This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/860,010, filed on Nov. 17, 2006. The disclosure of the above application is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to engines, and more particularly to engine torque control while the engine is operating at a high pressure ratio.
Internal combustion engines combust an air and fuel mixture within cylinders to drive pistons, which produces drive torque. Air flow into the engine is regulated via a throttle. More specifically, the throttle adjusts throttle area, which increases or decreases air flow into the engine. As the throttle area increases, the air flow into the engine increases. A fuel control system adjusts the rate that fuel is injected to provide a desired air/fuel mixture to the cylinders. As can be appreciated, increasing the air and fuel to the cylinders increases the torque output of the engine.
Engine control systems have been developed to accurately control engine torque output to achieve a desired engine speed, particularly when operating under high pressure ratios. Traditional engine control systems, however, do not control the engine speed as accurately as desired. Further, traditional engine control systems do not provide as rapid of a response to control signals as is desired or coordinate engine torque control among various devices that affect engine torque output. Such traditional control systems are often more complex than desired and require time and cost intensive calibration processes.
Accordingly, the present disclosure provides a method of controlling a torque output of an internal combustion engine. The method includes determining a pressure ratio, determining a reference torque based on the pressure ratio and a torque request, calculating a desired throttle area based on the reference torque and regulating operation of the engine based on the desired throttle area to achieve the desired torque.
In other features, the method further includes calculating a desired manifold absolute pressure (MAP) of the engine based on the reference torque and calculating a desired air-per-cylinder (APC) of the engine based on the reference torque. The desired throttle area is calculated based on the desired MAP and the desired APC. The desired MAP is determined using an inverted MAP-based torque model and the desired APC is determined using an inverted APC-based torque model. The method further includes filtering the desired MAP based on the pressure ratio and on whether the engine is operating in a steady-state. The method further includes determining a desired mass air flow (MAF) based on the desired APC. The desired throttle area is calculated based on the desired MAF.
In other features, the method further includes determining an estimated torque of the engine and correcting the reference torque based on the estimated torque, the pressure ratio and on whether the engine is operating in a steady-state. The method further includes calculating a torque error based on the reference torque and the estimated torque. The reference torque is corrected based on the torque error.
In another feature, the method further includes determining whether the engine is operating in a steady-state based on the pressure ratio and an engine RPM. The desired throttle area is calculated based on whether the engine is operating in the steady-state.
In still another feature, the method further includes rate limiting the reference torque.
In yet another feature, the method further includes calculating the pressure ratio as a ratio between a MAP and a barometric pressure.
Further advantages and areas of applicability of the present disclosure will become apparent from the detailed description provided hereinafter. It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating an embodiment of the disclosure, are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the disclosure.
The present disclosure will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is in no way intended to limit the disclosure, its application, or uses. For purposes of clarity, the same reference numbers will be used in the drawings to identify similar elements. As used herein, the term module refers to an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), an electronic circuit, a processor (shared, dedicated, or group) and memory that execute one or more software or firmware programs, a combinational logic circuit, or other suitable components that provide the described functionality.
Referring now to
A fuel injector (not shown) injects fuel that is combined with the air as it is drawn into the cylinder 18 through an intake port. The fuel injector may be an injector associated with an electronic or mechanical fuel injection system 20, a jet or port of a carburetor or another system for mixing fuel with intake air. The fuel injector is controlled to provide a desired air-to-fuel (A/F) ratio within each cylinder 18.
An intake valve 22 selectively opens and closes to enable the air/fuel mixture to enter the cylinder 18. The intake valve position is regulated by an intake cam shaft 24. A piston (not shown) compresses the air/fuel mixture within the cylinder 18. A spark plug 26 initiates combustion of the air/fuel mixture, which drives the piston in the cylinder 18. The piston, in turn, drives a crankshaft (not shown) to produce drive torque. Combustion exhaust within the cylinder 18 is forced out an exhaust port when an exhaust valve 28 is in an open position. The exhaust valve position is regulated by an exhaust cam shaft 30. The exhaust is treated in an exhaust system and is released to atmosphere. Although single intake and exhaust valves 22,28 are illustrated, it can be appreciated that the engine 12 can include multiple intake and exhaust valves 22,28 per cylinder 18.
