In internal combustion engines that have a compressor in an air feed to the internal combustion engine to compress the air supplied to the internal combustion engine, both the pressure and the temperature in the air feed are higher downstream from the compressor than upstream from the compressor. For this reason an intercooler is utilized downstream from the compressor, which reverses a portion of the temperature increase. Nevertheless, the temperature in the combustion chamber is still higher, and there is an increased knocking tendency. A knock control removes knocking by retarding the ignition. This lowers the efficiency and simultaneously increases the exhaust gas temperature. Counter measures are then provided, which reduce the knock tendency and lower the exhaust gas temperature to permissible values by enriching the air/fuel mixture and lowering the charge.
The method according to the present invention and the device for operating an internal combustion engine according to the present invention have the advantage that the setpoint charge pressure to be generated by the compressor is limited to a maximally permissible (allowed) setpoint charge pressure as a function of a temperature at the output side of the compressor. Operating states of the internal combustion engine that lead to an undesirably high temperature on the output side of the compressor are avoided from the outset in this manner. Thus, the knock tendency may be reduced from the start without having to accept a higher exhaust gas temperature. This also does not require any complicated counter measures such as enriching the air/fuel mixture or reducing the charge.
It is possible to ascertain the correlation between the maximally permissible setpoint charge pressure and the temperature at the output side of the compressor in a particularly simple and cost-effective manner by a control based on characteristic curves or characteristic maps.
Another advantage results if a maximally permissible temperature of the air at the air feed exit of the compressor is specified as temperature at the output side of the compressor and the maximally permissible setpoint charge pressure is ascertained as a function of the maximally allowed temperature. This makes it possible to utilize a physical correlation between the pressure ratio and the temperature ratio above the compressor for determining the maximally permissible setpoint charge pressure, such a physical correlation being representable mathematically in a relatively uncomplicated manner.
A simple procedure for ascertaining the maximally permissible setpoint charge pressure may be derived from this mathematical representation. In the process, a maximally permissible compressor pressure ratio is predefined as a function of the maximally allowed temperature of the air at the air feed exit of the compressor, and the maximally allowed setpoint charge pressure is ascertained from the maximally allowed compressor pressure ratio. The setpoint charge pressure to be generated by the compressor is then limited to the maximally allowed setpoint charge pressure.
The maximally allowed compressor pressure ratio for maintaining the maximally permissible temperature of the air at the air feed exit of the compressor may be ascertained in an especially simple manner as a function of the temperature of the air at the air feed entrance of the compressor, using a characteristic curve.
In
In equation (1), pnv is the pressure of the air at air feed exit 60, Tnv the temperature of the air at air feed exit 60, η the compressor efficiency and γ the isentropic exponent.
Downstream from compressor 5 in the flow direction of the fresh air, an intercooler 30 is disposed in air feed 10, which at least partially cools the temperature of the air which increased during the compression by compressor 5. A cylinder 35 is arranged downstream from intercooler 30 in the flow direction of the fresh air. Additional components for operating internal combustion engine 1, such as the fuel injector and spark plug (the latter only in the case of spark ignition engines) are not shown in
According to the present invention, the setpoint charge pressure to be generated by compressor 5 is limited to a maximally allowed setpoint charge pressure as a function of a temperature at the output side of compressor 5. The temperature at the output side of compressor 5 may be the exhaust gas temperature, for instance, or the temperature in the combustion chamber of cylinder 35. After all, not only is the exhaust gas temperature to be limited to permissible values with the aid of the method according to the present invention and the device according to the present invention, but the knock tendency may be reduced as well by limiting the temperature in the combustion chamber. The correlation between the maximally permissible setpoint charge pressure and the temperature at the output side of compressor 5 may be ascertained in a manner, for instance, that is controlled via characteristic curves or characteristics maps. To ascertain such a characteristics map, the individually assigned maximally allowed setpoint charge pressure may be determined on a test stand for various operating points of internal combustion engine 1 and various predefined maximally permitted exhaust gas-temperatures or maximally permissible combustion-chamber temperatures.
Thus, it is possible during operation of internal combustion engine 1 and by predefining a maximally permissible exhaust gas temperature or a maximally permitted combustion chamber temperature to ascertain the associated maximally allowed setpoint charge pressure from the corresponding characteristic map as a function of the instantaneous operating point of internal combustion engine 1. The setpoint charge pressure, which is predefined by engine control 15 as a function of the driver wish, for instance, will then be limited to this maximally allowed setpoint charge pressure.
An especially advantageous specific embodiment of the present invention utilizes the physical correlation between the pressure ratio and the temperature ratio above compressor 5 according to equation (1). To this end, a maximally allowed temperature of the air at the air feed exit of compressor 5 is predefined as temperature at the output side of compressor 5, and the maximally permissible setpoint charge pressure to which the setpoint charge pressure predefined by engine control 15 is limited, is ascertained as a function of this maximally allowed temperature. Starting from equation (1), the following correlation is obtained:
In equation (2) Tnvmax is the maximally permitted temperature of the air at the air feed exit of compressor 5, and pnvmax the associated maximally permitted setpoint charge pressure at the air feed exit of compressor 5. At specified maximally permitted temperature Tnvmax of the air at the air feed exit of compressor 5 and at compressor efficiency η known in engine control 15, and with isentropic exponent γ known in engine control 15, it is possible on the basis of equation (2) to generate a function that represents the maximally permissible pressure ratio pnvmax/pvv above compressor 5 for maintaining the predefined maximally permissible temperature Tnvmax of the air at the air feed exit of compressor 5 as a function of temperature Tvv of the air at the air feed entry of compressor 5. This function may also be ascertained on a test stand, for instance, within the framework of an application, and be stored in a characteristic curve 25 in engine control 15. The maximally allowed compressor pressure ratio pnvmax/pvv is multiplied by pressure pvv in front of compressor 5, in this way yielding the maximally permitted setpoint charge pressure pnvmax, which is entered in the charge pressure control where it limits the setpoint charge pressures specified there as to their maximum.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2004 015 742 | Mar 2004 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3096614 | Silver et al. | Jul 1963 | A |
4686830 | Buck et al. | Aug 1987 | A |
5121604 | Berger et al. | Jun 1992 | A |
5231830 | Entenmann et al. | Aug 1993 | A |
5442918 | Baeuerle et al. | Aug 1995 | A |
5454360 | Shimizu et al. | Oct 1995 | A |
5551235 | Entenmann et al. | Sep 1996 | A |
6058708 | Heinitz et al. | May 2000 | A |
6295816 | Gallagher et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6401457 | Wang et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6584772 | Haupt et al. | Jul 2003 | B2 |
6644029 | Weinreuter | Nov 2003 | B2 |
6804601 | Wang et al. | Oct 2004 | B2 |
20030101723 | Birkner et al. | Jun 2003 | A1 |
20030213244 | Faletti | Nov 2003 | A1 |
20050172627 | Baize et al. | Aug 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
10065266 | Jul 2002 | DE |
10319347 | Nov 2004 | DE |
2540180 | Aug 1984 | FR |
2821889 | Feb 2002 | FR |
WO2004079174 | Sep 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050217647 A1 | Oct 2005 | US |