The present application claims priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2005-366129 filed Dec. 20, 2005, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
The present invention relates to a method of controlling combustion of an internal-combustion engine, more particularly, a method and device, and a vehicle on which the device is mounted, for controlling the combustion of the engine, capable of reducing a generation of HC (hydrocarbon) or CO (carbon monoxide) by controlling misfire and excessive fuel supply.
For an internal-combustion engine mounted on a vehicle, since a throttle valve arranged to cross an air-intake pipe is configured to be closed typically when slowing down the vehicle, the air-intake pipe is substantially blocked. Then, a space inside the air-intake pipe downstream of the throttle valve drops to a negative pressure because the engine continues running (i.e., also continues emitting exhaust gas). This results in carrying out combustion under a condition in which oxygen runs short, and as a result misfire or excessive fuel supply may occur. Misfire and excessive fuel supply are not desirable because they cause an increase in HC or CO in the exhaust gas; therefore, they cause an increase in temperature of a catalyst to deteriorate the catalyst.
Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Nos. HEI 05-240095 and HEI 09-4500 disclose methods of thinning combustion during a low load operation (especially, during idling).
Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Nos. HEI 05-240095 and HEI 09-4500 describe a control for thinning combustion only when an idling state of the engine is detected; however, no measure to detect vehicle deceleration and base thinning of combustion on a detected vehicle deceleration is described.
Although misfire or excessive fuel supply may occur during deceleration of the vehicle similar to the case of the idling state, when the throttle valve is opened from such a condition and is moved to an acceleration condition, the misfire or excessive fuel supply may be easily repeated since the temperature inside the combustion chamber is dropped because of the previous misfire or excessive fuel supply. In due course, when the temperature inside the combustion chamber increases to a sufficient temperature for combustion, a sudden combustion takes place and, therefore it causes an acceleration shock or a torque variation since a lot of oxygen is supplied into the combustion chamber.
On the other hand, when accelerating from the idling state, the combustion chamber can maintain its temperature high enough for combustion. In addition, a clutch connection exists. Thus, the acceleration shock or torque variation does not cause an adverse effect.
The present invention addresses the above conditions, and provides a method and device, and a vehicle on which the device is mounted, for controlling combustion of the internal-combustion engine, capable of reducing a generation of HC or CO while controlling misfire and excessive fuel supply of the engine during vehicle deceleration.
According to one aspect of the invention, a method of controlling combustion of a fuel-injection, internal-combustion engine with two or more cylinders is provided. The method includes determining a deceleration condition of a vehicle being driven by the engine, and thinning the fuel-injection of the engine when the deceleration condition is determined.
According to another aspect of the invention, an apparatus for controlling combustion of a fuel-injection, internal-combustion engine with two or more cylinders is provided. The apparatus includes deceleration condition determining module for determining a deceleration condition of a vehicle being driven by the engine, and a fuel-injection thinning module for thinning the fuel-injection of the engine when the deceleration condition is determined by the deceleration condition determining module.
According to the aspects, the method or apparatus is capable of improving combustion and fuel consumption of the engine, such as reducing a generation of HC or CO while controlling misfire and excessive fuel supply to the engine during deceleration of the vehicle (that is, the method or apparatus can purify exhaust gas as well). Further, the method or apparatus can reduce heat deterioration of a catalyst that is caused by unburned fuel reaching the catalyst and being burned therein. Further, the method or apparatus can reduce a shock at the time of engine braking by reducing an effect of the engine braking compared with the conventional fuel-cut control. In addition, the method or apparatus can reduce a shock at a restart of fuel-injection after the fuel-injection is thinned, which is caused by an ignition delay when the engine gets cold during the fuel-injection pause and subsequent sudden combustion.
The engine may include an air-intake device, and the apparatus may further include a throttle-close-operation detecting module for detecting a closing operation of a throttle of the air-intake device, and an air-intake-pipe negative-pressure detecting module for detecting an increase in a negative pressure in the air-intake pipe of the air-intake device. The deceleration condition determining module may be configured so that it determines the vehicle being in the deceleration condition, when the throttle-close-operation detecting module detects the throttle-closing operation, and the air-intake-pipe negative-pressure detecting module detects the increase in the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe. The apparatus may determine an increase in the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe during the deceleration condition, and determine with high precision rather than only detecting the throttle-closing operation.
As used herein, the term “negative pressure in the air-intake pipe” represents a pressure of a region of an air-intake passage of the engine, downstream of a throttle valve, and it is usually at a negative pressure with respect to a pressure in upstream of the throttle valve. Therefore, “increase in the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe” means that this negative pressure changes even more to the negative pressure side.
