The present invention relates to a method for detecting reverse rotation at the start of an internal combustion engine having a sensor disk which is coupled to a crankshaft of the engine, the sensor disk having a marking via an alternating arrangement of teeth and tooth spaces, and a first sensor and a second sensor being associated with the sensor disk, each being capable of generating an electric signal which may assume at least two levels, one signal level being associated with a tooth and the other with a tooth space, a rising or falling signal edge of one signal and the signal level of the other signal being used for determining the direction of rotation and increment of the rotational angle of the crankshaft, as well as to a control unit for carrying out the method.
One problem when starting the engine is an undesirable reverse rotation of the crankshaft. Typical reasons for reverse rotation may be the movement of the vehicle with an engaged gear on a slope or a premature disconnect of the starter, in which case the stored energy of the compressed cylinder acts as a gas spring, rotating the engine in reverse. Once the engine rotates in reverse, if the reverse rotation is not detected, the correct assignment of injection and ignition for the engine controller is disrupted, causing the engine to rotate in reverse for a certain time.
The basic problem is that sampling of the crankshaft signal generated by an increment wheel having an inductive or magnetoresistive sensor does not include any direction of rotation information.
Different approaches for solving this problem are known from the related art:
U.S. Pat. No. 6,691,690 describes a method for detecting reverse rotation of an internal combustion engine having a crankshaft sensor and a camshaft sensor from the relationship between the crankshaft signal and the camshaft signal.
German Patent No. DE 19933844 describes a method for determining possible reverse rotation by analyzing the time of successive tooth increments.
Japanese Patent No. JP 2000136737 describes a method for establishing a relationship between the intake manifold pressure curve and the markings on the crankshaft and/or camshaft, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,079,945 describes the analysis of two crankshaft signals using two sensor wheels and thus two sensors.
Finally, as known from German Patent No. DE 19933845, an angle sensor measuring absolute values may be provided on the camshaft.
All known methods have considerable disadvantages. Thus, methods should be adapted to the engine using careful plausibility analysis of the signals taking into account different operating conditions to provide reliable results. Methods involving additional sensors on the crankshaft or camshaft are costly and require substantial modifications of the engine design. An object of the present invention is to achieve improved reverse rotation detection at the start of an internal combustion engine using incremental sensors.
The above-mentioned disadvantages of the related art are eliminated by a method for detecting reverse rotation at the start of an internal combustion engine having a sensor disk which is coupled to a crankshaft of the engine, the sensor disk having a marking via an alternating arrangement of teeth and tooth spaces, and a first sensor and a second sensor being associated with the sensor disk, each being capable of generating an electric signal which may assume at least two levels, one signal level being associated with a tooth and the other with a tooth space, and a rising or falling signal edge of the first signal and the signal level of the second signal being used for determining the direction of rotation and increment of the rotational angle of the crankshaft, the direction of rotation of the crankshaft being determined during the start of the engine as early as at the first signal edge. Tooth and tooth space are also understood. here as the alternating arrangement of markings, for example, of magnetic or optical markings.
At the signal edge of one of the sensors (change in the signal level from high to low or from low to high), the signal level of the other sensor is determined and the direction of rotation of the crankshaft is read from an assignment table.
In a preferred embodiment of the method, reverse rotation of the crankshaft is detected if the direction of rotation of the crankshaft changes at two successive signal edges. The change in the direction of rotation results directly from the analysis of only one rising or falling edge of one of the signals. In other words, a direction of rotation may be directly associated with each edge change without analyzing previous or subsequent edges.
In the event of reverse rotation of the crankshaft, the injection and/or ignition is/are preferably suppressed, preventing the engine from rotating in reverse. In addition, in the event of reverse rotation of the crankshaft, injection and/or ignition may remain suppressed until the crankshaft attains a minimum rotational speed in the forward direction of rotation.
In the event of a signal level change of one of the sensors, a counter in the control unit for the crankshaft angle is preferably incremented or decremented as a function of the direction of rotation. The absolute crankshaft angle is thus known at all times. The instantaneous crankshaft speed may be additionally determined from these values by determining the tooth time between two edges.
The above-mentioned object is also achieved by a control unit for an internal combustion engine having a sensor disk which is coupled to a crankshaft, the sensor disk having a marking via an alternating arrangement of teeth and tooth spaces, two sensors associated with the sensor disk generating an electric signal which may assume at least two signal levels, one of the signal levels being associated with a tooth and the second signal level being associated with a tooth space, and a rising or falling signal edge of the first signal and the signal level of the second signal being used for determining the direction of rotation and increment of the rotational angle of the crankshaft, and being able to carry out the method according to the present invention.
A first sensor 6 and a second sensor 7 are situated on sensor disk 1. Sensors 6, 7 are situated at an angle α relative to one another distributed in the different angle ranges over sensor disk 1. Both sensors 6, 7 are preferably situated in a shared housing. In this case, angle α may preferably assume values from approximately 1° to 15°. A particularly advantageous approach is a sensor having at least two sensor elements situated in the proximity of each other. One embodiment is the integration of at least two Hall elements on an IC at a distance of a few millimeters, the IC additionally containing the analyzing circuit. The two Hall elements then correspond to sensors 6 and 7, and the analyzing circuit determines the direction of rotation from the time relationship between the sensor signals. The shape of the known crankshaft sensor may then be preserved, making it possible to adopt this sensor without design changes in the engine.
When the crankshaft and thus sensor disk 1 rotate, teeth 4 and marking 5 pass by sensors 6, 7, triggering an electric signal in sensors 6, 7, for example. Sensors 6, 7 may be inductive or capacitive sensors. Alternatively, sensors 6, 7 may also be optical sensors, for example, being able to measure the optical changes caused in them by teeth 4 or marking 5.
The schematic drawing in
Rising signal edge 11 is identified in the following tables 1 and 2 as “L−>H”. Falling edge 12 is identified as “H−>L.” DR denotes the direction of rotation of the crankshaft, −> denoting counterclockwise rotation, and <− denoting clockwise rotation.
During the rising or falling edge of signal S1 or S2, the direction of rotation of the crankshaft may be determined from the other signal which is then constant. For example, if the edge of signal S1 (H−>L) is failing and signal S2 is on the high level, the crankshaft is rotating counterclockwise.
A signal coded according to
Furthermore, according to the present invention, in an extended application of this crankshaft sensor, the direction of rotation information is analyzed immediately after engine start. The direction of rotation may be analyzed in the engine control unit as early as at the first tooth. If reverse rotation is detected, injection and ignition may be suppressed until the required forward direction of rotation of the motor is observed via the starter torque.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 048 132 | Oct 2004 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060162701 A1 | Jul 2006 | US |