The invention relates to an exhaust-gas turbocharger according to the preamble of claim 1.
An exhaust-gas turbocharger normally comprises a housing in which a shaft is mounted. A turbine wheel and a compressor wheel are arranged rotationally conjointly on the shaft. The turbine wheel is set in rotation by means of exhaust gas. The shaft and the compressor wheel rotate with the turbine. Charge air in the accommodating chamber of the compressor wheel is thereby compressed. In exhaust-gas turbochargers, it is sometimes necessary to determine the rate of rotation or rotational speed.
It is an object of the present invention to specify an exhaust-gas turbocharger which, while being inexpensive to produce and operable with low maintenance, permits a precise measurement of the rotational speed and/or of the rate of rotation. It is also an object of the present invention to specify a method for measuring rotational speed or rate of rotation in the exhaust-gas turbocharger.
The object is achieved by the features of the independent claims. The dependent claims relate to preferred refinements of the invention.
According to the invention, a pressure sensor is used in the exhaust-gas turbocharger. Extremely small pressure fluctuations are measured by means of said pressure sensor. Said pressure fluctuations arise as a result of the blades of the compressor wheel or of the turbine wheel passing the pressure sensor. It is particularly preferable for the pressure sensor to be mounted at the compressor wheel, and thus for the pressure fluctuations at the compressor wheel to be measured. It is alternatively also possible for the pressure fluctuation to be measured at the turbine wheel by means of the pressure sensor. The rotational speed and thus also the rate of rotation can be determined from the pressure fluctuation, which is dependent on the number of blades.
When the blades of the compressor wheel or of the turbine wheel pass the pressure sensor, they alternately generate a pressure rise (also: pressure peak) and a subsequent pressure drop (also: pressure trough). A blade can be unequivocally detected when a pressure rise exceeds a certain pressure threshold value. The rotational speed and/or the rate of rotation can thus be determined on the basis of the number of blades. Here, both the rotational speed and also the rate of rotation of the shaft, of the compressor wheel and of the turbine wheel are always equal.
Further details, advantages and features of the present invention become apparent from the following description of an exemplary embodiment with reference to the drawing, in which:
An exemplary embodiment of the exhaust-gas turbocharger 1 according to the invention will be explained in detail below on the basis of
A pressure sensor 8 is arranged in the housing 2. The pressure-sensitive part of the pressure sensor 8 measures the pressure in the accommodating chamber 9 of the compressor wheel. Here, the pressure sensor 8 is arranged perpendicular to the individual blades 6 of the compressor wheel 5.
A section A-A is labeled in
A pressure profile or a pressure fluctuation 10 measured by the pressure sensor 8 is plotted in the lower part of
As can be seen from
If one visualizes an imaginary observer at an arbitrary point along the contour perpendicular to the blades 6, the observer sees a pressure rise 12 or pressure peak coming towards him as the blade 6 approaches. Said pressure rise 12 reaches its maximum when the blade 6 is opposite the observer. The pressure sensor 8 is positioned in the place of said imaginary observer. The pressure rise 12 then decreases again until the next blade 6 approaches. A determination of the rotational speed is thus possible by means of a very fast and precise pressure measurement. By contrast to conventional eddy-current sensors, the pressure sensor always functions equally effectively regardless of the material of the compressor wheel 5 or of the turbine wheel 4. Specifically, the measurement principle is based only on flow processes. Furthermore, the rotation measurement according to the invention is less sensitive with regard to the distance to the blades 6 than is the case with eddy-current sensors.
In addition to the above written description of the invention, reference is hereby explicitly made to the diagrammatic illustration of the invention in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102012009441.8 | May 2012 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2013/038590 | 4/29/2013 | WO | 00 |