Common rail injection systems working at very high injection pressures are being increasingly used for supplying internal combustion engines with fuel. In these common rail injection systems, fuel is pumped with the aid of a high-pressure pump into a high-pressure common rail, from which the fuel is injected into the combustion chambers of the internal combustion engine using injectors. In particular, for diesel engines, injectors having an injection valve which is opened and closed hydraulically by a servo valve are used to establish the time sequence of the injection operation into the combustion chamber. In this case, the servo valve is actuated by a magnetic or piezoelectric actuator. Legislation on emissions, which is becoming increasingly strict worldwide, and the constant increase in the efficiency of engines result, in the case of these common rail systems, in a larger number of partial injections being required for each injection operation, i.e., for each operating cycle of the internal combustion engine, the quantity of fuel of the individual injection becoming smaller and smaller, and the variance of the injection quantities between multiple injection operations, i.e., operating cycles, having increasingly strict tolerances. This also represents new challenges for the methods and devices for injector testing.
One object of the present invention is to provide a cost-efficient and robust approach for injector testing having increased accuracy.
In accordance with the present invention, opening and closing the injector generates pressure waves in the injector feed line, and the injection time (i.e., the time during which the injector is open) is determinable by measuring and evaluating the pressure curve in the feed line. There are different procedures to achieve this, based on the evaluation of different features in the pressure curve. Since, due to different influencing factors, the pressure curve changes for each injector type and operating point (temperature, pressure, injection time, etc.) of the injector, so far there is no universally applicable procedure that would deliver the best possible result for any injector type at any operating point. Therefore, the present invention includes a procedure for selecting the most suitable possible procedure from a number of different procedures for the particular specific application.
An example method according to the present invention for selecting a procedure for determining the injection time of the individual injection operations of a fuel injector which is suppliable with pressurized fuel via a feed line includes the steps of activating the fuel injector with different known activation periods in the vicinity of a predefined operating point of the fuel injector; detecting the pressure curve over time in the feed line for a number of injection operations for each activation period; evaluating the detected pressure curves over time using at least two different procedures for determining the injection time for each injection operation; determining the correlation between the determined injection times and the respective activation period; and selecting the procedure having the highest correlation.
The correlation between the injection times and the activation periods may be determined, for example, by calculating Pearson's correlation coefficients. The absolute values of the injection times and activation periods do not have to match.
The procedure thus selected shows the best linear correlation; however, zero point errors and/or slope errors may still occur. In order to accurately determine the correlation between the injection times and the activation periods, a regression function is established from the value pairs of activation periods and ascertained injection times, using the “least squares method,” for example. In the case of a straight-line regression, the injection time may be ascertained from the slope as well as the axis segment from the pressure curve. Such a linearization may be performed successfully in particular if only a relatively small region around the particular operating point of the injector is taken into account.
It is also possible to establish a threshold value for the correlation value in such a way that injection times are determined only when the threshold value is exceeded, so that the procedure shows a sufficiently high linear correlation between the injection time and the activation period. Alternatively, the injection times may also be determined when the threshold value is not reached and output with an appropriate warning.
The present invention also relates to a method for determining the injection quantity of individual injection operations of a fuel injector which may be supplied with pressurized fuel via a feed line, including the following steps: selecting the procedure best suited for the particular operating point for determining the injection time using the above-described method; activating the fuel injector at least at one predefined operating point and simultaneously measuring the pressure curve occurring in a feed line; determining the injection time of each individual injection operation from the measured pressure curve, using the selected procedure; and determining the injection quantity of each individual injection operation from the previously determined injection time.
Using the example method according to the present invention, the injection time of an individual injection operation of a fuel injector may be determined reliably with high accuracy even for short injection times.
The example method is applicable to any injector type and in the entire operating range of the particular injector and covers the entire quantity range of different injectors (automobiles, trucks, piezoelectric actuators, solenoid valves). The measuring procedure itself limits the pressure range only because of the pressure sensor, which may have to be adapted or replaced.
By using a pressure sensor which is often already present in the feed line, the acquisition and maintenance costs are reduced. The example method is insensitive to the installation site of the injector and simple to handle, since no complex mechanics or the buildup of a counter pressure is required. The example method allows for simple retrofitting of existing systems having continuous flow measurement and is suitable for use in workshops, since it is robust and contamination resistant.
