Claims
- 1. An inductive ignition system operating at a voltage Vc with a high (voltage) end and low end, the ignition system having one or more ignition coils Ti and associated power switches Si, where i=1,2, . . . n, with each coil Ti having a primary winding of inductance Lp and primary turns Np, and a secondary winding with turns Ns, the coil primary and secondary windings defining a turns ratio N equal to Ns/Np,
- a first end of the primary winding of each coil Ti being interconnected to a common voltage source point and the other (second) ends to separate switch means Si with the low side of the switch means Si returned to a common point on the low end of said voltage source Vc, and the secondary winding of each coil Ti being connected across a spark gap Gi,
- said connections forming a set of one or more series circuits, each such circuit including at least said voltage source, each of the primary windings of said coil Ti, and corresponding switch means Si, and wherein upon turning on, or closure, of switch means Si in each such series circuit a primary current Ip builds up within the primary winding of the corresponding coil Ti to a maximum value Ipo, which occurs at switch Si opening, to energize the coil to an energy El equal to 1/2.cndot.Lp.cndot.Ipo.sup.2 which is stored in the magnetic core of the coil,
- the system constructed and arranged to provide:
- (a) voltage Vc of X times Vb where X is equal to or greater than 2 and Vb is a car battery voltage of peak nominal operating voltage of 14 volts,
- (b) a peak current Ipo between 16 and 48 amps,
- (c) a peak spark current Is between 160 ma and 640 ma,
- (d) a primary inductance Lp no greater than 1.0 mH,
- (e) a secondary coil winding resistance Rs less than 2.0 k.OMEGA.,
- (f) a spark current waveform of sufficient peak amplitude and shape so as to have a higher resistance to spark break-up under high flows than standard inductive ignition spark waveforms,
- the system further constructed and arranged to provide a turns ratio N of sufficiently low ratio, a spark gap Gi of sufficient width, and a dwell time Tdw, during which time switch Si is closed, of sufficiently short duration so that upon switch Si closure the spark gap Gi does not break down, and upon switch Si opening a high voltage of value Vs is produced across the coil secondary winding to electrically breakdown said spark gap Gi and deliver substantially all of said energy El to the spark gap as a high current spark.
- 2. An inductive ignition system having one or more ignition coils Ti and associated power switches Si, where i=1, 2, . . . n, with each coil Ti having a primary winding of inductance Lp and primary turns Np, and a secondary winding with turns Ns defining a turns ratio N equal to Ns/Np, the system further including a variable control inductor of initial inductance Lsati located between a voltage source powering the ignition and common connections of the primary windings of said coils one or more coils, the variable inductance operating such that upon switch Si closure the voltage across the coil Ti secondary winding is reduced from the value that it would take on without said variable control inductor.
- 3. An inductive ignition system operating at a voltage Vc between 24 and 80 volts with a peak primary current Ipo of at least 20 amps having one or more ignition coils Ti and associated power switches Si, where i=1,2, . . . n, with each coil Ti having a primary winding of inductance Lp and primary turns Np, and a secondary winding with turns Ns defining a turns ratio N equal to Ns/Np, the system further constructed and arranged to provide a turns ratio N of sufficiently low ratio, a spark gap Gi of sufficient width, and a dwell time Tdw, during which time switch Si is closed, of sufficiently short duration so that upon switch Si closure the spark gap Gi does not break down, and upon switch Si opening a high voltage of value Vs is produced across the coil secondary winding to electrically breakdown said spark gap Gi and produce a peak spark current Is in substantially arc mode.
- 4. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein the primary turns Np are between 40 and 80 turns.
- 5. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein said power switches Si are IGBTs of 600 volt rating.
- 6. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein the core of said coil Ti is of an open E-core form with a center leg with said coil windings being wound concentrically on the center leg of said core.
- 7. The ignition system as defined in claim 6 wherein the core material is comprised of stacked thin lamination.
- 8. The ignition system as defined in claim 6 wherein the primary winding is a two layer winding with DC resistance Rp less than 0.4 ohms.
- 9. The ignition system as defined in claim 6 wherein the coil winding window height h is between 3/8" (0.9 cm) and 1/2" (1.3 cm) and the length of the primary winding lp is between 0.75" (2 cm) and 1.5" (4 cm).
- 10. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein the core of said coil Ti is a bobbin type core comprised of a center leg and end flanges with said windings wound concentrically about the center leg of said core.
- 11. The ignition system as defined in claim 10 wherein the core material is comprised of stacked thin laminations.
- 12. The ignition system as defined in claim 10 wherein the core material is comprised of pressed powder iron made of two parts divided at some point of the center leg at which dividing point a biasing magnet can be included.
