The present invention generally relates to vehicle brake systems and more particularly relates to a method and a control system for establishing the relationship between actuator position and actuator clamping force for a brake which can be operated by an electromechanical actuator.
A method is known from WO 99/16650 where the characteristic curve is also established using a special method without force sensor. In that case, an equivalent force value is established which is calculated solely from measured values for the actuator position and actuator torque, as well as their time derivation and various constants. Unknown influencing variables such as friction and damping are calculated using a special periodical activation signal as well as an extensive analysis of the measurements. The disadvantage of this method, in particular, is that all of the measured values for a complete period of the activating signal have to be stored temporarily and then, in a further stage using a complicated analysis process, provide a value of the characteristic curve to be established and representing the above mentioned relationship. This means that this method is not capable of real-time function and also acts on the assumption that the application point is known, i.e. the actuator position where the brake linings are just in contact with the disc but are not yet applying any force. Although a solution to this is provided in WO 99/16650, it requires a very high resolution phase incremental encoder which is very expensive.
It is therefore the object of the present invention to propose a method and a control system that makes it possible to establish the initially unknown relationship between actuation position and actuator clamping force completely without any force sensor and without the above-mentioned disadvantages.
This object is achieved according to the present invention in that
A precondition for this system functioning, as also applies in WO 99/16650, is a periodical activation which should preferably be achieved as an additional signal superimposed on the nominal value of the actuator clamping force. The frequency and amplitude of this addition signal are chosen in such a way that the actuator actually carries out the required back and forth movement during normal brake operation though this back and forth movement is not perceived by the driver as a braking force fluctuation.
The present invention uses low-pass filters of the first degree be used. Low-pass filters of the first degree (because they operate effectively and above all with relatively low calculating expenditure) so that the burden on the computing unit can be minimized.
The actuator clamping force Fη=1 (φ) corresponding to the actuator efficiency degree η=1 is calculated according to the formula:
where Mnominal represents the actuator torque, i represents the transmission ratio of the arrangement for the conversion of the rotational movement of the electric motor into a translation, J represents the mass moment of inertia and φ represents the actuator rotational acceleration. The specified formula results from a simple physical model observation under omission of all friction. The friction is calculated from the result automatically through the applied periodical back and forth movement and the mean value formation by the low-pass filters.
The analytical relationship between actuator position and actuator clamping force used for the calculation of an actual value for the actuator clamping force for each measured actuator position is described by an offset value of the actuator (Fo), an offset value of the actuator position (φo), a scaling factor (a) and a describing function to be defined beforehand f (φ) with the formula:
Festim(φ)=F0+a·f(φ−φ0)
A particular advantage with this analytical description is the constant number of initially unknown parameters Fo, φo, a, so that the method can be carried out equally for identifying the relationship of any function f (φ).
An identification method that minimizes the following quality criterion is used for the calculation of the parameters (φo, Fo, a) describing the relationship between actuator position and actuator clamping force:
where ci represents weighting factors for different weighting of the mean values. The use of this quadratic quality criterion allows an analytical determination of the partial derivations with regard to unknown parameters so that the equations describing the parameters can be easily calculated.
According to an advantageous invention characteristic, the weighting factors are chosen in such a way that mean values that can be gained from a larger quantity of measured data have more influence on the identification result. This step increases the precision of the identification process because the mean values gained from the greater quantity of measured data are more precise than the mean values or the values that are only formed from few measured data pairs.
A good adaptability of the slowly changing parameters (e.g. with the temperature) describing the relationship between actuator position and actuator clamping force is achieved with a further advantageous characteristic of the present invention by that the weighting factors are chosen in such a way that new mean values have more influence on the identification result.
Even if the actuator clamping force can be estimated from the estimated relationship between actuator position and actuator clamping force with the help of travel measurements, a measurement of the actuator clamping force is undoubtedly more accurate. Therefore, if (e.g. for reasons of precision) a force sensor is present, the aforesaid relationship can also be established with the described method, however, in this case it is advantageous to use the actual measured actuator clamping force instead of the actuator efficiency degree η=1. The estimated relationship can then serve, for instance, as fall-back mode for situations where the force sensor fails or errors by the force sensor can be established.
A compromise between costs and precision is achieved with another advantageous embodiment of the object of invention by that the actuator clamping force is measured within a prescribed measuring range using a force sensor, and outside that measuring range the actuator clamping force (Fη=1) corresponding to the actuator efficiency degree η=1 is used.
The force sensor preferably covers the range of actuator clamping forces lying below a clamping force threshold. This range is used the most frequently during the operation of the brake. The “upper” actuator clamping force range (e.g. panic braking, crawling downhill), in comparison, is hardly ever used and any loss of comfort (e.g. because of imprecise travel/force characteristic curve estimation) within this force range is more likely to be tolerated.
As the required back and forth movement necessary for estimating the actuator clamping force costs energy and wear because of neglected friction, it is advisable for the aforementioned sinusoidal oscillation to only be superimposed within the range where the force sensor cannot provide any values.
If the oscillation superimposed on the required value of the actuator clamping force is not applied by the actuator for physical reasons, the recorded measured values should not be included in the estimate as they would corrupt the measurement because the disregarded friction can no longer be determined. For this reason, the established values for the actuator position and the actuator clamping force corresponding to the actuator efficiency degree η=1 are only then fed into the appropriate filters when the superimposed sinusoidal oscillation is noticeable in the movement.
