This application is a U.S. National Phase under 35 U.S.C. §371 of International Application No. PCT/EP2007/008983, filed Oct. 17, 2007.
The present invention relates to a method and devices therefor for reducing the difference of the normalized air-fuel ratio of the various cylinders in an internal combustion engine compared with a predetermined value between 0.7 and 1.1.
As it is known, to optimize the combustion process in an internal combustion engine with several cylinders, it is necessary for the air-fuel ratio in each cylinder to be in proximity to the stoichiometric value. The devices and methods currently utilized and available in the market are based on oxygen sensors, usually housed in the exhaust conduit in proximity to the catalytic converter.
However, these sensors present certain drawbacks, for example, they are subject to breakage. Furthermore, it is not normally possible to determine the air-fuel ratio of the single cylinders as the sensor signal refers to the exhaust gases from the single cylinders when already mixed in the exhaust manifold. The complicated signal treatments which would serve to reconstruct the air-fuel ratio of the single cylinders do not guarantee the precision necessary for the controller device which is supposed to realign the cylinders.
The aim of the present invention is to identify a method and devices therefor for reducing the difference of the normalized air-fuel ratio in the various cylinders of an internal combustion engine compared with a predetermined value, preferably between 0.7 and 1.1, eliminating the oxygen sensors to overcome the drawbacks described.
The present invention is based on the use of the ionization current released by a device positioned on top of each cylinder of the said engine. In particular, the signal of the said ionization current is acquired by a Control Unit, commonly utilised for the management of the said engines. The said Control Unit is equipped with means, preferably electronic ones, which actuate the method of the present invention. The said method, repeated continually for each cycle of the said engine, develops over various phases.
The aims and advantages of the present invention will better emerge in the description that follows and the embodiments of the invention, illustrated in the plates enclosed purely in the form of simplified, non-limiting examples of an internal combustion engine with four cylinders:
With reference to
With reference to
The first phase (201) relates to the continuative application of a low-pass filter to the normalized air-fuel ratio signal of each cylinder (2) of the engine (1). The signal obtained following application of the low-pass filter is named in the present invention as the Filtered Cylinder Lambda signal.
The subsequent phase (202) relates to the continuative calculation of the difference between a predetermined signal representing a value between 0.7 and 1.1 and the Filtered Cylinder Lambda signal of each cylinder (2), and the obtaining of the signal relating to the operation realised during the said phase. The signal generated in phase 202 is named in the present invention as the Cylinder Error Lambda signal.
In the subsequent phase of the method (203), the Cylinder Error Lambda signal of each cylinder (2) is registered starting from the first engine cycle at each ignition of the said engine (1). Each signal registered in the said phase 203 is named in the present invention as the Registered Cylinder Error Lambda signal.
The method continues with the subsequent phase (204) in which the injectors (3) receive the increase signal for the quantity of fuel to put into the relevant cylinder (2) which has the Registered Cylinder Error Lambda signal with a negative value.
The method likewise envisages a further phase (205) in which the injectors (3) receive the decrease signal for the quantity of fuel to put into the relevant cylinder (2) which has the Registered Cylinder Error Lambda signal with a positive value.
In the first phase (304), the Registered Cylinder Error Lambda signal of each cylinder (2) is multiplied by a signal representing a value between 0.01 and 1. Phase 304 likewise envisages the obtaining of the signal determined by the operation realized during the said phase, named as the Intermediary Cylinder Correction Lambda signal. In the second phase (305), the Intermediary Cylinder Correction Lambda signal of each cylinder (2) is added to a signal representing a predetermined value between 0.7 and 1.1. Phase 305 likewise envisages the obtaining of the signal determined by the operation realized during the said phase 305, named in the present invention as the Cylinder Correction Lambda signal. In the third phase (306), the Cylinder Correction Lambda signal of each cylinder (2) is multiplied by a signal representing the stoichiometric value. Phase 306 likewise envisages the obtaining of the signal determined by the operation realised during the said phase, named in the present invention as the Amplified Cylinder Correction Lambda. In the fourth phase (307), the signal representing the quantity of air present in each cylinder (2) is divided by the Amplified Cylinder Correction Lambda signal of the relative cylinder. Phase 307 likewise also envisages the obtaining of the signal determined by the operation realised during the said phase, known in the present invention as the Cylinder Fuel Quantity. The fifth phase (308) envisages the sending of the signal to each injector (3) to admit the fuel into the relative cylinder (2) on the basis of the Cylinder Fuel Quantity signal of each cylinder acquired during the previous phase (307) and which is used to correct, in an inversely proportional manner, the predetermined quantity of petrol to inject into the relative cylinder; i.e. increasing the value of the signal decreases the quantity of petrol injected and vice versa.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2006A2097 | Oct 2006 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/008983 | 10/17/2007 | WO | 00 | 11/3/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/052651 | 5/8/2008 | WO | A |
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