The engine system 10 can include an intake cam phaser 32 and an exhaust cam phaser 34 that respectively regulate the rotational timing of the intake and exhaust cam shafts 24, 30. More specifically, the timing or phase angle of the respective intake and exhaust cam shafts 24, 30 can be retarded or advanced with respect to each other or with respect to a location of the piston within the cylinder 18 or crankshaft position. In this manner, the position of the intake and exhaust valves 22,28 can be regulated with respect to each other or with respect to a location of the piston within the cylinder 18. By regulating the position of the intake valve 22 and the exhaust valve 28, the quantity of air/fuel mixture ingested into the cylinder 18 and therefore the engine torque is regulated.
The engine system 10 can also include an exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) system 36. The EGR system 36 includes an EGR valve 38 that regulates exhaust flow back into the intake manifold 14. The EGR system is generally implemented to regulate emissions. However, the mass of exhaust air that is circulated back into the intake manifold 14 also affects engine torque output.
A control module 40 operates the engine based on the torque-based engine control of the present disclosure. More specifically, the control module 40 generates a throttle control signal and a spark advance control signal based on a desired engine speed (RPMDES). A throttle position signal generated by a throttle position sensor (TPS) 42. An operator input 43, such as an accelerator pedal, generates an operator input signal. The control module 40 commands the throttle 16 to a steady-state position to achieve a desired throttle area (ATHRDES) and commands the spark timing to achieve a desired spark timing (SDES). A throttle actuator (not shown) adjusts the throttle position based on the throttle control signal.
An intake air temperature (IAT) sensor 44 is responsive to a temperature of the intake air flow and generates an intake air temperature (IAT) signal. A mass airflow (MAF) sensor 46 is responsive to the mass of the intake air flow and generates a MAF signal. A manifold absolute pressure (MAP) sensor 48 is responsive to the pressure within the intake manifold 14 and generates a MAP signal. An engine coolant temperature sensor 50 is responsive to a coolant temperature and generates an engine temperature signal. An engine speed sensor 52 is responsive to a rotational speed (i.e., RPM) of the engine 12 and generates in an engine speed signal. Each of the signals generated by the sensors is received by the control module 40.
The engine system 10 can also include a turbo or supercharger 54 that is driven by the engine 12 or engine exhaust. The turbo 54 compresses air drawn in from the intake manifold 14. More particularly, air is drawn into an intermediate chamber of the turbo 54. The air in the intermediate chamber is drawn into a compressor (not shown) and is compressed therein. The compressed air flows back to the intake manifold 14 through a conduit 56 for combustion in the cylinders 18. A bypass valve 58 is disposed within the conduit 56 and regulates the flow of compressed air back into the intake manifold 14.
The engine torque control of the present disclosure determines a desired throttle area (ATHRDES) based on a pressure ratio (PR), a requested engine torque (TREQ) and an estimated engine torque (TEST). TREQ is determined based on an operator input including, but not limited to, an accelerator pedal position. PR is determined as the ratio between MAP and a barometric pressure (PBARO). PBARO can be directly measured using a sensor (not shown) or can be calculated using other known parameters. A reference torque (TREF) is initially provided by an arbitration ring and is subsequently rate limited based on PR and TREQ to provide a rate limited TREF (TREFRL) By rate limiting TREF, undesired, abrupt changes in engine operation are avoided.
TREFRL is summed with a corrected torque error (TERRCOR). More specifically, a torque error (TERR) is determined as the difference between TREFRL and TEST. TEST is determined by an engine control module (ECM), as explained in further detail below. TERRCOR is determined using a proportional-integral function based on the following relationship:
TERRCOR=kP(PR)*TERR+k1(PR)*∫TERR (1)
where:
Whether the engine is operating in steady-state is determined based on RPM and TREFRL. For example, current and previous values are monitored for both RPM and TREFRL. These values are filtered and a comparison is made between the respective current and previous values. For example, a current RPM is compared to a previous RPM and a current TREFRL is compared to a previous TREFRL. If the differences between the respective values are both less than corresponding threshold differences, the engine is deemed to be operating in steady-state and a steady-state flag (FLAGSS) is set equal to 1. If either one of the respective differences is greater than its corresponding threshold difference, the engine is deemed to be operating in a transient state and FLAGSS is set equal to 0.