If the travel/force characteristic curve is completely unknown when restarting the system and if no measured values are available yet, it is advisable during an initialization phase to have all measured data of equal weight flow into the calculation of the values of the characteristic curve and only then start the low-pass filter. For this reason, the present invention foresees that an initialization is carried out when the actuator is restarted where the resulting measured data are subjected to a simple mean-value generation and the established mean value pairs used as initial values for the low-pass filter.
A control system according to the present invention for applying defined clamping forces on a brake operated electrically by an actuator with which the aforementioned method can be achieved consists mainly of an initial controller (actuator clamping force controller) into which a signal representing the nominal value of the actuator clamping force and a signal representing the actual value of the actuator clamping force are fed as input parameters and the output parameter of which represents a nominal value of the actuator speed, a second controller (actuator speed controller) inserted after the first controller into which a signal representing the nominal value of the actuator speed and a signal representing the actual value of the actuator speed are fed as input parameters and the output parameter of which represents a nominal value of the actuator torque and a third controller (current controller) inserted after the second controller into which a signal representing the nominal value of the actuator torque and a signal representing the actual value of the motor current are fed as input parameters and the output parameter of which is a manipulated variable for setting the actual value of the current to be fed into the actuator.
The control system according to the present invention is characterized mainly by
With the aforementioned measures, the method is split into three different modules during its realization, each of which fulfils a self-contained function and therefore can be developed and maintained separately from each other.
An advantageous development of the control system according to the present invention consists of the data reduction module and the transformation module being processed in real time in such a manner that every occurring measured value in the data reduction module is taken into account and an appropriate actuator clamping value is calculated for each measured actuator position. As a result thereof each measured value pair has an actual influence on the estimate of the characteristic curve.
The actual estimation, i.e. the determination of the parameters describing the characteristic curve, involves intensive computation and should therefore preferably be computed in the background particularly as the re-determination of parameters is only advisable if sufficient new measured values have occurred beforehand. It is therefore advisable that the characteristic curve identification module is processed in time available outside of the control process.
With an advantageous development of the control system according to the present invention, a measured value of the actuator clamping force which assists the determination of the value pair of the relationship between actuator position and actuator clamping force within the valid measurement range and which is determined using a force sensor is fed into the data reduction module as further input parameter. An actual value of the actuator clamping force is preferably used as controlled variable which results from the sum of the measured value of the actuator clamping force weighted with a weighting factor k (0<=k<=1) and an actual value of the actuator clamping force calculated by the transformation module with a weighting factor (1−k).
A transient-free switch-over between pure measurement and pure estimation is achieved by the weighting factor k being set to 1 in the lower measurement range of the force sensor and by linear degression diminishing to 0 in the upper measurement range.
The control system depicted in
Festim(φ)=F0+a·f(φ−φ0)
The calculated actuator clamping force Festim. (φ), the actual value of the actuator position φactual measured on actuator 4 and a nominal value of the actuator clamping force Ftheor are fed into the first controller 1 as input parameters. The nominal value of the actuator clamping force Ftheor consists preferably of a first value FDw preselected by the driver and complying with driver's deceleration wishes, and an superimposed, periodically changing second value Fsin corresponding to the back and forth movement of actuator 4 which are added together at an addition point 11.
In addition,
The second embodiment of the control system according to the present invention as shown in
In this case, components already mentioned are provided with the same reference numbers. The difference to the control system shown in
As already indicated above, the method according to the present invention is carried out in the data reduction module 8, the configuration of which is shown in FIG. 3. To carry out the process, the range defined by the measured values for the actuator position φactual is divided into n partial ranges as shown in FIG. 4. An actuator clamping force Fη=1 corresponding to the actuator efficiency degree η=1 is calculated from the value pairs Mactual, φactual mentioned in connection with
as well as an actuator position φη=1 corresponding to the actuator efficiency degree η=1, the meaning of the above used terms having already been explained. The named parameters Fη=1, φη=1 are fed into the low-pass filter pairs (marked with the reference numbers 181, 182 . . . 18n) assigned to the already mentioned partial ranges 1 . . . n. At the same time, the output signal φη=1 of function block 16, which represents the actuator position corresponding to the actuator efficiency degree η=1, is fed into a second function block 17. The second function block 17 is used for determining the partial range, the output parameter of which represents a Figure which identifies the partial range assigned to the actuator position corresponding to the actuator efficiency degree η=1. The Figure is assigned to the filter activation blocks 191, 192 . . . 19n assigned to filter pairs 181, 182 . . . 18n, the filter blocks activating the respective filter pairs. The output parameters of the filter pairs 181, 182 . . . 18n are the already mentioned averaged value pairs Fη=1, mean and φη=1, mean.
Finally,
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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101 37 275 | Jul 2001 | DE | national |
102 05 013 | Feb 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP02/08362 | 7/26/2002 | WO | 00 | 1/28/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO03/01166 | 2/13/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6217131 | Schanzenbach | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6435625 | Schwarz et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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19703838 | Aug 1998 | DE |
19730094 | Jan 1999 | DE |
19742920 | Apr 1999 | DE |
19826053 | Dec 1999 | DE |
19826133 | Dec 1999 | DE |
0168428 | Sep 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040232762 A1 | Nov 2004 | US |