The present invention relates to an electronically controlled fuel injection method for supplying fuel to engines. More particularly, the present invention relates to a fuel injection method for injecting fuel accurately without being affected by variations in supply voltage or in coil resistance of a solenoid included in a fuel injector.
When the supply voltage VB is low, the microcomputer 13 provides a field effect transistor (hereinafter, “FET”) driver 15 with a pulse having such a waveform that elongates the on-time period of an FET 14. As a result, a coil current flows through a solenoid 16 for a longer time to elongate a fuel injection time. When the supply voltage VB is high, to the contrary, the fuel injection time is shortened to keep the fuel injection amount unchanged. Immediately after the FET 14 is turned from ON to OFF, the current flowing through the solenoid 16 is redirected to a zener diode 18 via a diode 17. As a result, the drain voltage of the FET 14 is equalized to the voltage of the zener diode 18, which consumes power to halt fuel injection.
The conventional art for correcting the fuel injection amount by detecting variations in the supply voltage is disclosed, for example, in Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. S58-28537. The conventional art for correcting the fuel injection amount by detecting the supply voltage and the drive current flowing through the solenoid is disclosed, for example, in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2002-4921.
In the correction control system based on the supply voltage VB as shown in
In contrast, the constant current control system shown in
Thus, as shown in
The present invention is made in view of the above problems, and its object is to provide a fuel injection method for precise correction of the fuel injection amount by eliminating the offset component that are generated when detecting the current flowing through the solenoid for fuel injection.
To solve the above problems and achieve the object, a fuel injection method according to claim 1 includes: starting driving of a solenoid for fuel injection; detecting a coil current before starting driving of the solenoid; detecting a coil current when driving the solenoid; calculating a difference current between the coil current detected when driving the solenoid and the coil current detected before starting driving of the solenoid; correcting a width of a drive pulse for driving the solenoid based on the difference current calculated; and halting driving of the solenoid.
According to the invention described in claim 1, the offset component can be detected by calculating difference current between coil currents respectively detected before and after every driving the solenoid, to correct the drive pulse width accurately by eliminating the offset component.
A fuel injection method according to claim 2 further includes adjusting the difference current based on a predetermined span correction factor after calculating the difference current. In the injection method, the width of the drive pulse is corrected based on the difference current adjusted.
According to the invention described in claim 2, an appropriate current span can be set to correct the drive pulse width accurately.
In a fuel injection method according to claim 3, the detecting the coil current before starting driving of the solenoid is executed for every driving of the solenoid to correct the width of the drive pulse for every driving of the solenoid.
According to the invention described in claim 3, the offset component can be eliminated for every driving of the solenoid that generates the offset component, to correct the drive pulse stably for long periods by eliminating the influence of temperature drift.
A fuel injection method according to claim 4 further includes calculating a span correction factor when adjusting a product. In the fuel injection method, the calculating a span correction factor includes calculating a span correction factor based on coil currents that are respectively detected before and after flowing a predetermined current through the solenoid.
According to the invention described in claim 4, the current span can be calculated for each product to correct the drive pulse width accurately using the current span of each product.
A fuel injection method according to claim 5 further includes storing the span correction factor calculated in a rewritable storage unit.
According to the invention described in claim 5, appropriate offset correction can be performed immediately after product shipment using the span correction factor of each product stored in the storage unit at the shipment and kept in the product in an appropriate state.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention will be described below in detail, with reference to the drawings. First explained is a configuration of an electromagnetic fuel injection pump system applying a fuel injection method according to the present invention.
As shown in
When the FET 14 is turned from ON to OFF, the zener diode 18 equalizes the drain voltage of the FET 14 with the voltage of the zener diode 18 to consume the solenoid current. The ECU 36 contains the microcomputer 13.
The supply voltage detector 21 detects the supply voltage VB and feeds the detected value to the microcomputer 13. One end of the solenoid 16 is connected to the supply terminal 11, to which the supply voltage VB is applied. The other end of the solenoid 16 is connected to the drain of the FET 14 and to the gate of the FET 14 via the diode 17 and the zener diode 18. Based on the control signal output from the microcomputer 13, the FET driver 15 generates a drive pulse and feeds it to the gate of the FET 14.
The source of the FET 14 is grounded via the current detection resistor 22. When the drive pulse turns the FET 14 on, a current (coil current) flows from the supply terminal 11 through the FET 14 and the current detection resistor 22 to the ground terminal to drive the solenoid 16. The value of the current flowing through the current detection resistor 22 is fed as a voltage signal to the current detector 23, which detects the current based on the input voltage. The detected signal output from the current detector 23 is fed into the microcomputer 13 and converted into a digital signal at the A/D converter 26 to execute correction of the drive pulse. The internal configuration of the current detector 23 is same as that shown in
Correction of the injection amount from the electromagnetic fuel injection pump thus configured is briefly explained. The coil current at the time of driving the solenoid 16 for fuel injection is detected and, based on the detected value, the on-time period of the FET 14 is adjusted to correct the drive pulse width.
