The invention relates to a method for operation of a vibration gyro and a sensor arrangement having a vibration gyro, which represents a resonator and is part of at least one control movement which excites the vibration gyro by supplying an exciter signal at its natural frequency, in which case an output signal can be tapped off from the vibration gyro, from which output signal the exciter signal is derived by filtering and amplification.
By way of example, EP 0 461 761 B1 discloses rotation rate sensors in which a vibration gyro is excited on two axes which are aligned radially with respect to a major axis, for which purpose a primary and a secondary control loop are provided, with appropriate transducers on the vibration gyro. When rotation rate sensors such as these are used to stabilize the vehicle movement in vehicles, the rotation rate sensor must operate immediately after the vehicle has been started up. However, this is delayed by the transient response of the control loop.
The object of the present invention is therefore to speed up the transient response of the control loop. This object is achieved according to the invention in that, once a sensor arrangement with the vibration gyro has been switched on, the frequency of the exciter signal is set by exciting the vibration gyro to oscillate freely before the exciter signal is supplied, with the frequency of the free oscillation being measured and with the exciter signal being supplied to the vibration gyro at the measured frequency.
A small amount of damping after the excitation means that the free oscillation which decays in accordance with an exponential function is available for a sufficiently long time for frequency measurement. For example, the frequency measurement can be carried out as a measurement of the cycle duration by counting higher-frequency pulses.
In one advantageous refinement of the method according to the invention, the vibration gyro is excited by moving a signal that is used for excitation through at least a predetermined frequency range, after which the signal is switched off and the frequency of a free oscillation that is formed is measured.
If the natural frequency may be in a higher frequency range than that predetermined, this refinement may be developed such that a further frequency range is scanned through if no free oscillation has formed. In this case, it is possible to provide for the frequency ranges to be chosen such that, overall, they cover all the possible natural frequencies of the vibration gyro.
However, it is also possible to take precautions to ensure that the search for the natural frequency is restricted to a relatively narrow range. This is done, for example according to another development, in that the frequency ranges are chosen such that they cover a previously measured natural frequency, stored in a memory, including its change area.
In order to avoid excluding any possible natural frequency from the search, the frequency ranges may overlap according to another refinement.
In a further refinement of the invention, the frequency range is chosen such that it covers one actual frequency of the vibration gyro whose value is calculated from a stored value, its temperature dependency and the temperature measured on switch on. The stored value is that value which is measured at a predetermined temperature, for example 25° C., during an adjustment process for the vibration gyro and the sensor arrangement which contains the vibration gyro, and is stored in a non-volatile memory. In this case, the temperature during the adjustment process can also preferably be stored in the memory, possibly as well as the temperature dependency.
A sensor arrangement according to the invention achieves the object by means which result in rapid stabilization of the control loop in such a way that, once the sensor arrangement has been switched on, the frequency of the exciter signal is set such that, before the exciter signal is supplied, the vibration gyro is excited to oscillate freely, with the frequency of the free oscillation being measured and with the exciter signal being supplied to the vibration gyro at the measured frequency.
In the sensor arrangement according to the invention, the means preferably comprise a frequency measurement device, a micro-controller with a non-volatile memory, and a frequency synthesizer.
The measures described in the other dependent claims allow further advantageous developments and improvements of the sensor arrangement according to the invention.
The invention allows numerous embodiments. A number of these will be described in the following text and are illustrated schematically in a number of figures in the drawing, in which:
The sensor arrangement shown in
The vibration gyro 1 represents a high Q-factor filter, with the path between the input 2 and the output 4 being part of a primary control loop 6, and the path between the input 3 and the output 5 being part of a secondary control loop, which is not illustrated, since there is no need to explain it in order to understand the invention. The primary control loop 6 is used to excite oscillations at the resonant frequency of the vibration gyro, for example at 14 kHz. The excitation is in this case produced on one axis of the vibration gyro, with respect to which the oscillation direction used for the secondary control loop is offset through 90°. The signal SO is split in the secondary control loop, which is not illustrated, into two components, one of which can be tapped off, after suitable processing, as a signal which is proportional to the rotation rate.
The majority of the signal processing in both control loops is carried out digitally. The clock signals required for signal processing are produced in a crystal-controlled digital frequency synthesizer 10, whose clock frequency in the illustrated example is 14.5 MHz. The method according to the invention is carried out essentially by using the primary control loop as a consequence of which
The control loop has an amplifier 11 for the output signal PO, to which an anti-aliasing filter 12 and an analog/digital converter 13 are connected. Multipliers 14, 15, to which carriers Ti1 and Tq1 are supplied, are used for splitting into an in-phase component and a quadrature component. The two components then respectively pass through a (sinx/x) filter 16, 17 and a low-pass filter 18, 19. The filtered real part is supplied to a PID regulator 20 which controls the digital frequency synthesizer, thus closing a phase control circuit which results in the phase angles of the Ti1 and Tq1 being correct. Furthermore, a carrier Tq2 is produced and is modulated in a circuit 22 with the output signal from a further PID regulator 21, which receives the low-pass-filtered imaginary part. The output signal from the circuit 22 is supplied to the input 2 of the vibration gyro 1 as the exciter signal PD. Depending on the preconditions in detail, other regulators, for example PI regulators, may also be provided instead of the PID regulators.
A further amplifier 24, a Schmitt trigger 25 and a counter 2b are provided in order to carry out the method according to the invention. These act as a frequency measuring device. A microcontroller 27 controls the individual steps of the method according to the invention and has access to a non-volatile memory 28 which is in the form of EEPROM. Furthermore, a temperature sensor, which is provided in any case for many circuit arrangements and comprises an actual sensor 29 and an analog/digital converter 30, is used for the method according to the invention. A bus system 31 connects the components that have been mentioned to one another and to the digital frequency synthesizer 10 as well as to the circuit 22.
In order to carry out the method according to the invention, the microcontroller 27 controls the frequency synthesizer 10 and the circuit 22 such that the excitation signals, which will be explained in more detail later in conjunction with
In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
By way of example, in the case of a vibration gyro whose natural frequency may be between 13.5 kHz and 14.5 kHz, the frequency range is split into ten frequency ranges of 100 Hz each, plus 35 Hz for the overlap. By way of example, 10 ms has been found to be appropriate for the time which is required to scan through a frequency range.
In the exemplary embodiment shown in
In the exemplary embodiment shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 043 592.0 | Sep 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/065781 | 8/29/2006 | WO | 00 | 3/12/2008 |