HVAC (Heating Ventilation and Air Conditioning) systems are used for climate control of, e.g., internal cabin areas of an automobile. HVAC systems may be configured with an HVAC module having a heat exchanger disposed in a housing. An HVAC distribution system may be operatively connected to the HVAC module. An HVAC system may have one or more airflow paths for allowing air to flow, for example, to, from, and/or within the HVAC module and the HVAC distribution system. Doors or baffles may be associated with the airflow path for controlling the amount of air flowing to, through, and/or from the HVAC module and/or the HVAC distribution system.
An HVAC module for a vehicle includes a cooling unit to cool air that passes through the cooling unit and a heating unit to warm air that passes through the heating unit. The HVAC module has a housing having a plurality of airflow paths to guide the air that passes through the cooling unit or the heating unit. An upper discharge outlet temperature is indeterminate based on a temperature detected by a single temperature sensor in one of the plurality of airflow paths and a blend setting. The HVAC module includes a temperature sensor to determine a reference temperature of the air at a sensor location. The reference temperature is offset from a floor outlet temperature by a floor offset function of the blend setting. The reference temperature is offset from the upper discharge outlet temperature by an upper offset function of the blend setting.
Features of examples of the present disclosure will become apparent by reference to the following detailed description and drawings, in which like reference numerals correspond to the same or similar, though perhaps not identical, components. For the sake of brevity, reference numerals or features having a previously described function may or may not be described in connection with other drawings in which they appear.
The HVAC module of the present disclosure includes a housing, a blower, a cooling unit, and a heating unit. The cooling unit is to provide cold air and the heating unit is to provide hot air. The heating unit may be a heater core or an electrical heating device. The cooling unit may be an evaporator or an electrical cooling device. These components are typical components for an HVAC module and operate similarly to the components in a conventional HVAC system. Thus, the operation of the blower, cooling unit, and heating unit will not be explained in further detail. Further, unless specifically stated, any reference to “volume of air” or “airflow” in the specification does not specifically refer to cold air, hot air or mixed air but rather is just a generic term used for simplicity.
Examples of the present disclosure provide for an HVAC system having a temperature sensing device, and a method for estimating discharge temperature at the outlets.
In general, air flows through the heat exchangers of an automotive HVAC module. Air is discharged downstream of the heat exchangers. In examples of the present disclosure, the heat exchangers may be a cooling unit and a heating unit. In examples of the present disclosure, the temperature of the discharged air is determined as disclosed herein, but not measured directly via a temperature sensing device. The temperature sensing device monitors the temperature and sends a signal to a control device.
In examples of the present disclosure, the upper discharge outlet may be a panel outlet 56, a defrost outlet 54, or combination of the panel outlet 56 and the defrost outlet 54. The defrost outlet 54 discharges air that is ultimately directed into the passenger compartment of the vehicle 16 toward a windshield 17 of the vehicle 16 to defrost or defog the windshield 17. The HVAC module 14 may guide air to the defrost outlet 54 in a defrost mode 34 or a mix mode 35 as depicted in
In examples of the present disclosure, an upper discharge outlet temperature may be indeterminate based on a temperature detected by a single temperature sensor 18 in one of the plurality of airflow paths and a blend setting 31. In other examples of the present disclosure, the upper discharge outlet temperature may be indeterminate based on a temperature detected by a single temperature sensor 18 in one of the plurality of airflow paths and a blend setting combined with a blower setting. As used herein, an indeterminate discharge outlet temperature means that the discharge outlet temperature cannot be accurately determined based on the specified information.
Blend setting is the control setpoint between full cold (i.e., 0% hot) and full hot (i.e., 100% hot). The blend setting may be accomplished via a knob on the instrument control cluster of the vehicle 16. When full heat is desired, the knob is turned to the full heat setting. In some vehicles, the knob is turned fully to the “red” side for full heat. When full cold is desired, the knob is turned to the 0 percent heat setting. In some vehicles, the knob is turned fully to the “blue” side for full cold. In other vehicles, an automatic climate control system may control the blend setting.
