The present invention relates to a method and a control system for providing enhancing stability control in vehicle having an electric powertrain.
Certain vehicles can be driven using motor torque from one or more electrical traction motors. For example, hybrid electric vehicles can selectively disconnect an internal combustion engine from a transmission input member in an electric-only (EV) operating mode in order to conserve fuel, as well as to deliver immediate motor torque to the transmission input member. The engine can be cranked and fueled automatically above a threshold speed, with engine torque used either alone or in conjunction with motor torque from the traction motor(s) to propel the vehicle. Battery electric vehicles dispense of the engine altogether, and thus operate solely in an EV mode. Extended-range electric vehicles provide a unique combination of technologies, wherein a smaller engine is used solely to power an electric generator beyond a threshold EV range, thereby extending the effective EV range of the vehicle by recharging a battery or directly powering the traction motor(s).
A method and a control system are provided herein for use in a vehicle having an electric drivetrain, e.g., a hybrid, a battery electric, or an extended-range electric vehicle. The present method is automatically executed via the control system to maintain driveline stability when the vehicle is operating in a sustained electric-only (EV) mode, or when the vehicle is executing a predetermined EV mode shift or transition. For example, EV launch is a possible EV mode within the scope of the present invention, and a mode shift to or from an EV mode is a possible EV mode transition, both of which could benefit from the stability enhancement of the present method.
When a vehicle operates in an EV mode, the various engine-associated energy absorbing elements, such as drive shaft compliance or compliance provided by optional engine damping assemblies, are disconnected or otherwise isolated from the electric drivetrain. A battery electric vehicle typically lacks such elements. Driveline instability may be created by the combination of high driveline efficiencies in an electric powertrain, which has little inherent damping, and more than one source of torque to be applied to the drive wheels of the vehicle. The present control system and accompanying method can be used to enhance driveline stability control in such vehicles.
In particular, the present control system uses a stability control module in a powertrain torque control loop of the vehicle to improve overall driveline stability control. The stability control module in one embodiment automatically applies a notch filter that varies its filtering capabilities in conjunction with changing vehicle speed, i.e., the stability control module acts in a manner that is fully adaptive to changing vehicle speed. In one embodiment, a lookup table of two or more different notch filters is indexed by vehicle speed and stored in memory, with the method including accessing the table using associated hardware components of the control system.
The center frequency of the notch filter(s) may be optimized for any mechanical resonance present along the driveline at various vehicle speeds, and stored as calibration values for the different vehicle speeds, or alternatively stored as calibrated bands or speed ranges. The control system can adaptively tune the center frequency of the notch filter(s) and damping coefficients of a filtering transfer function, e.g., a Laplace transform, to the present vehicle speed. The stability control module may optionally work in conjunction with any existing active driveline damping control methodologies, i.e., a methodology wherein a damping motor torque command acts directly on an output speed feedback value.
A method for controlling driveline stability in a vehicle having a traction motor and a transmission includes determining a speed of the vehicle prior to entering an EV mode or prior to an EV mode transition, and then filtering, via a control system, an initial motor torque command to the traction motor using a notch filter. The notch filter applies different filtering characteristics with changing vehicle speed to generate a filtered motor torque command. The method further includes controlling the traction motor via the control system using the filtered motor torque command to thereby enhance driveline stability.
The notch filter may have a center frequency and damping coefficient, each being tunable as a function of the changing vehicle speed. For example, the present method may include automatically selecting a center frequency and damping coefficient from a lookup table indexed by vehicle speed.
A vehicle includes an electric fraction motor, a transmission, and a control system. The control system is configured to control driveline stability in the vehicle during an EV operating mode and during a predetermined transition from the EV operating mode. The control system is configured for determining a speed of the vehicle prior to entering the EV operating mode or prior to executing the predetermined transition, and using a notch filter to filter an initial motor torque command. The initial motor torque command is transmitted from a propulsion torque control module of the control system as a function of vehicle speed. The control system thereafter controls the electric traction motor during the EV mode or the predetermined transition using the filtered motor torque command.