In
As shown in
A relation among Ir, Pw and Pr has been found experimentally and stored in a non-volatile memory in the microcomputer 13.
Offset correction executed by the microcomputer 13 is explained next.
Thereafter, the drive current is turned ON (Step S13), elapse of a fixed time period (the predetermined time Tr shown in
Vadini=Vadin−Vadinoffset (1)
Thereafter, based on a span correction factor (Kspan) 67 that is a certain factor previously stored in a memory, a current span is adjusted using the following equation (2) (Step S17).
Vadins=Vadini×Kspan (2)
The current span-adjusted value (Vadins) is output as the drive current 52 to the drive current correction (Step S2 in
According to the above offset correction, the offset components are detected when driving of the solenoid 16 is OFF. Therefore, during driving of the solenoid 16, the offset components are eliminated to calculate the drive pulse width accurately. The offset detection is executed in synchronization with driving of the solenoid 16 to detect the offsets for every halt on driving and to eliminate the offset components for every driving of the solenoid 16.
Calculation of a current span component is explained next. The offset-corrected drive current has not been corrected by the current span. The effect of span correction in an actual circuit is explained. An error of the current detection resistor (Ri) 22 dominantly effects on the span. If the error in the resistance is ±2%, the error directly appears as an error in the span. Accordingly, on adjusting a product board before shipment, for example, the correction factor for adjusting the span is measured and stored in a non-volatile memory. The correction factor is then read out to correct the current span of the drive current for the normal running.
After waiting a certain time to elapse (Step S24), the input voltage (Vadin1a) 69 of the A/D converter 26 is detected (Step S25). Then, based on the offset voltage (Voffset) stored in the memory and the input voltage (Vadin1a), the drive current component (Vadin1as) is calculated using the following equation (3) (Step S26).
Vadin1as=Vadin1a−Voffset (3)
Thereafter, based on the reference current (V1a) 68 and the result (Vadin1as) from the equation, the span correction factor 67 (coefficient) is calculated using the following equation (4) (Step S27).
Kspan=V1a/Vadin1a (4)
The calculated span correction factor (Kspan) 67 is stored in a programmable memory such as an electrically erasable programmable read only memory (hereinafter, “EEPROM”). The span correction factor (Kspan) 67 is read out of the memory for the normal driving (Step 17 in
Thus, the product board is adjusted in a production line before shipping the product. In this case, span correction factors can be programmed in a non-volatile memory such as the EEPROM to save span correction factors matched with different characteristics of respective products, improving the performance for eliminating offsets.
According to the embodiment of the present invention as described above, the current span factors suitable for the products can be determined and saved on shipping the products, and the offset components can be detected and stored when driving of the solenoid 16 is OFF. As a result, during driving of the solenoid 16, based on the current span factors and the offset components, an accurate drive pulse width can be calculated by eliminating the offset components from the detected current. The above processing is executed in synchronization with driving of the solenoid 16 to detect offsets for every halt on driving. Therefore, it can respond to voltage drifts and variations with time in the offset voltages to cancel them.
Specific numerical values of the offset voltages in the above configuration are explained using the circuit diagram shown in
When Idcp denotes the drive current (coil current), then: Vini=Idep×Ri, where R1=the resistance of the current detection resistor 22=22 mΩ.
The drive current and the voltage-converted value Vd input to the A/D converter 26 have the numeric values as indicated in the following Table 1.
When the offset correction is executed with the calculated values shown in the table, the offset voltages are input as the voltage when the solenoid 16 is OFF, and cancelled through arithmetic processing in the microcomputer 13 (offset elimination) to reduce the error to zero.
According to the present invention, when the drive pulse width applied to the solenoid for fuel injection is corrected, the current flowing through the solenoid during halts on driving the solenoid is detected as the offset component to correct the offset on driving of the solenoid. This configuration is effective to eliminate the offset voltage of the operational amplifier in the current detector and to correct the drive pulse width accurately based on an accurate current.
The above invention can eliminate the drifts due to temperature and so forth varying with time if it detects the offset for every halt on driving the solenoid. In addition, by the previous calculation of the current span correction factor, for example, on adjusting the board, the above invention can determine an appropriate current span matched with characteristics of respective products to correct the drive pulse width more accurately.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2002-316708 | Oct 2002 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP03/13909 | 10/30/2003 | WO | 00 | 4/28/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/040113 | 5/13/2004 | WO | A |
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4242729 | Weber et al. | Dec 1980 | A |
4345564 | Kawamura et al. | Aug 1982 | A |
5499608 | Meister | Mar 1996 | A |
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6420817 | Ricci-Ottati et al. | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6910644 | Nakayama et al. | Jun 2005 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1 134 010 | Oct 1982 | CA |
1038541 | Aug 1966 | GB |
58-28537 | Feb 1983 | JP |
58-107827 | Jun 1983 | JP |
62-18804 | Jan 1987 | JP |
63-106484 | May 1988 | JP |
63-223350 | Sep 1988 | JP |
2002-4921 | Jan 2002 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050284950 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |