumps, while maintaining a requested system flow output and pressure. The power saving mode may be applied in controller examples where the controller is configured with sub-controllers that control an individual motor-pump and communicate with each other.
Reference will now be made in detail to the exemplary aspects of the present disclosure that are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like structure.
An aspect of the present disclosure relates to a fluid system that has a fluid pump having an output, an electric motor that operates the fluid pump in response to an electrical signal, a pressure sensor, and a controller. The controller communicates the electrical signal derived from a modifiable lookup table. The pressure sensor communicates with the controller and the controller updates the modifiable lookup table based on a difference between the desired system pressure and the sensed system pressure to minimize variation between the sensed system pressure and the desired system pressure.
Another aspect of the present disclosure relates to the fluid system also including a temperature sensor for sensing a hydraulic fluid temperature of hydraulic fluid passing through the fluid pump. The controller also includes a plurality of initial lookup tables and plurality of modifiable lookup tables corresponding to different hydraulic fluid temperatures. Based on the hydraulic fluid temperature sensed by the temperature sensor, the controller selects an appropriate modifiable lookup table from the plurality of updatable lookup tables.
Another aspect of the present disclosure relates to the controller in the fluid system being configured to monitor the sensed motor speed over time and determine whether an acceleration condition exists. The controller is also configured to modify the electrical signal sent to power the motor when the acceleration condition exits.
Another aspect of the present disclosure relates to the controller in the fluid system being configured to perform a recalibration routine to update the modifiable table. The recalibration steps may comprise receiving sensed performance data from a sensor; retrieving initial performance data related to the fluid pump and the electric motor from a memory module; storing the sensed performance data and the initial performance data in a modified lookup table; in response to a sensed measurement from the pressure sensor, comparing the sensed performance data and the initial performance data to determine a correlation between the sensed performance data, the initial performance data and the desired system pressure; generating an updated version of the modifiable lookup table; using the updated version of the modifiable lookup table to send a motor current command signal to the controller.
Another aspect of the present disclosure relates to a fluid system that has a plurality of fluid pumps, each pump coupled to a motor. The fluid system includes a junction location for combining fluid output flow from the fluid pumps, and wherein a pressure sensor is positioned at or downstream of the junction location. In another example, each motor is controlled by a sub-controller.
Another aspect of the present disclosure relates to the controller in the fluid system being configured to determine pressure sensor functionality in multi-motor-pump configurations. The steps to determine pressure sensor functionality may comprise sensing a first pressure measurement while first individual pump in the plurality of pumps produces an output flow and the remainder pumps in the plurality of pumps do not produce a flow output; determining whether the first pressure measurement is an anomaly based on a predetermined threshold for system pressure; in response to determining that the first pressure measurement is an anomaly, sensing a second pressure measurement wherein the second pressure measurement is based on alternating the first individual pump to a no flow output state and producing the flow output from a second individual pump from the remainder pumps; and determining whether the second pressure measurement is an anomaly based on the predetermined threshold for system pressure.
Referring now to the drawings,
The controller 106 further includes a plurality of outputs including a voltage output, a phase current output, and a phase angle output. In the subject example, each of the plurality of outputs is in electrical communication with the electric motor 104.
The controller 106 further includes a circuit having a microprocessor and a storage media. In an example, the microprocessor may be a field programmable gate array (FPGA). The FPGA is a semiconductor device having programmable logic components, such as logic gates (e.g., AND, OR, NOT, XOR, etc.) or more complex combinational functions (e.g., decoders, mathematical functions, etc.), and programmable interconnects, which allow the logic blocks to be interconnected. In an example, the FPGA can be programmed to provide voltage and current to the electric motor 104 of the rotary fluid device system 100 such that the rotary fluid device system 100 responds in accordance with desired performance characteristics (e.g., constant horsepower, pressure compensation, constant speed, constant pressure, etc.). In another example, the storage media can be volatile memory (e.g., RAM), non-volatile memory (e.g., ROM, flash memory, etc.), or a combination of the two. The storage media includes program code for the FPGA, an initial lookup table 120 and a modified (dynamic) lookup table 116.
Motor speed command 128 is based on a modifiable lookup table 116, which consolidates the pump and motor characteristics (e.g., torsional, volumetric, and electrical efficiency) into a single curve of steady state motor speed versus current that results in the desired pressure 132 versus flow at the output of the pump 102. This approach may be modified to use a family of curves for external factors, which may have a strong influence on the motor-pump performance. Fluid temperature 138 is an example of one such variable illustrated in
The fast speed response required by typical hydraulic consumers 124 will be satisfied by the internal motor speed control loop based on the lookup tables (120 and 116) as described in U.S. Patent Publication Number 2010/0021313. Unlike U.S. Patent Publication Number 2010/0021313, the adjustments to the control tables described herein can be applied to the steady state performance—an adjustment/re-calibration control should not respond to transient conditions including pressure changes during flow transients. This is achieved by requiring persistence in the operating condition (e.g., greater than about 0.5 seconds) prior to invoking the control and monitoring logic described. In referring to
One technical effect of certain examples of the disclosure is that the control methodology adjusts the motor-pump steady state operating characteristics, which can be considered a slow control loop that adjusts the pump performance at a very slow rate (e.g., less than about 1 Hz). By adding a pressure sensor 108 between the pump outlet port 102 and the hydraulic consumers 124, the pump control lookup table 120 can be modified in order to minimize the variation in the outlet pressure. A pressure sensed 130 by the sensor 108 is compared with a desired set pressure 132 (e.g., 3000 psi) and the difference is added as an error signal to adjust the speed versus current modified lookup table 116 (possibly as an outer proportional-integral-derivative (PID) control, although other control schemes are possible).
In another example as depicted in
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Any detected faults or prediction of faults to occur will be communicated outside of the control system through an appropriate interface, such as an aircraft user interface. These communications can be used by a system controller or maintenance computer to direct action (e.g., maintenance activity or reconfiguration of the aircraft system).
The motor-pump control described herein is robust as described above and fail safe. In the event of pressure sensor failure (e.g., detectable by a time history similar to curve 7128 but differentiated from normal transient flow response by persistence greater than about 0.5 seconds for instance), the motor 104 and pump 102 will continue operating with the data table as constructed just prior to loss of the signal. If the error is too great (exceeds a pre-determined threshold 702), the motor 104 and pump 102 will revert to the initial lookup table coded in read-only memory at the factory. In this condition the motor 104 and pump 102 would operate at a lower operating pressure, but would still be available to power the hydraulic consumers 124.
If a temperature sensor signal is lost (broken cable for instance), the pressure sensor 108 will continue to update the lookup table 116 to control the motor-pump device to the set pressure.
If performance of the motor 104 and pump 102 degrades to a point where the steady state current exceeds the limit allowed by the electrical power distribution system, the motor-pump control 106 can be set to reduce the set pressure to continue operation. Trending, as described above, can be used to determine the maximum duration of safe operation within an operating threshold based on the maximum current allowed and the minimum pressure required.
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In order to distinguish each motor-pump performance from the others for the purpose of calibrating the modifiable lookup table 116 as described in the example of
In one example, during conditions where there is no requirement for all of the parallel motor-pumps to remain powered simultaneously (e.g., steady cruise in an aircraft hydraulic system), the power packs can be individually powered and calibrated (e.g., only one motor-pump is powered at a time) using the common pressure sensor 814 illustrated in
In another example, during conditions where a total flow rate demanded by the hydraulic consumers 828 is less than the maximum flow capacity of a single pump, the remaining pumps can be commanded to operate at reduced pressure (e.g., 1500 psi). In this case, the pump(s) set to operate at lower pressure will have their output flow blocked by the outlet check valve (822, 824) and will not contribute to the system flow. The pump operating at full pressure may be calibrated using the methodology described above in reference to
Similar to the calibration mode described above, it is possible to reduce the power consumed by a dual motor-pump power pack by reducing the pressure of one of the pumps to a low pressure setting (e.g., 1500 psi), the alternate pump will maintain the required system pressure (e.g., 3000 psi) and hold the reduced pressure pump check valve closed. If a high flow demand is detected by a low pressure in combination with the primary pump reaching maximum speed or a speed above a predetermined threshold (e.g., 90% speed), the lower pressure pump will immediately exit power savings mode and provide supplemental flow to the system at the rated system pressure (e.g., 3000 psi).