The present invention also relates to a method for testing a fuel injector, including the following steps: determining the particular injection quantity of a number of individual injection operations of a fuel injector at at least one operating point using the above-described method and statistically evaluating the injection quantities thus determined. Such a testing method allows for a particularly accurate and effective testing of modern high-performance injectors which are operated using high injection pressures of thousands of bar and short injection times.
In one specific embodiment, the method for testing a fuel injector also includes the evaluation of a measure of variance, such as the standard deviation or the variance, of the ascertained injection quantities. This allows the quality of testing to be further improved.
In one specific embodiment, each injection operation includes multiple partial injection operations. The method is so flexible that it is able to also evaluate injection operations including multiple partial injection operations.
In one specific embodiment, the procedure for evaluating the pressure curve over time includes the transformation of the detected pressure curve into the frequency domain. By transforming the pressure curve into the frequency domain, the evaluation of the pressure curve may be improved; in particular, interfering frequency components may be filtered out prior to the further evaluation. In another specific embodiment, the evaluation procedure also includes the back-transformation of the pressure curve from the frequency domain into the space domain or time domain.
In one specific embodiment, the procedure for evaluating the pressure curve over time includes the determination of maximums, minimums, and/or inflection points of the pressure curve. This allows the beginning and the end of the injection operation to be determined in a particularly effective, reliable, and simple manner.
In one specific embodiment, the method includes the activation of the fuel injector using activation periods above and below the operating point. In particular, the method includes the successive activation of the fuel injector using a series of stepwise increasing or decreasing activation periods. Using such a stepwise activation, the correlation between the activation period and the injection time determined from the pressure curve may be determined particularly accurately, and the procedure for evaluating the pressure curve that is most suitable for the particular injector at the examined operating point may be selected particularly effectively.
The present invention also relates to a device for testing a fuel injector. An example of such a device has at least one receptacle for accommodating at least one fuel injector; at least one feed line, which is designed to supply a pressurized fluid to the fuel injector; at least one sensor, which is designed to measure the pressure curve over time; a volume measuring unit, which is designed to detect the flow rate through the injector; at least one actuator, which is designed to activate the fuel injector; and at least one evaluation unit, which is functionally connected to the volume measuring unit, the sensor, and the actuator. The evaluation unit is designed to carry out at least one of the methods according to the present invention.
The sensor for measuring the pressure curve over time in the feed line may be a pressure sensor situated in the feed line or a structure-borne noise sensor mounted on the feed line, which measures the noise generated by the pressure fluctuations propagating in the feed line. Such a structure-borne noise sensor may be designed as a piezoelectric element, for example.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are explained below in greater detail with reference to the figures.
a shows, as an example, the activation of an injector during the injection quantity correlation.
b shows the injection quantity as a function of the activation period.
a and 4b show the corresponding injection times ascertained for the various activation periods, two different procedures having been used for ascertaining the injection times.
a and 5b show the ideal correlation values ascertained for different operating points as a function of the activation period.
a and 6b show, as an example, the activation of an injector at the operating point and the resulting pressure curve in the feed line.
a through 7d show the measured pressure curve in the time domain (
In a first step 100, a number of injection operations having different activation periods take place in the vicinity of an operating point to be measured (test point), and the pressure curves present in feed line 4 are measured and, if necessary, stored. In the subsequent evaluation (step 200), the pressure curves are evaluated. In doing so, either the previously stored pressure curves may be used or the measured pressure curves may be evaluated immediately without temporary storage. In particular, the injection times are determined from the respective pressure curves using different procedures (steps 211, 212, 213), and the correlation between the injection times thus ascertained and the corresponding activation periods is calculated (steps 221, 222, 223). The correlation values thus determined are compared to each other, and the procedure with the best correlation, i.e., with the highest correlation value, is selected for evaluating the subsequent measurement (step 230).
