The present disclosure relates to electric motors. More specifically, the present disclosure relates to torque control of electric motors for motor vehicles.
Many motor vehicles utilize electric motors. In particular, hybrid motor vehicles utilize one or more electric motors in addition to an internal combustion, and electric vehicles utilize one or more electric motors as the primary power plant.
Operation of these electric motors requires the control of the torque output of the motors. Currently, torque control of electric motors is based on an open-loop system. Such systems require significant calibration of numerous look-up tables to achieve robust performance of the motor vehicles.
Thus, while current electric motor torque control systems achieve their intended purpose, there is a need for a new and improved systems to regulate the torque output of electric motors.
According to several aspects, a system for torque control of an electric motor in a motor vehicle includes a power inverter that delivers a current to the electric motor to regulate the torque of the electric motor and a model predictive control (MPC) module that sends a three-phase voltage to the power inverter to control the operation of the power inverter.
In an additional aspect of the present disclosure, the MPC module is based on a linear time varying model of the motor at each sample time.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the MPC module is based on a linear parameter varying model within the MPC control horizon.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the MPC module utilizes flux feedback from a Kalman filter.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the MPC module utilizes current feedback.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the system further includes a Kalman filter to estimate currents to remove noises from current measurements at selected motor operating conditions.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the system further includes a torque sensor that measure the torque of the electric motor.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the system further includes a Kalman filter that estimates a flux or currents for the MPC module based on voltages from the electric motor and the measured torque of the electric motor.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the MPC module is based on a two-loop control architecture.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the two-loop control architecture includes an inner loop that controls the currents to the electric motor.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the two-loop architecture includes an outer loop that is based on torque feedback from the electric motor.
According to several aspects, a system for torque control of an electric motor in a motor vehicle includes a power inverter that delivers a current to the electric motor to regulate the torque of the electric motor and a model predictive control (MPC) module that sends a three-phase voltage to the power inverter to control the operation of the power inverter. The MPC module is based on a linear time varying model or a linear parameter varying model.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the MPC module utilizes flux feedback from a Kalman filter.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the MPC module utilizes current feedback, the system further comprising a Kalman filter to estimate currents to remove noises from current measurements at selected motor operating conditions.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the system further includes a torque sensor that measure the torque of the electric motor.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the system further includes a Kalman filter that estimates a flux or currents for the MPC module based on voltages from the electric motor and the measured torque of the electric motor.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the MPC module is based on a two-loop control architecture.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the two-loop control architecture includes an inner loop that controls the currents to the electric motor.
In another aspect of the present disclosure, the two-loop architecture includes an outer loop that is based on torque feedback from the electric motor.
According to several aspects, a system for torque control of an electric motor in a motor vehicle includes a power inverter that delivers a three-phase AC current to the electric motor to regulate the torque of the electric motor; a battery pack that applies a DC voltage to the power inverter, and a model predictive control (MPC) module that sends a three-phase voltage to the power inverter to control the operation of the power inverter. The MPC module is based on a linear time varying model or a linear parameter varying model.
Further areas of applicability will become apparent from the description provided herein. It should be understood that the description and specific examples are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
The drawings described herein are for illustration purposes only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure in any way.
The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses.
Referring to
The system 10 further includes a model predictive control module (MPC) 36 that regulates the currents transmitted from the power inverter 16 to the electric motor 24, for example, a three-phase AC machine. In some arrangements, the MPC 36 is linear time varying (LTV), that is, the motor system model parameters are time varying. In other arrangements, the system model parameters are linear parameter varying (LPV), that is, some of the system parameters vary slowly. The electric motor 24 is a permanent magnet (PM) machine, also referred to as a permanent magnet asynchronous machine (PMSM).
For reference, the following nomenclature is utilized in the present disclosure—r(k): control reference at sample time k; Tq_ref: motor torque reference or command, r(k)=Tq_ref; va, vb and vc: three phase voltage applied to the electric motor 24 for torque control; ia, ib ic three phase current of the electric motor 24; θ, ω: electric motor rotor position and motor speed; motor speed calculated as ωe, electrical motor speed, and ωm, mechanic motor speed or physical rotating speed, that are related by the expression ωe=p/2ωm, where p is the number of magnet poles in motor; Tq: motor torque; id, iq: motor currents in the rotor rotating reference frame (these two currents are perpendicular in the magnetic field); Vd, Vq: motor voltages in the rotor rotating reference frame (these voltages are perpendicular in the magnetic field and are also referred to as direct voltage and quadrature voltage); phase transformation (θ) transforms the rotating reference frame currents or voltages to three phase currents or voltages and vice versa; λd,λq: motor flux in rotating reference frame; {tilde over (λ)}q {tilde over (λ)}d: adding tilt means estimated motor flux.
