The invention generally relates to a method for determining the heating characteristic of a glow plug such as known from DE 10 2006 010 194 A1.
At present, there is a multitude of well-known different types of glow plugs which are each different in their heating characteristic. The types of glow plugs that are customary at the moment can be roughly subdivided into ceramic glow plugs and metallic glow plugs. However, there are considerable differences not only between ceramic glow plugs and metallic glow plugs but, for example, also among ceramic glow plugs from different manufacturers and even among different types, i.e. models, of ceramic glow plugs from the same manufacturer.
An efficient glow plug control, however, requires that the heating characteristic of the used glow plug be known. It is, therefore, desirable that the type of the used glow plug can be determined automatically in order to be able to implement a glow plug operating mode that is optimally harmonized with the heating characteristic of the used glow plug.
DE 10 2006 010 194 A1 discloses a method for detecting the glow plug type wherein electric variables, for example, the resistance, the gradient of the resistance, or the inductance, are measured and the type of used glow plug can be determined by comparison with stored parameter sets each representing a specific glow plug type.
Although the known method allows distinguishing between metallic and ceramic glow plugs, it is not suitable for distinguishing among ceramic glow plugs of different types, i.e. among different models thereof or among different manufacturers.
The present invention, therefore, aims at providing a way of how the heating characteristic of a glow plug can be determined more precisely, so that it is possible to be able to even distinguish ceramic glow plugs of different types from each other.
This problem is solved by a method having the features presented in claim 1. Advantageous further developments of the inventions are the subject matter of subordinate claims.
By measuring an electric variable, for example, the resistance, repeatedly during a voltage pulse, preferably at the beginning and at the end of the voltage pulse, the difference between successive measurement results of this variable can be used to determine the heating characteristic of a glow plug much more precisely than this would, for example, be possible by simply calculating the gradient or time-derivative during the heating-up phase of the glow plug such as it is, for example, known from DE 10 2006 010 194 A1. The reason for this is that by simply calculating a gradient, it is assumed that the increase in temperature of a glow plug is steady and the gradient, accordingly, reflects a temperature-dependent electric variable of the heating characteristic of a glow plug.
Surprisingly, the results that can be obtained are much more precise if this seemingly plausible assumption is abandoned. In fact, glow plugs can cool down between the individual voltage pulses to a noticeable degree. By measuring an electric variable repeatedly, more particularly at the beginning and at the end of each voltage pulse, and forming the difference between two successive measurement results of this variable, the conclusion that can be drawn is much more precise and the plug type can, therefore, also be determined if the differences among the plug types are only minor.
Therein, a measurement result can be determined from a plurality of individual measurements, for example, 2 to 5, in rapid succession, said individual measurements being combined via a filter function, e.g., by averaging. The time interval between the first and last measurements of such a succession should, preferably, not be longer than 1/10, most preferably not longer than 1/50, of the pulse length or the time interval of the combined measurement results. By proceeding in this manner, the influence of accidental interferences is reduced and, therefore, the accuracy of the evaluation increased.
With the method according to the invention, the difference to be evaluated can each be calculated between a measurement result that is determined for the beginning of a voltage pulse and one that is determined for the end of the voltage pulse. In this manner, the heating-up behavior of a glow plug can be precisely determined and the plug type can be verified. As an alternative or in addition, it is also possible to calculate the difference between a measurement result that is determined for the end of a voltage pulse and one that is determined for the beginning of a voltage pulse following thereafter. In this manner, the cooling-down behavior of a glow plug can be determined in a reliable manner, said cooling-down behavior also being characteristic of the type of a glow plug and, therefore, of the heating-up behavior as well.
As a matter of principle, the heating characteristic of a glow plug can be determined by evaluating a single difference value. Preferably, however, a plurality of difference values is determined and evaluated. For example, the difference between a measurement result that is determined for the beginning of a voltage pulse and one that is determined for the end of the voltage pulse can be calculated and an arithmetic average be formed from such difference values and evaluated for each of a plurality of pulses. In this manner, the precision of the evaluation can be improved.
An advantageous further development of the invention provides that evaluation comprises that the difference is divided by a variable which is correlated with the energy input during a voltage pulse. In this manner, the difference is, thus, divided by a variable that correlates with the energy input between the points in time being decisive for the two measurement results. The variable correlated with the energy input can, for example, be the pulse length, the current intensity, or the on-board voltage. More particularly, it is also possible to use functions, more particularly products, of the aforementioned variables as the variable that is correlated with the energy input. More particularly, the variable that is correlated with the energy input can also be the energy input itself. The more the variable that is correlated with the energy input during the voltage pulse correlates with the energy input, the higher the increase in accuracy of the evaluation that is obtained by the division.
Preferably, the variable measured with a method according to the invention can be the electric resistance of the glow plug. As a matter of principle, however, it is also possible to measure another temperature-dependent electric variable of a glow plug, for example, the inductance, the capacitance, or a resonance frequency.
