The present disclosure relates to electric motor commutation during clutch actuation. A conventional brushless direct current (“BLDC”) motor typically includes a stator having electromagnetic poles with windings thereon, and a rotor comprising permanent magnets creating permanent magnetic pole pairs. The stator and the rotor magnetically interact with each other when electric current flows in the stator windings. Phase commutation of current flowing through each of the stator windings is performed to create a continuously rotating magnetic field.
Hall-effect sensors in BLDC motors are typically used for magnetic pole position sensing, and to commutate the motor based on the change of the Hall-effect sensor signals. Because the BLDC motor may include a positional tolerance of the Hall-effect sensors, an optimal commutation point may not coincide with the state of commutation signaled by the Hall-effect sensors. The method described herein provides for more consistent BLDC motor performance in final drive unit clutches.
The present disclosure provides for a method of operating a final drive unit clutch. The method includes providing an electric motor coupled with a clutch. The electric motor including a stator, a first Hall-effect sensor coupled with the stator, a second Hall-effect sensor coupled with the stator, a third Hall-effect sensor coupled with the stator, and a rotor having at least one magnetic pole pair. The method also provides for a controller in electrical communication with the electric motor. The method includes determining a first ideal commutation point, and calculating a first offset of a first Hall-effect sensor state change from the ideal commutation point. The method further includes calculating a time delay of commutation, during the clutch transition between a non-torque transmitting position and a torque transmitting position, utilizing the first offset such that a second Hall-effect sensor state change corresponds with a second ideal commutation point.
The accompanying drawings are incorporated herein as part of the specification. The drawings described herein illustrate embodiments of the presently disclosed subject matter, and are illustrative of selected principles and teachings of the present disclosure. However, the drawings do not illustrate all possible implementations of the presently disclosed subject matter, and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure in any way.
It is to be understood that the invention may assume various alternative orientations and step sequences, except where expressly specified to the contrary. It is also to be understood that the specific devices, assemblies, systems and processes illustrated in the attached drawings, and described in the following specification are simply exemplary embodiments of the inventive concepts defined herein. Hence, specific dimensions, directions or other physical characteristics relating to the embodiments disclosed are not to be considered as limiting, unless expressly stated otherwise. Also, although they may not be, like elements in various embodiments described herein may be commonly referred to with like reference numerals within this section of the application.
BLDC motors are utilized in applications across many industries including automotive, aerospace, consumer, medical, industrial automation equipment, and instrumentation applications. In one embodiment, the subject matter disclosed herein may be utilized in the operation of all-wheel drive vehicle connect/disconnect systems. With reference to
In an embodiment, as illustrated in
When the rotor 110 magnetic poles pass near the Hall-effect sensors 102, 104, 106, the Hall-effect sensors 102, 104, 106 give a high or low signal (i.e., pulse) indicating the passing of a North or South magnetic pole. Based on the combination of the three Hall-effect sensors 102, 104, 106, the exact sequence of commutation can be determined. A Hall state is defined by a predetermined position, or by a continuous set of predetermined positions, of the rotor 110 relative to one or more of the Hall-effect sensors 102, 104, 106.
During operation of the BLDC motor 100, two of the three phases of commutation conduct current while the third phase has zero current in order for the rotor 110 to rotate. The zero current phase may also be referred to as a dead phase. Hall states can be used to create a one-to-one relation with rotor phases and the direction which the voltage needs to be applied. For three phase BLDC motors, there are six possible Hall phase combinations which cover exactly one electrical revolution; therefore, the position resolution using the three phase Hall-effect sensors is limited to one sixth of an electrical revolution.
As illustrated in
A first step in changing Hall states at the optimal commutation point includes utilizing a controller 112 to learn the ideal commutation point and the position offsets of the Hall-effect sensors 102, 104, 106. To learn the offsets during active operation of the motor, the described method makes use of a dead phase during commutation. As illustrated in
For the following description, the counter clockwise rotational direction of the BLDC motor shaft 101—as seen looking at the shaft 101 as illustrated in
The graph illustrated in
The graph illustrated in
From the foregoing, the Hall state can be expressed as:
Hall_state=Hall1+2*Hall2+4*Hall3
Where Hall1 is equal to the state of Hall-effect sensor 102, Hall2 is equal to the state of Hall-effect sensor 104, and Hall3 is equal to the state of Hall-effect sensor 106. The state of each Hall-effect sensor 102, 104, 106 is either 0 or 1. This expression enables the combined state of the three Hall-effect sensors 102, 104, 106 to be stated as one number between 1 and 6.
In an embodiment, calculating the Hall-effect sensor offsets φA, φB, φC may be performed when the clutch pack (not depicted) of the rear drive unit clutch 10 is between a fully open state, and the kiss point of the clutch plates. The kiss point of the clutch plates is the point at which the clutch pack begins to transmit torque. At this phase of operating the rear drive unit clutch 10, the BLDC motor 100 experiences high speed and low load. The high speed of the BLDC motor 100 produces more back-EMF than a low speed of the BLDC motor 100, thereby producing more reliable calculation of the Hall-effect sensor offsets φA, φB, φC because the influence of signal noise is reduced.