The MPC 36 generates a desired motor control voltages Vd, Vq based on the commanded motor torque (or reference torque), Tq_ref, the motor speed and motor flux feedback, as estimated by a sensor 26 and sensors that measure three-phase currents. Employing phase transformation (θ) 32, the optimal control Vd and Vq are transformed to the desired three phase voltages va, vb and vc applied to the electric motor 24. Based on the desired three phase voltages va, vb and vc space vector modulation or PWM 34 is applied to the control inverter switches 16 to generate the desired three phase currents 20, 21 and 22 to the electric motor 24 that produces the desired torque Tq. As such, the system 10 utilizes model predictive control of motor torque using flux feedback.
The MPC 26 utilizes an optimization algorithm to obtain the desired voltages Vd and Vq in order to control the desired torque Tq. The control objective is to minimize a cost function (1) at a predictive time horizon with number of N samples.
In this cost function, i indicates discrete sample time at ith sample step, Tq(i) is the torque at sample time i. r(i) is the torque control reference at sample time i, k is the current sample time, vref(i) is Vd and Vq reference commands, which are set to zero, Δvi is the rate of change of Vd and Vq, Wy, Wu, WΔu are the tunable weighting functions, and ∥*∥ denotes vector norm.
Tuning the weights balances the fast torque tracking responses and the control input energy and aggressiveness of control inputs by the rate limit. The algorithm solves the optimal control Vd and Vq that minimizes the cost function (1) to achieve desired torque tracking control. The solution of this optimization controller is subject to the motor dynamic responses characterized by the motor flux state space equation:
The optimization is also subject to torque, maximum inverter voltage and current and temperature constraint:
Tq,min(ωm)<Tq<Tq,max(ωm)
Vs=√{square root over ((vd)2+(vq)2)}≤Vmax
Is=√{square root over ((id)2+(iq)2)}≤Imax
Tm,min<Tm<Tm,max (3)
In equation (2), rs is the stator winding resistance, Ld and Lq are motor inductances, which are nonlinear functions of id and iq. The motor dynamic equation is linear time varying (ωe(t), Lq(id(t), iq(t)), Ld(id(t), iq(t))), where λm: the mechanical linkage flux, considered as a constant; Vmax: maximum inverter voltage limit; Imax: maximum inverter current limit; Tq,min(ωm): minimum torque limit as a function of motor speed; and Tq,max(ωm): maximum torque limit as a function of motor speed (typical torque limit is in the flux weakening range as motor speed exceeds a certain limit, the motor torque reduces as a function of speed); and Tm,min<Tm<Tm,max, motor temperature and min max limits.
Since the computer and optimization control executes at discrete sampling times for a linear system, the motor differential equation is linearized and discretized at each sample time over the predictive time window horizon to define a linear time varying model predictive control (LTV/MPC) for the MPC 36. The linearized motor discrete state space equation at each sample time I is
{tilde over (λ)}(i+1)=Ã{tilde over (λ)}(i)+{tilde over (B)}u
{tilde over (y)}(i)=G{tilde over (λ)}(i)+H
{tilde over (λ)}(i)=[{tilde over (λ)}d(i)(i)]
The resultant MPC 26 is a state feedback of flux estimates {tilde over (v)}i=f({tilde over (λ)}q {tilde over (λ)}d). Since the flux is not directly measurable, a Kalman filter 30 is applied to estimate the motor flux for feedback control based on the voltage command Vd and Vq and the measured current id and id from a phase transformation (θ) 28, as shown in greater detail in
Turning now to
where the output equation for the current observer is y=[id id]′.
Turning now to
Referring now to
The MPC 36 minimizes a cost function:
where k indicates sample time at k. this optimization is to find optimal control Vd and Vq such that id and iq can track the commanded id* and iq* based on the motor dynamic equation (4) described above. The outer-loop torque control is achieved by comparing the actual torque measurement and torque command. The torque tracking errors are modulated through a PID controller 318 that modifies id* and iq* commands for better torque tracking, where α<1 316 and (1−α) 314 allocates PID modulations to modify individual id* and iq* commands.
An electric motor torque control systems of the present disclosure offers several advantages. These include reduce calibration times and the potential to eliminate one or more sensors utilized in the operation of electric motors.
The description of the present disclosure is merely exemplary in nature and variations that do not depart from the gist of the present disclosure are intended to be within the scope of the present disclosure. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure.
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