A desired MAP (MAPDES) and a desired air per cylinder (APCDES) are determined based on TREFCOR. More specifically, MAPDES is determined using an inverse MAP-based torque model in accordance with the following relationship:
MAPDES=TMAP−1((TREFCOR+f(ΔT)), S, I, E, AF, OT, N) (2)
where:
MAPDES can be filtered to provide a filtered MAPDES (MAPDESF). More specifically, MAPDESF is determined based on PR and SS in accordance with the following relationship:
where:
where:
Φ is based on PR in accordance with the following relationships:
PCRITICAL is defined as the pressure ratio at which the velocity of the air flowing past the throttle equals the velocity of sound. This condition is called choked or critical flow. The critical pressure ratio is determined by:
where γ is equal to the ratio of specific heats for air and range from about 1.3 to about 1.4.
Referring now to
In step 212, control determines whether the engine is operating in steady-state. If the engine is operating in steady-state, control continues in step 214. If the engine is not operating in steady-state, control continues in step 216. In step 214, control sets FLAGSS equal to 1. In step 216, control sets FLAGSS equal to 0. In step 217, control corrects TERR based on FLAGSS, as described above. In step 218, control corrects TREF based on the corrected TERR.
Control determines MAPDES and APCDES based on the corrected TREF in step 219. Control filters MAPDES based on FLAGSS, as described in detail above, in step 220. In step 222, control determines MAFDES based on APCDES. Control determines ATHRDES based on MAPDES and MAFDES in step 224. In step 226, control regulates engine operation based ATHRDES and control ends.
Referring now to
The PR module 300 determines PR based on MAP and PBARO. PR is output to the TREF module 302, the corrector module 308 and the filter module 312. The TREF module determines and rate limits TREF (i.e., to provide TREFRL) based on TREQ and PR. TREFRL is output to a summer 320, a summer 322 and the FLAGSS module 310. The FLAGSS module 310 determines whether the engine is operating in steady-state and sets FLAGSS accordingly. FLAGSS is output to the corrector module 308 and the filter module 312. The summer 322 inverts TEST, which is output from the ECM 318, and sums TREFRL and the inverted TEST to determine TERR. TERR is output to the corrector module 308.
The corrector module 308 selectively corrects TERR based on PR and FLAGSS, and outputs TERRCOR. More specifically, if FLAGSS indicates that the engine is operating in steady-state, TERR is corrected, whereby TERR is not equal to the output TERRCOR. If FLAGSS does not indicate that the engine is operating in steady-state, TERR is not corrected, whereby TERR is equal to the output TERRCOR. The summer 320 sums TREFRL and TERRCOR to provide TREFCOR, which is output to the MAPDES module 304 and the APCDES module 306.
The MAPDES module 304 determines MAPDES based on RPM and TREFCOR and outputs MAPDES to the filter module 312. The APCDES module 306 determines APCDES based on TREFCOR and outputs APCDES to the MAFDES module 314. The filter module 312 filters MAPDES based on FLAGSS and PR to provide MAPDESF. The MAFDES module 314 determines MAFDES based on APCDES. Both MAPDESF and MAFDES are output to the ATHRDES module 316, which determines ATHRDES based thereon. ATHRDES is output to the ECM 318, which regulates engine operation based thereon.
The engine torque control of the present disclosure provides accurate transient or steady-state torque control under varying environmental conditions by considering the pressure ratio. Traditional systems that don't consider the pressure ratio implement a linear relationship for all pressures. As a result, a high gain is provided for all pressures, which can lead to instability and overshooting in such traditional systems. This accurate engine torque control is achieved under all combinations of engine load, RPM, ignition timing, intake and exhaust timing and the like. Furthermore, the engine torque control enables an automated calibration process to be implemented, which significantly reduces the time and effort required to calibrate an engine. More specifically, the engine torque control is based on a torque model, which unifies all of the inputs and outputs. As a result, the torque model automates the calibration process, wherein an input or inputs can be changed and the effect on the outputs is readily provided.
Those skilled in the art can now appreciate from the foregoing description that the broad teachings of the present disclosure can be implemented in a variety of forms. Therefore, while this disclosure has been described in connection with particular examples thereof, the true scope of the disclosure should not be so limited since other modifications will become apparent to the skilled practitioner upon a study of the drawings, the specification and the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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60860010 | Nov 2006 | US |