It may be desirable to add a communication link between the motor-pump sub-controllers (818, 820) to reduce the individual motor-pump power/energy extraction, to minimize wear and tear and/or to minimize the audible noise generated by the power pack system 800. For example, if a dual motor-pump power pack is used and it is determined that one of the motor-pumps will operate in the low pressure power savings mode for most of the system life, an additional monitoring and control function may be used to track the motor-pump usage (e.g., time at torque/speed for the individual motors) and balance the power savings mode between the two units. One such method is to always opt to operate the motor-pump with the highest damage ratio (calculated as integral of input electrical power over the operating time) in power savings mode. This will balance the wear and tear between the two motor-pumps (802, 804, 806, 808) and maximize system life.
A communication linkage between sub-controller 1 (818) and sub controller 2 (820) may also be used to prevent the individual motor-pumps from operating at maximum speed (or minimize the time operating at or near maximum speed) by balancing the loads between the two motors (802, 806). For example, if a large hydraulic consumer 828 flow is demanded, the typical control will cause one motor-pump to ramp-up to near full speed while the other, potentially in a lower pressure power savings mode, will continue to operate at a near zero speed. Alternatively, a system monitoring and control function may be used to command the two pumps (804, 808) to equal speeds, whereby each pump will output half of the system flow demand by operating at one-half its rated speed. This has the advantage of reducing the typical wear and tear on the otherwise high speed motor-pump as well as reducing the audible noise levels. To balance the power savings with the reduced speed objective, a speed threshold may be used on the primary pump to determine when the second pump should be powered to supplement the system flow. For example, the second motor-pump may be commanded out of low pressure power savings mode if the primary motor-pump speed exceeds 25% of its rated value.
Additionally, temperature sensors (830, 832) on the motor-pumps can be used by a monitoring and control function to adjust which motor-pump is providing system flow based on the individual motor temperatures. This can potentially be used to permit safe operation of the power pack if the usage, duty cycle, or failure of one of the motor-pumps causes one of the motor-pumps to overheat. In this case, the overheating motor-pump will be commanded into a lower power state (or off depending on the severity of the overheat condition) and the other (in a dual motor-pump arrangement) will be commanded into full pressure mode.
Method 1000 proceeds to Decision Block 1025 from Block 1020 and a determination is made whether the second pressure measurement is an anomaly. If it is determined that the second sensed pressure is an anomaly, then the YES branch is followed and the method continues to block 1035. At Block 1035, a responsive action may be required to address the pressure sensor. Referring back to Decision Block 1025, if it is determined that the second pressure measurement is not an anomaly, then the NO branch is followed and the method 1000 continues to Block 1030 where a responsive action may be required for the first pump. In addition, method 1000 can be applied to a fluid device system where there are more than two pumps, where active pump operational status can be rotated through each pump in the plurality to determine the operational efficiency of each pump, as well as determine the operation of the pressure sensor.
Accordingly, blocks of the block diagrams and flow diagrams support combinations of means for performing the specified functions, combinations of elements or steps for performing the specified functions and program instruction means for performing the specified functions. It will also be understood that each block of the block diagrams and flow diagrams, and combinations of blocks in the block diagrams and flow diagrams, can be implemented by special purpose, hardware-based computer systems that perform the specified functions, elements or steps, or combinations of special purpose hardware and computer instructions.
While the disclosure has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical of various examples, it is to be understood that the disclosure is not to be limited to the disclosed examples, but on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Various modifications and alterations of this disclosure will become apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of this disclosure, and it should be understood that the scope of this disclosure is not to be unduly limited to the illustrative examples set forth herein.
This application is being filed on Oct. 29, 2014, as a PCT International Patent application and claims priority to U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 61/896,683 filed on Oct. 29, 2013, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2014/062973 | 10/29/2014 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61896683 | Oct 2013 | US |