In an example of the present disclosure, there is no single location in one of the plurality of airflow paths in which a single temperature sensor can be placed to allow the upper discharge temperature to be determined from a single temperature sensor in one of the plurality of airflow paths by adding or subtracting a predetermined offset temperature for a particular blend setting and/or blower setting. The airflow paths guide the air that passes through the cooling unit and/or the heating unit 15. Hot and cold air is not completely mixed in the airflow paths until reaching the discharge outlets. Therefore, the temperature at any single location in the airflow paths is not an accurate predictor of the temperature in any of the upper discharge outlets. In examples, the upper discharge outlets may be the panel outlet 56 and the defrost outlet 54. The floor outlet 53 may also be a discharge outlet in examples of the present disclosure. Depending on the mode setting, the upper discharge temperature may be the panel outlet temperature and/or the defrost outlet temperature. The mode setting is a mode control setpoint to direct airflow to the floor outlet, a panel outlet, a defrost outlet, or combinations thereof;
In examples of the present disclosure, the defrost outlet 54 discharges air that is ultimately directed into the passenger compartment of the vehicle 16 toward a windshield of the vehicle 16 to defrost or defog the windshield. The panel outlet 56 discharges air that is ultimately discharged into the passenger compartment of the vehicle 16 from the dashboard or instrument panel toward an upper portion of a first row seat in the vehicle 16.
In examples of the present disclosure, there is no single location in the airflow paths between the heat exchangers and the upper discharge outlets that allows simple determination of the panel average discharge temperature and the defrost average discharge temperature. The term panel average discharge temperature is used because the temperature of air discharged from the panel outlet(s) is not exactly the same across the face of the panel outlet(s). For example, the temperature at the left side of an outlet may be different from the temperature at the right side of an outlet. The average temperature of the air across the face of the outlet is a good measure of the cooling/heating effectiveness in the passenger compartment of the vehicle. As used herein, “simple determination” means that there is a predetermined difference between the sensed temperature and the discharge temperature. In other words, if there is simple determination, the discharge temperature may be calculated by adding an offset temperature to the sensed temperature. In examples of the present disclosure, the offset temperature may be a function of the blend setting. In examples of the present disclosure, the offset temperature may also be a function of the blower setting and/or the HVAC mode. For example, the floor offset function may be a function of the blend setting and/or the blower setting. The blower setting is a control setpoint to regulate an amount of airflow from a blower through the HVAC module 14. The upper offset function may be a function of the blend setting and/or the blower setting. The floor offset function may be a function of at least two of the blend setting, a mode setting and a blower setting. The upper offset function may be a function of at least two of the blend setting, the mode setting and the blower setting.
As used in the previous paragraph, the term “function” is used in the mathematical sense. That is, a function is a relation between a set of inputs and a set of permissible outputs with the property that each input is related to exactly one output. In graphs, functions must pass the “vertical line test”: if a vertical line can be drawn anywhere on a graph so that it hits the graph in more than one spot, then the graph is NOT a function. As shown in
As an illustration, consider an HVAC system that, unlike examples of the present disclosure, has a front panel average temperature 77 and a defrost average temperature that may be accurately estimated by adding a constant (e.g., 3 degrees) to a sensed temperature 43 from one of the airflow paths. If the blend setting is 60% hot and the sensed temperature 43 is 50 degrees C., and the front panel outlet temperature 77 is 53 degrees C., the front panel outlet temperature 77 may be determined by adding 3 degrees C. to the sensed temperature 43. In the same HVAC system, if the blend setting is 60% hot and the sensed temperature 43 is 82 degrees, then the defrost average temperature 75 would be 82+3=85 degrees C.
However, in examples of the present disclosure, there is no single location in any of the airflow paths in the housing 12 that allows a function of the blend setting to be added to the sensed temperature from that single location to determine the panel outlet temperature and the defrost temperature in all modes that discharge air through the panel outlet or the defrost outlet. Thus, previous HVAC systems would have either accepted the cost of an additional temperature sensor, or accepted inaccurate temperature setting. To illustrate, in a bilevel mode 36 at a blend setting of 50% hot the panel outlet temperature may be offset by +5 degrees from the sensed temperature at a particular location. In the same illustration, in a mix mode 35, with all else the same, the panel outlet temperature may be offset by −3 degrees from the sensed temperature at the particular location in the airflow path. Therefore, in the illustration, there is no function of the blend setting because there are 2 offsets for the same blend setting—the vertical line test is not satisfied.
