This application is the U.S. National Phase of PCT Appln. No. PCT/DE2020/100440 filed May 20, 2020, which claims priority to DE 10 2019 113 300.9 filed May 20, 2019, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated by reference herein.
The present disclosure relates to a method for operating an electromechanical camshaft phaser. The present disclosure also relates to a device for controlling an internal combustion engine comprising at least one electromechanical camshaft phaser.
Methods for operating an internal combustion engine with electromechanical camshaft phasing are described, for example, in DE 102 59 133 A1. In this case, the camshaft phaser, that is, the arrangement for adjusting the relative angle of rotation between the camshaft and the crankshaft of the internal combustion engine, has a modular structure, wherein components of the arrangement are partly used by other control and regulating devices of the internal combustion engine. A control unit of the electric motor of the camshaft phaser is connected to a second control unit, which is the engine control unit of the internal combustion engine.
Electromechanical camshaft phasers generally have the advantage over hydraulic camshaft phasers that adjustment of the camshaft is possible even when the internal combustion engine is stationary. In this context, reference is made to DE 10 2012 219 297 A1 as an example.
Further methods for operating camshaft phasers are disclosed, for example, in the documents DE 102 36 507 A1, DE 10 2005 022 714 A1, DE 10 2017 104 015 A1 and DE 102 42 659 A1.
An object of the present disclosure is to further develop an electromechanical camshaft phaser with regard to the most efficient possible use of resources, in particular with regard to data processing processes, compared to the cited prior art.
This object is achieved according to the present disclosure by a method for operating an electromechanical camshaft phaser with the features of claim 1. The method can be carried out with the aid of a device for controlling an internal combustion engine according to claim 7. The configurations and advantages of the present disclosure explained below in connection with the control device also apply analogously to the operating method, and vice versa. Advantageous further developments of the present disclosure are described in the dependent claims.
The camshaft phaser, which is operated according to the method according to the present disclosure, comprises a setting gear, in particular in the form of a triple-shaft gear mechanism, and an electric motor provided for actuating the setting gear, which is controlled by means of an electric-motor control unit. Data relating to the operation of the electric motor, including position changes of its motor shaft, are transmitted via a data bus from the electric-motor control unit to an engine control unit of the internal combustion engine comprising the camshaft phaser. In addition, recurring time signals are transmitted from the electric-motor control unit to the engine control unit of the internal combustion engine via a separate line, by means of which harder real-time requirements are met than by means of the data bus. Said time signals are used to generate a time difference signal in the engine control unit by comparing it with the data received by the engine control unit from the electric-motor control unit, which is fed back to the electric-motor control unit via the data bus and is used there to synchronize the electric-motor control unit with the engine control unit.
The data bus, which connects the electric-motor control unit with the engine control unit of the internal combustion engine and both control units with further components of the internal combustion engine, is in particular a CAN bus. Although it does not meet any hard real-time requirements, this data bus is used to transmit the time difference signal required for synchronization from the electric-motor control unit to the engine control unit of the internal combustion engine. In the opposite direction, that is from the electric-motor control unit to the engine control unit, the data bus is bypassed, in that time signals are transmitted over the separate line. Overall, a high-precision synchronization is possible with the best possible utilization of the hardware resources.
Various configurations are possible with regard to the distribution of data processing processes to the two control units, that is to say on the one hand, the engine control unit of the internal combustion engine, and on the other hand, the electric-motor control unit controlling the camshaft phaser. For example, successive processes which relate to the camshaft phaser are processed both in the electric-motor control unit and in the engine control unit, wherein the respective data on the processes are recorded in a ring memory integrated in the electric-motor control unit, or in the engine control unit. In a preferred embodiment of the method, the evaluation of the data stored in the ring memories takes place, for the most part, within the electric-motor control unit.
The duration of each process, which is also generally referred to as a task, is typically at least twice, in particular at least three times, the time difference used for synchronization between the various control units.
The data recorded and transmitted by the electric-motor control unit can include trigger signals which relate to a specific camshaft position and are provided with a time stamp.
Hall sensors, for example, can be used in a known manner known to detect the angular position and/or direction of rotation of the rotor of the electric motor. The electric motor is preferably a brushless direct current motor. The setting gear, which is actuated by means of the electric motor, is designed, for example, as a harmonic drive. With regard to the design features, reference is made, for example, to the documents DE 10 2017 119 860 A1 and DE 10 2017 126 527 A1.
In the following, an exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure is explained in more detail by means of a drawing. In the figures:
An internal combustion engine 1, shown merely symbolically in
The electric-motor control unit 6 is linked, to the engine control unit, labeled 7, of the internal combustion engine 1, via a data bus 8, namely a CAN bus. The control units 6, 7 are designed to process processes, which are generally referred to as tasks and are illustrated in
In addition to the CAN bus 8, there is a line 9, with which a data connection is established between electric-motor control unit 6 and the engine control unit 7. The line 9 is used to send time signals from the electric-motor control unit 6 to the engine control unit 7. The data volume of the transmitted time signals is only a small fraction of the data transmitted between the electric-motor control unit 6 and the engine control unit 7 via the CAN bus 8. However, in contrast to the CAN bus 8, hard real-time requirements can be met with the aid of the line 9.
Data processing processes which relate to specific, similar signal patterns and which are to be carried out in the electric-motor control unit 6 and in the engine control unit 7 are illustrated in
Insofar as data of the task with which the electric-motor control unit 6 is concerned are transmitted to the engine control unit 7, the corresponding signal patterns also appear in the engine control unit 7, as can be seen from
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2019 113 300.9 | May 2019 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DE2020/100440 | 5/20/2020 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2020/233754 | 11/26/2020 | WO | A |
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See Corresponding Search Report for International Application PCT/DE2020/100440. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20220220870 A1 | Jul 2022 | US |