The first step in calculating the Hall-effect sensor offsets φA, φB, φC may be accomplished by calculating the back-EMF zero-crossing times from three measured phase voltages Va, Vb, and Vc. In an embodiment, as illustrated in
e
c
=V
c−[(Va+Vb)/2]
V
n
=V
a
−RI−L(dl/dt)−ea
V
n
=V
b
+RI+L(dl/dt)−eb
e
a
+e
b
+e
c=0
Sampling phase voltages Va, Vb, and Vc at the end of the on or off period for a Hall-effect sensor 102, 104, 106 reduces the effects of resonance/noise. In an embodiment, the sampling point of the three phase voltages Va, Vb, and Vc may occur after the 50% on-time. In an embodiment, the phase voltages Va, Vb, and Vc may be sampled thirty times to determine the back-EMF at each sampled time.
In another embodiment, the back-EMF zero-crossing may be calculated utilizing one phase voltage Vc and a DC-link voltage Vdc at a motor/generator on-time sampling and a motor/generator off-time sampling as expressed below:
motor/generator on-time sampling: ec=(2/3)Vc−(Vdc/3)
motor/generator off-time sampling: ec=(2/3)Vc
As illustrated in
φA=(t−3−t23)*BLDCspeed−30
The Hall-effect sensor offset φA may also be calculated by subtracting a value of time t2 from the value of time at t23, multiplying this obtained value by the speed of the BLDG motor 100, and subtracting this obtained value from 30.
φA=30−(t23−t2)*BLDCspeed
Where, in both expressions, t2 is a value of time where the back-EMF plot 204 has a value of zero; t_3 is another value of time where the back-EMF plot 204 has a value of zero; t23 is a value of time where the combined Hall state changes from 2 to 3; and 30 is the number of degrees of rotation between t−3 and the ideal commutation point 200, and between t2 and the ideal commutation point 200. The Hall-effect sensor offsets φB, φC are similarly calculated.
The ideal commutation point 200 is related to the location of the back-EMF zero-crossings, and is located at a predetermined number of degrees between two consecutive back-EMF zero-crossings. In an embodiment, the ideal commutation point is located at thirty degrees between two consecutive back-EMF zero-crossings. To improve performance of the BLDC motor 100 and the rear drive unit clutch 10, the method described herein causes the signals of the Hall-effect sensors 102, 104, 106 to correspond with the back-EMF zero-crossings. The gap between the ideal commutation point 200 and the Hall-effect sensor signals is the Hall-effect sensor offsets φA, φB, φC.
A second step in changing Hall states at the optimal commutation point includes determining the value of time to delay commutation utilizing the Hall-effect sensor offsets φA, φB, φC. Where the Hall-effect sensor offsets φA, φB, φC comprise a negative value, commutation is advanced during counterclockwise rotation (i.e., clamping of the rear drive unit clutch pack). Where the Hall-effect sensor offsets φA, φB, φC comprise a positive value, commutation is delayed during counterclockwise rotation (i.e., transitioning of the rear drive unit clutch pack from a non-torque transmitting position to a torque transmitting position). With reference to
T
commut_2
=T
hallchange_1+(60−|φA|)/BLDCspeed
The calculation for determining the time to delay commutation where φB is negative and φA is positive may be expressed as:
T
commut_2
=T
hallchange_1+(60+|φA|)/BLDCspeed
Where Tcommut_2 is the time delay of commutation for Hall-effect sensor 104; Thallchange_1 is the time of state change for Hall-effect sensor 102; 60 is the number of degrees of rotation in a Hall state; φA is the offset of Hall-effect sensor 102; and BLDCspeed is the rotational speed of the BLDG motor 100.
With reference to
T
commut_1
=T
hallchange_1+(φA/BLDCspeed)
As illustrated in
The advantages associated with the above-described method and structure include, but are not limited to, good dynamic and low speed performance as compared to direct back-EMF methods. Further, the above-described method and structure is less noise sensitive compared with known designs, which makes it more reliable and less prone to incorrect readings. Another significant advantage is that the Hall-effect sensor offsets φA, φB, φC are learned inside of the rear drive unit 10. As a result, no separate end-of-line calibration is required. The present system does require three voltage sensors (not depicted) on the controller 112. Ideally, the system uses pre-existing voltage sensors. Yet another advantage of the present system is that the BLDC motor 100 can be easily swapped for repair and/or replacement without the need for elaborate, complicated, time consuming, and/or expensive procedures.
While various embodiments of the presently disclosed subject matter have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example, and not limitation. It will be apparent to persons skilled in the relevant arts that the disclosed subject matter may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The embodiments described above are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative, not restrictive.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2017/067908 | 12/21/2017 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62437214 | Dec 2016 | US |