A relationship between the injection time and the injection quantity is established for the procedure thus selected (step 240). For this purpose, the sum of injection quantities for a number of injection operations, measured using volume measuring unit 16, may be used for ascertaining the relationship between injection time and injection quantity. For a proportionality between injection quantities and injection time to be calculated, the mean activation periods of the corresponding injection quantities must be different.
If the injection quantities are determined from a continuous flow lasting for 2 to 3 minutes, for example, a mean injection quantity is obtained. This eliminates errors due to measured value variances.
Alternatively, the injection time may also be examined. The relationship between injection quantity and injection time is determined at two points in the vicinity of the operating point, and a regression function is established through these two points. Interpolation is performed between these points for calculating the injection quantity from the injection time. Linearization is possible in particular if only a small region around the particular operating point is examined.
In step 300, the measured data, i.e., the pressure fluctuations over time in the feed line when the injector is activated at the operating point, are measured and, if necessary, stored. This may take place before or after the best suitable procedure has been selected (injection quantity correlation) in steps 100 and 200. This may take place before or after step 100, as well as before, after, or during the selection of the best suited procedure (injection quantity correlation) in step 200.
The data measured at the operating point are evaluated (step 400); in particular, the injection times of the individual injection operations are determined (step 410) from the recorded pressure curves using the procedure ascertained during the injection quantity correlation, and the individual injection quantities are ascertained from the injection times (step 420). In doing so, either the previously stored pressure curves may be used, or the measured pressure curves may be evaluated directly without temporary storage.
The individual injection quantities are statistically evaluated (step 500) to determine the quality of injector 2.
a shows, as an example, the activation of an injector 2 during the injection quantity correlation. In the diagram shown in
Injector 2 is initially activated at the operating point with activation period Tact (phase A). Subsequently, activation period Tact is reduced to a period T1 below operating point Top and, after a stabilization phase, the pressure curve in feed line 4 is measured and recorded (phase B). At the same time, a flow quantity V1 is measured for a number of injection operations having activation period T1.
Later, activation period Tact is increased stepwise to an upper activation period T2 above operating point Top of the injector (phase C).
For the upper activation period T2, which is above operating point Top, flow quantity V2 is measured again, after a stabilization period, for a number of injections having activation period T2 (phase D).
For each activation period Tact the pressure curve over time in feed line 4 is measured and recorded for a number of injection operations which is statistically sufficient for achieving the required accuracy.
The relationship between the injection time and the injection quantity is ascertained with the aid of a straight line regression (linear approximation) from flow quantities V1, V2 measured for activation periods T1 and T2.
b shows the measured flow quantity Q (y axis) as a function of activation period TA (x axis) for three different activation periods, in particular at the operating point (P2), below and above the operating point (P1, P3).
b shows that the flow quantity as a function of the injection time in the examined region may be satisfactorily approximated using a straight line.
a and 4b show, for different activation periods TA (x axis), the corresponding injection times TI (y axis) ascertained from the pressure curves in the feed line, a different procedure having been used for ascertaining injection time TI for each of the two figures.
a and 4b clearly show that injection times T1 ascertained using the first procedure (
a and 5b show the ideal correlation values K (y axis) ascertained for different operating points as a function of the activation period TA (x axis).
The data of
a and 5b only show correlation values K determined using the ideal procedure for the particular operating point. The different procedures are distinguished by using different symbols for the test points.
The data shown in
The results further show that in this example, the correlation at a lower injection pressure (for example, in idle mode) is better overall and, in the case of changing activation period TA, is subject to smaller fluctuations (
a and 6b show, as an example, the activation of an injector at the operating point (
From features of this pressure curve, such as maximums, minimums, and/or inflection points, injection time TI associated with a predefined activation period TA may be calculated. This may be done using different procedures which weight the individual features differently. The procedure best suited for the particular operating point is selected using the above-described method.
A procedure may also include transformation of the measured pressure curve into the frequency domain and its further processing there.
a shows, as an example, such a pressure curve in the space and time domains, and
In the frequency spectrum shown in
d shows the processed signal back-transformed into the time domain. For comparison, the electrical activation signal is also shown as a dashed line.
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10 2010 001 387 | Jan 2010 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/050009 | 1/3/2011 | WO | 00 | 10/4/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/092042 | 8/4/2011 | WO | A |
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