In the bilevel mode, the HVAC discharges air through the panel outlet(s) 56 and the floor outlet 53. In the mix mode, the HVAC discharges air through the defrost outlet(s) 54 and the floor outlet 53. In an existing HVAC system, the temperature at a particular location in the air path may be about 40 degrees C., however, the temperature of the air at the panel outlet 56 may be about 20 degrees C. In the same existing HVAC module in the “mix” mode, the temperature at the particular location in the air path may be about 40 degrees, but the temperature at the defrost outlet may be about 25 degrees C. Thus, if the temperature of the defrost outlet were to be determined using the same reference temperature and offset function as the panel outlet 56, the temperature of the defrost outlet would be determined incorrectly, resulting in an error of greater than 5 degrees C.
In examples of the present disclosure, the HVAC module 14 includes a temperature sensor 18 to determine a reference temperature of the air at a sensor location with the temperature sensor 18 attached to the housing 12. The sensor location is NOT in one of the plurality of airflow paths of the housing 12 to guide the air that passes through the cooling unit 13 or the heating unit 15 to a floor outlet 53, an upper discharge outlet or combinations thereof. In the example depicted in
In examples, the floor offset function may be a function of the mode setting in addition to being a function of the blend setting. In some examples, the floor temperature may be a function of the lower temperature determined by the lower temperature sensor 18″.
Examples of the present disclosure include a method for determining the discharge temperature of the floor, vent and defrost outlets. The method includes determining a reference temperature of the air at a sensor location. The sensor location is NOT in one of the plurality of airflow paths. The method adds a floor offset temperature to the reference temperature to determine the floor outlet temperature. The floor offset temperature is a floor offset function of the blend setting. For example, at a blend setting of 40% hot, the floor offset temperature may be +5 degrees C. At a blend setting of 60% hot, the floor offset temperature might be +10 degrees C. The method also adds an upper offset temperature to the reference temperature to determine the upper discharge outlet temperature. The upper offset temperature is an upper offset function of the blend setting. For example, at a blend setting of 40% hot, the upper offset temperature may be −5 degrees C. At a blend setting of 60% hot, the upper offset temperature might be +3 degrees C.
In examples of the present invention, the HVAC module includes a thermistor, thermocouple, or other temperature sensing device capable of providing a signal corresponding to a temperature of air at a particular location. A temperature sensing device can be a detector, such as an infra-red sensor or other such device, or sensor, or any device capable of directly or indirectly determining the temperature of the air at the particular location.
In examples of the present disclosure, a defrost airflow path is partially defined by a defrost duct 40 defined by the housing 12. A panel airflow path is partially defined by a panel duct 48 defined by the housing 12. A bleed tube 20 is defined in an interstitial space 25 between the defrost duct 40 and the panel duct 48 (best seen in
In an example of the present disclosure, the bleed tube 20 may define a bleed tube inlet slot 22 at an intersection of the defrost duct 40 and the panel duct 48. (See
It is to be understood that when “about” is utilized to describe a value, this is meant to encompass minor variations (up to +/−10%) from the stated value.
Reference throughout the specification to “one example”, “another example”, “an example”, and so forth, means that a particular element (e.g., feature, structure, and/or characteristic) described in connection with the example is included in at least one example described herein, and may or may not be present in other examples. In addition, it is to be understood that the described elements for any example may be combined in any suitable manner in the various examples unless the context clearly dictates otherwise.
In describing and claiming the examples disclosed herein, the singular forms “a”, “an”, and “the” include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise.
The terms “connect/connected/connection”, “attach/attached/attachment” and/or the like are broadly defined herein to encompass a variety of divergent connected arrangements and assembly techniques. These arrangements and techniques include, but are not limited to (1) the direct communication between one component and another component with no intervening components therebetween; and (2) the communication of one component and another component with one or more components therebetween, provided that the one component being “connected to” or “attached to” the other component is somehow in communication with the other component (notwithstanding the presence of one or more additional components therebetween). Additionally, two components may be permanently, semi-permanently, or releasably engaged with and/or connected to one another.
It is to be further understood that “communication” is to be construed to include all forms of communication, including direct and indirect communication. Indirect communication may include communication between two components with additional component(s) located therebetween.
While several examples have been described in detail, it is to be understood that the disclosed examples may be modified. Therefore, the foregoing description is to be considered non-limiting.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 62/330,815, filed May 2, 2016.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62330815 | May 2016 | US |