The fuel-injection thinning module may be configured so that where the engine includes an even number of cylinders, it continuously carries out a predetermined number of fuel-injections after continuously pausing the even number of fuel-injections, and where the engine includes an odd number of cylinders, it continuously carries out a predetermined number of fuel-injections after continuously pausing the odd number of fuel-injections. In this case, all of the cylinders are evenly thinned and, thus, a temperature drop of the cylinders may be reduced. The predetermined number may be one.
The number of continuous fuel-injection pauses may be set based on at least any one of an engine speed, a blow-back rate of burned fuel gas, and a negative pressure in an air-intake pipe of the engine. This is because the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe also decreases following a drop of the engine speed which decreases as the vehicle decelerates, and it becomes gradually unnecessary to carry out the thinning operation.
As used herein, the term “blow-back of burned fuel gas” represents a phenomenon in which exhaust gas as a result of complete combustion or unburning (include incomplete combustion, etc.) is discharged from the combustion chamber at an exhaust stroke into the exhaust pipe, and the exhaust gas then moves back from the exhaust pipe into the combustion chamber or into the air-intake pipe during an air-intake stroke. Here, not all the exhaust gas moves back to the combustion chamber or air-intake pipe, but a portion thereof does. This rate of the portion re-introduced is referred to as “a blow-back rate of burned fuel gas.”
The apparatus may further include a fuel-injection-amount adjusting module for adjusting a fuel-injection amount during the thinning of fuel-injection by the fuel-injection thinning module based on at least either one of an engine speed and a negative pressure in an air-intake pipe. Since the cylinder enters an excessive oxygen state after the cylinder is air-scavenged by the thinning operation and oxygen inside the cylinder increases, the fuel-injection amount may be increased.
The apparatus may further include an ignition-timing adjusting module for adjusting an ignition timing during the thinning of fuel-injection by the fuel-injection thinning module based on at least either one of the engine speed and the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe. For example, as the engine speed decreases by the thinning operation, passengers of the vehicle may feel the thinning as a rough impression. In order to reduce this drawback, the ignition timing is retarded to reduce the torque per combustion.
The ignition-timing adjusting module may be configured so that where combustion of the engine is a first combustion after the fuel-injection thinning module starts the thinning of fuel-injection when the fuel-injection amount is not adjusted by the fuel-injection-amount adjusting module, it does not adjust the ignition timing for the combustion. In this case, even if ignition-timing is adjusted after shifting to the thinning operation, the ignition timing may always be used with the fuel-injection amount corresponding to the ignition timing, as a set.
The fuel-injection thinning module may be configured so that it carries out the thinning of fuel-injection when the deceleration condition determining module determines that the engine is in a deceleration condition, and when a water temperature of the engine is not below a predetermined temperature (e.g., approximately 60 degrees C. or higher), and a transmission device is not shifted in the neutral position, a clutch in a driving force transmitting path of the vehicle is not disconnected, an engine speed is not below a predetermined speed (e.g., approximately 500 rpm or higher), and the clutch is not in a state immediately after having been connected (e.g., has been connected for at least a predetermined period of time such as approximately 200 milliseconds or longer). This is because that when further satisfying these conditions during the deceleration condition, the engine is not stable, and there is a high possibility of misfire or excessive fuel supply.
That is, on the other hand, the fuel-injection thinning module may be configured to terminate the thinning of fuel-injection via a predetermined procedure when the deceleration condition determining module does not determine the deceleration condition, or the water temperature of the engine is below the predetermined temperature, the transmission device is shifted in the neutral position, the clutch is disconnected, the engine speed is below the predetermined speed, or the clutch is in a state immediately after having been connected.
The fuel-injection thinning module may be configured to immediately terminate the thinning of fuel-injection without carrying out the predetermined procedure, when a throttle valve of the engine is rapidly-opened, the clutch is in a state immediately after having been connected, or the transmission device is shifted in the neutral position. That is, when the engine torque is suddenly required during the fuel-injection thinning control, the thinning control is terminated as soon as possible, thereby assuring a good acceleration feeling, or preventing the engine stall.
On the other hand, the fuel-injection thinning module may be configured so that where the engine includes an even number of cylinders, it continuously carries out a predetermined number of fuel-injections after continuously pausing the even number of fuel-injections, and where the engine includes an odd number of cylinders, it continuously carries out a predetermined number of fuel-injections after continuously pausing the odd number of fuel-injections. The number of continuously pausing the fuel-injections may be set based on at least any one of the engine speed, and a blow-back rate of burned fuel gas, and a negative pressure in an air-intake pipe of the air-intake device of the engine. The predetermined procedure may include a procedure for completing the number of continuously pausing fuel-injections set by the fuel-injection thinning module before terminating the thinning of fuel-injection when the throttle is not rapidly opened, the clutch is not immediately after it is connected, and the transmission device is not shifted in the neutral position. When it is in such conditions, since it is not necessary to recover the torque immediately, the fuel-injection thinning control is terminated after completing the set number of fuel-injection pauses. Accordingly, the passenger does not feel the torque variations during vehicle deceleration including an acceleration shock (i.e., a transition of the fuel-injection mode).