The above features and advantages, and other features and advantages of the present invention are readily apparent from the following detailed description of the best modes for carrying out the invention when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
A vehicle 10 is shown in
The vehicle 10 includes a control system 40 that is configured to selectively execute a method 100 by generating and transmitting a set of control signals (arrow 42). The control signals (arrow 42) are used to control driveline stability when operating in an EV operating mode or when executing an EV mode shift or transition, as set forth in detail below. The vehicle 10 includes a transmission 14, shown here in lever diagram form for illustrative clarity. One possible embodiment of the transmission 14 includes a respective first and a second planetary gear set 20 and 30. The first planetary gear set 20 has three nodes 22, 24, and 26. Likewise, the second planetary gear set 30 has three nodes 32, 34, and 36. Depending on the embodiment, the nodes 22, 24, and 26 and the nodes 32, 34, and 36 of the respective first and second gear sets 20 and 30 can be a sun gear, a ring gear, and a carrier member.
The transmission 14 of
A first and second electric fraction motor 16 and 18 selectively drive the planetary gear sets 20 and 30, respectively, during different EV operating modes. As shown, the first traction motor 16 may be connected to node 26, e.g., a sun gear, and the traction motor 18 may be connected to node 32, which may also be a sun gear in the same embodiment. A transmission output member 38 is connected to node 34 of the second planetary gear set 30, e.g., a carrier member, with output torque transmitted to a set of drive wheels (not shown) via the transmission output member.
In the embodiment shown in
In the second electric-only mode (EV2), the engine 12 remains off and the input brake 11 remains engaged. The clutch 19 is applied this mode. As with EV1, both traction motors 16 and 18 can provide positive propulsion or negative regenerative braking torque. However, as noted above the lack of engine damping in the EV operating mode(s), e.g., from a separate damper assembly 23 represented schematically in
The control system 40 shown in
Referring to
Outputs from the propulsion torque control module 50 may include an engine torque command (arrow 55), which is zero in any EV mode, and initial motor torque commands (arrows 57 and 59). In a vehicle having just one fraction motor, only one motor torque command will be output from the torque control module 50, although two motors are described in
The stability control module 80 can include at least as many different signal filters as there are traction motors. Therefore, in keeping with the two-mode embodiment shown in
A notch filter can be represented mathematically by the following transfer function:
where ωm, and ωp are the center frequencies (typically chosen as the same values) and ξm, and ξp are the damping coefficients for the numerator and denominator, respectively. The center frequencies and the damping coefficients may be stored beforehand as calibration values, e.g., in a lookup table 28 indexed by vehicle speed.
Referring briefly to
Also note the change in phase in conjunction with vehicle speed in
Referring once again to
As understood by those of ordinary skill in the art, active damping control uses feedback from measured engine speed, motor speed(s), wheel speeds, and other values to track and compensate for higher frequency driveline disturbances. The damping control module 70 may include a high-pass filter 74 that filters out any high-frequency disturbances presented in the output speed signal, i.e., above a calibrated frequency threshold, and an active damping gain module 76 that applies calibrated proportional and integral gains as needed to generate the required corrective damping torque commands (arrows 75 and 77) to enhance the active damping control. The torque commands (arrows 75 and 77) are eventually fed into the electrical propulsion system 90 of the vehicle 10 shown
Referring to
During such transitions, significant torque perturbations can be caused by torque interruption, torque reversal, and inaccurate clutch torque estimations. The torque perturbations in turn can potentially cause large driveline excitations, which are largely caused by complicated mode transitions including multiple torque and speed control phases. The method 100 is therefore automatically executed by the control system 40 of
Beginning with step 102, the control system 40 of
At step 104, vehicle speed is measured or otherwise determined, such as by using speed sensors position with respect to the transmission output member 38 shown in
At step 106, the control system 40 of
At step 108, the values from step 106 are applied via a notch filter using the equation set forth above. The electrical propulsion system 90 is thereafter controlled using the outputs from the notch filters 60, 160 of
While the best modes for carrying out the invention have been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this invention relates will recognize various alternative designs and embodiments for practicing the invention within the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/388,119, filed on Sep. 30, 2010, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61388119 | Sep 2010 | US |