- 13. The ignition system as defined in claim 12 wherein the relative permeability of the core material is at least 25 for a magnetic field strength of 200 Oersted.
- 14. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein the coil is essentially cylindrical and comprised of a center magnetic core over which are wound the primary and secondary turns and a thin tubular cylindrical magnetic material (over said windings), the magnetic path including at least one air gap.
- 15. The ignition system as defined in claim 14 wherein the primary winding is made up of two layers of magnet wire.
- 16. The ignition system as define in claim 14 wherein the core center leg is of round cross-section which can be sectioned into two parts to include an air gap.
- 17. The ignition system as defined in claim 16 wherein a biasing magnet is placed in the air gap in the center core section.
- 18. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein a variable control inductor of initial inductance Lsati is included between said voltage source, of voltage Vc, and said common connections of he primary windings of said coils, and is constructed and arranged so that the inductance Msat of the core of said variable inductor drops as the coil primary current increases.
- 19. The ignition system as defined in claim 18 wherein said saturable inductor is constructed and arranged to reduce the peak coil Ti output voltage upon power switch Si closure to a value less than will break down the spark gap Gi, and wherein the energy stored in the saturable inductor upon switch Si opening is substantially less than the energy stored in the coil Ti.
- 20. The ignition system as defined in claim 19 wherein said initial inductance Lsati is about 0.6 times the low primary current coil primary inductance Lp.
- 21. The ignition system as defined in claim 20 wherein the core of said variable inductor is comprised of high permeability powder iron.
- 22. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein said voltage source comprises energy storage capacitor means C charged to said voltage Vc.
- 23. The ignition system as defined in claim 22 and further comprising a current sense resistor Rsense placed between the low voltage side of the capacitor C, defined as the voltage sense point Vsense, and the low side common connection of switches Si, defined as ground, to sense the primary current Ip and control the openings of the switches Si at the predetermined peak primary current Ipo.
- 24. The ignition system as defined in claim 23 and further comprising an NPN transistor placed with its emitter at the voltage sense point Vsense and its base to ground, and its collector taken to a control circuit to turn off switch Si when the transistor base-emitter junction becomes forward biased as a result of primary current reaching the level Ipo.
- 25. The ignition system as defined in claim 22 constructed and arranged to operate as an automotive ignition system with a 12 volt battery as the supply voltage and included between the battery and said capacitor C is a DC to DC power converter for raising the battery voltage to the capacitor voltage Vc.
- 26. The ignition system as defined in claim 25 wherein said power converter is a flyback converter comprised of at least a converter transformer Tcnv, a primary winding switch Scnv, an output diode Dcnv, the power converter providing isolation between the battery and the capacitor C.
- 27. The ignition system as defined in claim 26 wherein the power converter is constructed and arranged to maintain the output voltage Vc except on closure of ignition power switches Si when it is turned off to provide an anti-latching function to allow the power switches to recover should they become latched.
- 28. The ignition system as defined in claim 27 wherein the transformer Tcnv has two layered windings, a single layer primary and a single layer secondary.
- 29. The ignition system as defined in claim 28 wherein the primary winding turns are approximately 12 and the turns ratio of secondary to primary winding is approximately 1.6.
- 30. The ignition system as defined in claim 28 wherein the core of said transformer Tcnv has a narrow winding window of width "h" approximately equal to 4 mm.
- 31. The ignition system as defined in claim 28 wherein said output diode Dcnv is an ultra-fast recovery diode and wherein operation of the power converter includes a DC component of current and is of continuous versus discontinuous operating mode in charging its output load capacitor C.
- 32. The ignition system as defined it claim 25 wherein said power converter is a boost converter with power components comprised of an inductor, a switch, and an output diode.
- 33. The ignition system as defined in claim 26 wherein the controller for said power converter is a comparator operated as an oscillator which maintains an approximately constant peak converter current Icnv between a regulated input voltage and a higher input voltage below 30 volts, and whose off-time Toff is controlled by a resistor Rc connected to the output voltage Vc which charges a timing capacitor Ct to a prescribed level to define the converter switch off-time.
- 34. The ignition system as defined in claim 26 wherein said switch Scnv is an N-type FET of 50 to 60 volt rating, and the driver of said switch Scnv comprises a P-type and N-type semiconductor switch whose control elements are connected to the output of a control comparator for turning switch Scnv on and off.
- 35. The ignition system as defined in claim 29 wherein the primary inductance of said transformer Tcnv is approximately 40 uH.