In addition to the above, the fuel-injection amount during the thinning of fuel-injection by the fuel-injection thinning module may be configured to be adjusted based on at least either one of the engine speed and the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe. The fuel-injection thinning module may be configured so that upon the thinning of fuel-injection is terminated, it continues the adjustment of the fuel-injection amount based on at least either one of the engine speed and the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe, until a first fuel-injection into each of the cylinders after the fuel-injection is restarted. Accordingly, the passenger does not feel the transition of the fuel-injection mode.
Alternatively, the ignition timing during the thinning of fuel-injection by the fuel-injection thinning module may be configured to be adjusted based on at least either one of the engine speed and the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe. The fuel-injection thinning module may be configured so that when the thinning of fuel-injection is terminated, it continues the adjustment of the ignition timing based on at least either one of the engine speed and the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe, until a first fuel-injection into each of the cylinders after the fuel-injection is restarted. Accordingly, the passenger does not feel the torque variations during the deceleration condition including the acceleration shock (i.e., the transition of the fuel-injection mode).
The above combustion controlling apparatus is suitable for various kinds of vehicles that include an internal-combustion engine as its drive source.
The disclosure is illustrated by way of example and not by way of limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings, in which the like reference numerals indicate similar elements and in which:
Hereafter, a method and device, and a vehicle on which the device is mounted, for controlling combustion of an internal-combustion engine according to the present invention will be explained in detail referring to the attached drawings.
Although a vehicle 10 according to an embodiment of the present invention shown in
As shown in
The throttle body 22 is a typical throttle body, and includes a throttle valve 223 provided so as to cross the air-intake passage 21 that passes through inside the throttle body 22, and a throttle opening sensor 224 for detecting an opening of the throttle valve 223. The throttle opening detected by the throttle opening sensor 224 is transmitted to the ECU 40 that is connected with the throttle opening sensor 224.
An air-intake pressure sensor 24 is provided downstream of the throttle body 22 in the air-intake passage 21, for detecting a pressure of this section in the air-intake passage 21.
Moreover, cylinders of the engine 20 are provided with a water temperature sensor 27 for detecting a temperature of engine coolant that flows through a water jacket inside a wall of the cylinders. The water temperature detected by the water temperature sensor 27 is transmitted to the ECU 40 that is connected with the water temperature sensor 27.
The ECU 40 is connected with the throttle opening sensor 224, the air-intake pressure sensor 24, and the water temperature sensor 27, as described above, and acquires information detected by these sensors. The ECU 40 is also connected with a neutral sensor 12, a clutch sensor 13, and an engine speed sensor 14.
The neutral sensor 12 detects whether a transmission device or gears (not shown) of the vehicle 10 (refer to
The ECU 40 refers to information (a fuel-injection interval setting, etc.) stored in a fuel-injection interval setting storage area 491 (described later) based on the information from these sensors. The ECU 40 controls a fuel-injection and ignition by transmitting an instruction to a fuel injector 23 and a spark plug 28 of the engine 20, respectively. In this embodiment, the ECU 40 is mainly configured to control the fuel-injection, as described hereinafter.
The ECU 40 includes a memory 49, as well as an immediately-after-engine-start determination module 41, an engine-start timer 42, and a re-run inhibiting determination module 43. The memory 49 is provided with a storage area for a re-run inhibiting flag 492 and the fuel-injection interval setting storage area 491 described above. In this embodiment, the ECU 40 detects a deceleration condition of the vehicle 10 (refer to
As shown in
Alternatively, even if the ECU 40 determines the deceleration condition of the vehicle 10 (refer to
The ECU 40 may determine that the water temperature of the engine 20 is not low based on the information from the water temperature sensor 27, that the transmission device is not shifted in the neutral position based on the information from the neutral sensor 12, that the clutch is not disconnected based on the information from the clutch sensor 13, and that the engine speed is not low based on the information from the engine speed sensor 14, for example.
Further, it may be determined that the clutch is in a state not immediately after having been connected (i.e., has been connected for a predetermined period of time) by providing a clutch connection timer 46 (refer to
That the fuel-injection thinning control is not in the re-run status may be determined by providing a storage area for the re-run inhibiting flag 492 (refer to
Permitting re-running the control immediately after the termination of the injection thinning causes an alternation of ON and OFF of the control, unintentional instability of the operational state of the engine, or a possibility of a passenger feeling the torque variation.