Preferably, the method according to the invention is used to determine the heating characteristic of a glow plug by determining the type of the glow plug. In general, it can be assumed that the heating characteristics of different glow plugs of the same type differ from each other, at the most, to an insignificant degree only. As a matter of principle, however, the method according to the invention can also be used to determine a potential ageing effect on the heating characteristic of a glow plug, with the result that it is even possible to distinguish between new and old glow plugs of the same type.
In particular, a glow plug type can also be detected within a glow plug type detection phase included prior to the glow cycle. The accuracy of the evaluation by means of the method described herein can be once again increased by such a phase by selecting the phase such that the mutual influence of the glow plug current feed is reduced. This can, for example, be achieved by operating the glow plugs with a defined pulse length and selecting the pulse length such that no other glow plugs are switched on and/or off during a pulse of a glow plug.
The present invention, furthermore, relates to a control unit for glow plugs, said control unit comprising a memory in which a program performing a method according to any one of the preceding claims is stored. Preferably, the memory of such a control unit contains parameter ranges which are each typical for certain glow plug types.
By comparing a parameter determined by means of a method according to the invention with the stored parameter ranges, a glow plug can, therefore, be uniquely allocated to a glow plug type and, thereafter, be activated with a heating-up program that is optimal for the particular plug type.
Further details and advantages of the invention will be illustrated by means of an exemplary embodiment, with reference made to the enclosed drawings. In the figures,
As can be seen from
In order to be able to allocate a given glow plug to a specific glow plug type, an electric variable, for example, the resistance R is measured at the beginning and at the end of at least one voltage pulse, and the difference between successive measurement results of this variable is formed. In the simplest case, the electric variable is measured exactly twice during one voltage pulse. The measured values of the individual measurements, then, are the measurement results between which the difference is formed. It is possible to obtain an increased accuracy by taking a plurality of measurements, for example, 2 or 3, shortly one after the other at the beginning of a voltage pulse and to form a measurement result for the beginning of the voltage pulse from the measured values thus obtained, for example by combining the individual measured values via a filter function, e.g., by averaging. In a corresponding manner, a plurality of measurements can be taken shortly one after the other at the end of a voltage pulse and a measurement result for the end of the voltage pulse can be formed from the measured values thus obtained.
The difference of the electric resistances at the beginning and at the end of a voltage pulse is plotted as ΔR in
The energy input between two measurements can, for example, be achieved continuously by means of an integrator or by adding individual periods. It is particularly advantageous to calculate the energy from a linear interpolation of the voltage and current values measured at the times at which the measurements were taken.
Surprisingly, the values within the scope of measurement accuracy are almost constant over time. Since the glow plugs are heated up by current pulses with time progressing, the approximately constant curve means that the value of the quotient is approximately independent of the temperature. This is an important advantage because, as a consequence, the initial temperature does not play any role in the application of the method. The method can, therefore, be used with a cold glow plug the temperature of which can range from −30° C. to +40° C. depending on weather conditions, as well as with a hot glow plug the temperature of which may be several hundred degrees because of preceding engine operation.
As a matter of principle, the type of a given glow plug can already be determined by means of a single value that was calculated for a single current pulse. However, the reliability of the allocation can be improved if evaluation is assisted by a plurality of values. It is, for example, possible to calculate a function which depends on the differences between neighboring values of a series of measurement results of a variable that is measured at the beginning and at the end of a voltage pulse. It is, in particular, possible to calculate the arithmetic average of a succession of parameters which were calculated by evaluating the difference between successive measurement results of an electric variable.
For measurement engineering reasons,
The described method is to advantage in that, by evaluating the difference between successive measurement results of an electric variable, it is possible to determine a parameter which is characteristic of the type of a glow plug and, more particularly, even allows distinguishing among ceramic glow plugs of different types. By comparing the parameter to be determined with specified parameter ranges, the glow plug type of a given glow plug can, therefore, be determined.
The length of the current pulses, by itself, is of no significance for the method according to the invention. In particular, the parameter determined according to the invention, which is used for determining the plug type, is independent of the pulse length to a very high degree, with the result that the pulse length can be changed while the plug type is being determined. Typically, the pulse length ranges from 5 ms to 120 ms.
Application of the described method is possible with a control unit for glow plugs which comprises a memory, with a program performing such a method during operation being stored in said memory. With regard to its hardware components, such a control unit can be designed as are conventional control units and can be characterized by its memory contents only. In addition to software performing the method described above for detecting a glow plug type, the memory, preferably, contains different parameter ranges to which a parameter determined by means of the method according to the invention is compared. The individual parameter ranges are each characteristic of specific glow plug types, with the result that a glow plug can be uniquely allocated to a specific type by comparing it with the parameter ranges.
Additionally, various heating-up routines or control variables, for example, a setpoint for the effective voltage after an optimum operating temperature has been reached, can be stored in the memory of the glow plug control unit. In this manner, a glow plug can always be activated with a program that is the best for the heating characteristic of the particular glow plug type after the method according to the invention has been performed. Preferably, a control routine or control variables are, furthermore, also stored in the memory, said control routine or control variables being used if the parameters determined for a glow plug do not allow allocating it to a known type. This case can, for example, occur if glow plug types come into the market, which were not yet known when the control unit was produced and/or programmed.
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