The present invention relates to an inverter for an electric machine and relates in particular to inverters for starter-generators in motor vehicles which should also function in batteryless operation or when the battery is defective or discharged.
Conventionally, three-phase machines are operated with the help of pulse-controlled inverters. The three-phase machines are connectable to a battery through the pulse-controlled inverter. The pulse-controlled inverter includes circuit breakers, which are usually implemented as a bridge configuration having six self-locking switches. For example, such self-locking circuit breakers may be power MOSFETs, but it is also known to use other semiconductor switches, such as IGBTs or thyristor-type switches, for example MCTs, ESTs, GTOs, or similar. Embodiments having traditional bipolar power transistors are also known.
All of these switches may only be used when the voltage at the control electrode exceeds a certain positive value compared to a reference electrode, for example the source electrode or the cathode. Without control voltage, the switches used in the conventional systems cut off. Actuating the switches, i.e., feeding a voltage to the control electrodes, is usually done with the help of a control device which is for example a component of a vehicle electrical system control unit or of a voltage controller.
If the three-phase machine is a permanent-field synchronous machine, in the event of an error condition there must be assurance that it is possible to short circuit the phases of the machine or connect them with low impedance, since otherwise overvoltages may occur when the synchronous machine is running at correspondingly high speeds. It is therefore conventional, and is described, for example, in German Patent Application No. DE 198 35 576, that in the case of a three-phase machine having a pulse-controlled inverter that is designed as a permanent-field synchronous machine, in special cases depending on the error condition, by switching on single or multiple circuit breakers selectively the phases of the machine are short-circuited, so that overvoltages are prevented.
However, actuating the circuit breakers in the conventional embodiment is only possible if correct functioning of the switches, the actuating system, and the battery is ensured. If individual switches of the pulse-controlled inverter are closed and yet the supply voltage has simultaneously failed, it is no longer possible to actuate the switches and turn them on.
An object of the present invention is to ensure in a system with a three-phase machine having an assigned pulse-controlled inverter that, in the event of an error when there is a threat of overvoltage, a short-circuiting or a low-impedance connection of specifiable circuit breakers is reliably possible, irrespective of detrimental marginal conditions such as a missing battery, a defective battery, or a discharged battery.
An inverter according to the present invention for an electric machine may have the advantage that, in the event of an error, specifiable phases of the electric machine are short circuited or connected at low impedance, or that the relevant switches are conductive, so that overvoltages which may possibly occur are prevented while the electric machine is rotating. These advantages may be achieved by selecting specifiable circuit breakers of the pulse-controlled inverter, preferably the three circuit breakers connected to the low-side branch, in such a way that they are conductive in the absence of control voltage and cut off when control voltage is applied. Such self-conducting circuit breakers are advantageously designed as normally-on MOSFETs. When a short circuit is recognized, the control voltage at the relevant control electrode of the switch is simply turned off, thereby putting the latter in the conductive state.
One advantageous example embodiment of the present invention is designed in such a way that parallel connection of mechanical normally-closed contacts to conventional semiconductor switches is employed. In an advantageous manner, relay contacts are provided here that are releasable by a switch-on signal. In an advantageous way, a combination of mixed and pure half-bridges with a specifiable combination of normally-on switches and normally-off switches is employed. The switches are advantageously actuated with the help of a control device, which however emits trigger signals such that they open the normally closed switches at specifiable times.
In normal operation, all inverters according to the present invention may be operated like conventional inverters, by clocked actuation, but with reversed actuation of the control electrodes, i.e., with control voltage for non-conductive time phases and without control voltage in conductive phases.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are illustrated in the drawings and are explained in greater detail in the following description.
Electric machine 10 is connected to inverter 11 in a normal way. The windings of the electric machine are designated as U, V, W in the figure. The switching elements of the inverter are actuated with the help of a control electronics unit 18 that feeds the requisite control voltages for optimal operation to the respective gate electrodes of the switching elements. The voltage is supplied for control electronics unit 18 in normal operation from battery 19, through a suitable voltage converter 20 if necessary. An intermediate circuit capacitor 21 is used to smooth the voltage or to buffer the electrical charge.
In normal operation, the inverter shown in
In place of the normally-on semiconductor switches used in the low-side branch, conventional field effect transistors may also be used in one embodiment of the present invention, in which case parallel connection of mechanical normally-closed contacts is then assigned to them. Such relay contacts are then explicitly released by a switch-on signal. One aspect of all embodiments is that the components used in the low-side branch are always conductive in the absence of a trigger signal and thus produce a short circuit. That ensures that no overvoltages are able to occur when the machine is rotating and the supply voltage fails.
In detail, in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 21 081 | May 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCTDE03/00339 | 2/6/2003 | WO | 00 | 6/15/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO0309650 | 11/20/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3742330 | Hodges et al. | Jun 1973 | A |
4554512 | Aiello | Nov 1985 | A |
4933831 | Takahashi et al. | Jun 1990 | A |
5323102 | Torii et al. | Jun 1994 | A |
6366062 | Baretich et al. | Apr 2002 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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198 35 576 | Nov 1999 | DE |
0 596 472 | May 1994 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040222766 A1 | Nov 2004 | US |