- 36. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 and further comprising a lossless snubber constructed and arranged to store the energy Ele associated with the leakage inductance Lpe of said coils Ti, equal to 1/2.cndot.Lpe.cndot.Ipo.sup.2, in a snubber capacitor of capacitance Csn, and through the action of a snubber switch Ssn which is activated following turn-off of a coil power switch Si to energize a snubber inductor of inductance Lsn which is then de-energized upon switch Ssn opening following fall of snubber capacitor voltage to a level substantially below its peak voltage, and diode means for delivering essentially all the energy stored in the snubber inductor back to the said voltage source Vc.
- 37. The ignition system as defined in claim 36 wherein said snubber capacitor is connected to the ungrounded ends of each of said power switches Si through diodes Di.
- 38. The ignition system as defined in claim 37 wherein said snubber switch Ssn is a P-type FET whose gate is connected to a control switch means Scsn whose one end is grounded and other end has a series resistor to the FET gate.
- 39. The ignition system as defined in claim 38 wherein switches Ssn and Scsn are of about 100 volt rating.
- 40. The ignition system as defined in claim 36 wherein inductance Lsn of snubber inductor is about 4 mH.
- 41. The ignition system as defined in claim 36 wherein snubber capacitor stores said energy Ele and the energy in any other inductor (carrying current Ipo) in series with the coil leakage inductance 4, the capacitance value Csn of the snubber capacitor being such that its maximum voltage Vsn is no greater than approximately 80% of the maximum voltage rating of said power switches Si.
- 42. The ignition system as defined in claim 38 wherein said switches Si are 600 volts rating IGBTs, i.e. 600 volt collector to emitter voltage.
- 43. The ignition system as defined in claim 36 wherein snubber capacitor has its low voltage connection with the low voltage connection of said power switches Si and is paralleled with a diode clamp to prevent the peak snubber voltage Vsnpk from exceeding the voltage rating of switches Si.
- 44. The ignition system as defined in claim 41 wherein switch Ssn is a P-type FET with its source connected to the snubber capacitor, with a resistor and protection zener diode across its source and gate, with a series gate resistor, with a control N-type switch Scsn connected between the gate resistor and ground, with the control element of switch Scsn connected to a junction of a resistor pair defining a voltage divider whose one side is grounded and whose other side is connected to the FET source through one or more resistors.
- 45. The ignition system as defined in claim 44 wherein an ignition input trigger disabling switch has its control element connected to the higher voltage end of said resistor divider pair.
- 46. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein a voltage Vx of at least 12 volts is obtained from said source voltage Vc to provide turn on voltage for said power switches Si.
- 47. The ignition system as defined in claim 46 wherein said voltage is obtained from the connection point of the cathode of a zener diode and resistor connected in series and wherein the resistor is connected to the source voltage and the anode of the zener diode is connected to ground.
- 48. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 comprising an ignition controller circuit to control ignition firing, the controller circuit having trigger input circuits and phase input circuits each containing a timing capacitor and comparator used in conjunction with an octal counter to turn said power switches Si on and off in the required order and for the required time duration Tdw.
- 49. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein the coils Ti have diodes in series with their secondary winding to prevent current flow during power switch Si closure.
- 50. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein voltage Vc is at least 36 volts and wherein each ignition coil can be multi-fired to produce more than one high duty cycle ignition spark at a duty cycle above 80% under at least one condition of operation of the ignition due to the rapid charging of the coil Ti primary inductance and long duration of the spark.
- 51. The ignition system as defined in claim 36 wherein magnetic core of said snubber inductor is made of powder iron.
- 52. The ignition system as defined in claim 51 wherein the magnetic core of said snubber inductor is an open E-type core with a round center winding post.
- 53. The ignition system as defined in claim 52 including a non symmetrical bobbin constructed and arranged to have one section within the core winding window on which is wound wire and a second enlarged diameter section that protrudes from the core open end and is usable as a mounting bracket.
- 54. The ignition system as defined in claim 7 wherein the center leg core cross-section is rectangular with the ratio of long side to the short side being approximately equal to or less than the square root of three, i.e. 1.7.
- 55. The ignition system as defined in claim 54 wherein the coil body is essentially of round cross-section except for small lamination protrusions.
- 56. The ignition system as defined in claim 7 wherein the width "d2" of the back end of the lamination is approximately 1.5 times the center leg width "d".
- 57. The ignition system as defined in claim 7 wherein the center leg core cross-section is square and the coil body is of rectangular cross-section comprising a block coil with the high voltage tower emanating at right angles to the axis of the wire windings near the high voltage end.
- 58. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein said voltage Vc is about 50 volts, and is used for rapidly charging, within time Tdw less than one millisecond, the primary winding of one or more coils Ti with low inductance primary Lp of about 0.5 mH to a primary current Ipo of 20 to 50 amps by means of power switches Si associated with the primary winding of each coil Ti.