That the engine 20 is not in a state immediately after engine start may be determined by providing an engine-start timer 42 (refer to
Thus, in this embodiment, the ECU 40 is configured to carry out the fuel-injection thinning control when all of the nine conditions shown in
Moreover, although the fuel-injection thinning control in this embodiment has been configured so that only the fuel-injection by the fuel injector 23 is thinned, the ignition by the spark plug 28 may also be thinned in addition to this fuel-injection.
One example of the setting information stored in the fuel-injection interval setting storage area 491 may be in the form of a map, as shown in
Preferably, the number of fuel-injection pauses is an even number when the engine 20 has an even number of cylinders. For example, when the engine 20 has four cylinders, as shown in
In
In
As also seen from
As described above, the number of fuel-injection pauses may be fixed to a number corresponding to the engine speed, the blow-back rate of burned fuel gas (internal EGR), or the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe at the start of the fuel-injection thinning control. Alternatively, as shown in
As the fuel-injection thinning control is started, the cylinders (i.e., combustion chambers) are air-scavenged, and, thus, an amount of oxygen in each of the cylinders increases. For this reason, in order to prevent excessive oxygen on the contrary, it is desirable to correct an amount of fuel-injection so that it increases from usual, as follows.
That is, as shown in
For example, the corrected fuel-injection time ΔT may be set as approximately +300 microseconds when the engine speed is at approximately 8000 rpm, or as approximately +1000 microseconds when the engine speed is at approximately 3000 rpm, and so forth.
When the thinned fuel-injection is carried out and the engine speed or the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe decreases, a torque by which the engine 20 generates per combustion may be large even if the fuel-injection amount is corrected as described above, and, thus, the passenger may be able to physically recognize the thinning. This may be what is called a “rough” feeling.
In order to reduce this, it is desirable to correct the ignition timing during the thinned fuel-injection as follows. In
It is desirable that the ignition timing is approximately proportional to the engine speed or the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe, as shown in
Therefore, returning to
In
Next, referring to
Specifically, the ECU 40 is configured so that it carries out the immediate resume when the throttle valve 223 is rapidly opened (that is, Rapid Throttle Open) by the driver operating the throttle control (not illustrated) at a gear shift, or when the clutch is in a state immediately after having been connected (i.e., Immediately After Clutch is Connected), or when the transmission device is shifted into the neutral position (i.e., Shifted into Neutral Position), or otherwise, it carries out the normal resume.
The rapid throttle open may be determined by the throttle valve 223 being opened faster than a predetermined opening rate (e.g., approximately +160 degrees per second or faster), for example. Specifically, as shown in
It may be determined that the clutch is in the state immediately after having been connected by determining that the clutch has been connected for less than a predetermined period of time, for example, a time being less than approximately 200 milliseconds. Specifically, as shown in
How many times fuel-injection is paused in each of the cylinders is stored each time in the memory 49, and the ECU 40 determines whether the fuel-injection pauses are completed by comparing the number of pauses stored in the memory 49 and the number of pauses to be carried out in the thinned fuel-injection.
Upon resuming normal fuel-injection, the corrected amount of fuel-injection and the corrected ignition timing as described above are also resumed to the original condition in the normal fuel-injection. For example, for the fuel-injection amount where the immediate resume takes place, the injection command value is immediately resumed from T+ΔT to T as shown in
Also for the ignition timing upon the immediate resume, as shown in
For example, since the ignition timing is gradually retarded in this embodiment in order to suppress the torque corresponding to the engine speed or the negative pressure in the air-intake pipe that decrease as the vehicle decelerates during the thinned fuel-injection as shown in
The ignition timing upon normal resume, as shown in
In the example of
Although the present disclosure includes specific embodiments, specific embodiments are not to be considered in a limiting sense, because numerous variations are possible. The subject matter of the present disclosure includes all novel and nonobvious combinations and subcombinations of the various elements, features, functions, and/or properties disclosed herein. The following claims particularly point out certain combinations and subcombinations regarded as novel and nonobvious. These claims may refer to “an” element or “a first” element or the equivalent thereof. Such claims should be understood to include incorporation of one or more such elements, neither requiring nor excluding two or more such elements. Other combinations and subcombinations of features, functions and elements, and/or properties may be claimed through amendment of the present claims or through presentation of new claims in this or a related application. Such claims whether broader, narrower, equal, and/or different in scope to the original claims, also are regarded as included within the subject matter of the present disclosure.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070144494 A1 | Jun 2007 | US |