- 59. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein said coil energizing occurring without false firing of the ignition by using a variable inductor in the power unit which reduces the coil output voltage upon switch closure to approximately one half its value without said inductor.
- 60. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 including open core coils which have 1 to 2 open core sections on the outer portion of the core structure made possible by the lower primary inductance Lp of the coil of about 0.5mH.
- 61. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 which uses control circuits of only one current sensor and transistor to set the peak primary current Ipo.
- 62. The ignition system as defined it claim 1 wherein the system is constructed and arranged such that power switches Si and coils Ti operate with one half or less the heating of conventional inductive ignition systems during the current buildup coil energizing dwell time Tdw for a given stored energy El because of the lower primary inductance Lp, higher voltage Vc, and the resulting very short dwell time Tdw required to attain the peak primary current Ipo.
- 63. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein the coil secondary windings are connected across spark gaps whose spark current Is, following spark breakdown of the gap, is over 300 ma peak which provides a higher spark power than conventional and arc type, versus glow type, spark discharge during part of the spark, which is less susceptible to segmentation under high flows.
- 64. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein the coil primary resistance Rp is between 0.1 and 0.3 ohms and the coil secondary resistance Rs is between 300 and 1000 ohms.
- 65. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 with voltage Vc approximately 40 volts, with low primary inductance Lp of approximately 0.5 millihenry, with high peak coil primary current Ipo of approximately 30 amps, with high coil primary stored energy El of 100 to 500 millijoules, and with flow resistant peak spark currents Is of approximately 400 ma.
- 66. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 having a high output voltage Vs of about 40 kV or higher and with fast rise time of about 20 microseconds.
- 67. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 having low coil primary and secondary resistances Rp and Rs less than 0.2 ohm and 800 ohms respectively.
- 68. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 with magnetic core of the coils Ti having a magnetic path length lm of coil Ti is between 2 and 4 times the coil primary winding length lp and lm is also between 4 and 8 times the center core diameter d'.
- 69. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 having a spark gap Gi of approximately 0.08" (2 mm).
- 70. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein said spark gap Gi is located approximately 1/4" (0.6 cm) from the spark plug shell end.
- 71. The ignition system as defined in claim 22 wherein value of said capacitor means C is between approximately 1000 and 2000 microfarads.
- 72. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein said turns ratio N is between 60 and 120.
- 73. The ignition system as defined in claim 72 wherein said turns ratio N is approximately 75.
- 74. The ignition system as defined in claim 1 including both variable inductor and diodes in series with the coil secondary windings wherein said variable inductor allows lower voltage rating of said diodes to be used.
- 75. The inductive ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein said voltage Vc is approximately 42 volts.
- 76. The inductive ignition system as defined in claim 1 wherein said power switches Si are IGBT switches of voltage rating above 600 volts.
- 77. The inductive ignition system as defined in claim 3 wherein said coil is provided with two windings wound on the center leg of an elongated open E-core with a closed end and an open end and having:
- (a) a primary inductance Lp of less than 2 mH;
- (b) a peak current Ipo of 20 to 50 amps; and
- (c) a peak spark current Is greater than 100 ma.
- 78. The ignition coil as defined in claim 77 wherein the two windings are wound concentrically about the center leg of said magnetic core with the primary comprising a two layer winding.
- 79. The ignition coil as defined in claim 77 wherein the voltage source used to energize said one or more coils has a voltage of approximately 42 volts.
- 80. The ignition coil as defined in claim 77 wherein the coil turn ratio N defined by Ns/Np is between 60 and 80.
- 81. The ignition coil as defined in claim 77 wherein the primary winding wire has two ends which emerge at the closed end of the magnetic E-core and the secondary winding wire has a high voltage end which emerges at the open end of the magnetic E-core.
- 82. The ignition coil as defined in claim 77 wherein said E-core is formed of magnetic material comprising single piece thin E-laminations stacked to make up the core.
Parent Case Info
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) of provisional applications Ser. No. 60/008,599, filed Dec. 13, 1995; Ser. No. 60/011,739, filed Feb. 15, 1996; and Ser. No. 60/029,145, filed Oct. 21, 1996.
PCT Information
Filing Document |
Filing Date |
Country |
Kind |
102e Date |
371c Date |
PCT/US96/19898 |
12/12/1996 |
|
|
4/21/1999 |
4/21/1999 |
Publishing Document |
Publishing Date |
Country |
Kind |
WO97/21920 |
6/19/1997 |
|
|
US Referenced Citations (5)