The present invention relates to a method for operating an internal combustion engine, as well as to a computer program and a control device for implementing the method.
In a method for operating an internal combustion engine described in published German patent document DE 102 27 279, a pressure sensor which detects the pressure in a cylinder (guide cylinder) of the engine is associated with this cylinder. Furthermore, the engine has a structure-borne noise sensor, which indirectly detects the pressure changes in the individual cylinders. The pressure variation plays an important role in combustion control according to this known method: the agreement of the detected combustion chamber pressure with the combustion chamber pressure obtained from the signal of the structure-borne noise sensor is verified for the guide cylinder. If, during a certain period of time, the ascertained pressures differ by more than a certain value, an error message is output, which informs the engine's user of a certain wear condition.
An object of the present invention is to provide a method in which the engine performance quantities required for combustion control or regulation may be ascertained economically, yet precisely.
In connection with the present invention, it is recognized that certain “second” sensors such as structure-borne noise sensors have a lower accuracy, and are subject to greater tolerances and more drift (due to their underlying principle) than pressure sensors, while they are relatively cost-effective and simple to install. When the method according to the present invention is used, a drift of such a (second) sensor may be not only reliably recognized, but also quantified and subsequently compensated for. The performance quantities that are important for the control and regulation of the engine, such as the start of combustion, the center of gravity of the combustion, the gas torque, the maximum pressure, the indicated work, etc., may be determined using the second sensor with a similarly high accuracy as there may be by using the first (pressure) sensor, and this is largely independent of the operating time or the age of the sensors. This allows reliable and precise operation of the engine despite the use of the relatively economical second sensor.
In accordance with the present invention, a joint evaluation of the signal of the first sensor and the signal of the second sensor for a certain shared combustion chamber is carried out. A certain magnitude of the particular signal is advantageously used for evaluation, for example, the position, a crank angle, a maximum gradient, and/or a maximum value. In a simple case, the shared combustion chamber may be the combustion chamber whose pressure is directly detected by the first sensor. The corresponding cylinder is referred to, in general, as the guide cylinder. The precondition for this operation is that the second sensor, for example, a structure-borne noise sensor, is reliably reached by the structure-borne noise generated in the guide cylinder.
A drift-compensated second sensor, i.e., its signal, may in turn be used as reference for the drift compensation of a third sensor. Also in this case, the precondition is that the signals or quantities of both sensors should be referable to the same combustion chamber. In this way, if necessary, an entire chain of drift compensations may be performed, starting with a pressure signal-based drift compensation. Using a single pressure sensor, this allows drift-compensated operation of a plurality of other sensors, which in turn make precise control or regulation of the engine possible.
Another advantageous variant of the method may be used when the specific arrangement of the second sensor makes it impossible to associate the quantity, already provided by it, with the guide cylinder or a cylinder whose pressure behavior is being detected by an already drift-compensated second sensor. For this case, it is proposed that the first quantity be simply phase shifted by the crank angle distance between the guide cylinder and a cylinder or combustion chamber whose pressure behavior is being-detected by the second sensor which is to be drift-compensated.
The precondition for carrying out this method, however, is for the pressure variation in the combustion chamber of the guide cylinder to be essentially equal to that in the combustion chamber to which the second quantity provided by the second sensor refers. This is the case, e.g., in overrun operation of the engine, where no combustion takes place in the combustion chamber and where the pressure variation therefore depends essentially on the normal piston compression in the combustion chamber.
Another operating state in which such a drift recognition is possible is the “conventional” operation of a diesel engine in which only a slight exhaust gas recirculation takes place, which results in a short ignition delay in all cylinders. As a result, the differences in the charges of the individual cylinders have only a slight effect on the combustion angle and thus on the variation of combustion pressure. In addition, it is advantageous for recognizing the drift of the second sensor if known methods are used in this operating state for equalizing the injection amount differences, for example, on the basis of the engine speed signal.
By comparing all characteristic curves measured using the second sensor, further interfering factors of the individual cylinders, caused, for example, by different injection behaviors, may be largely eliminated by the drift compensation.
An additional correction may also be performed in the “partially homogeneous” operation. However, in this case the air differences of the individual cylinders have an additional effect. These differences should be detected, if possible, via suitable measures for reducing the (interfering) effects. If necessary, an air amount correction may also be performed using the combustion angles of those cylinders which have already been ascertained using drift-compensated auxiliary sensors.
If the second sensor is reliably affected by the pressure variation in two adjacent combustion chambers, the above-described method, in which the first quantity is phase shifted, may be performed for both combustion chambers, and a mean value may be formed from the two ascertained drifts. The accuracy of this method is enhanced in this way.
The method according to the present invention is based on ascertaining a change over time in the second quantity with respect to the first quantity. The initial or reference state is therefore a state in which it is assumed that a drift of the second sensor does not yet exist. To have maximum flexibility in a later drift compensation, it is advantageous if, in order to define the reference state, the ratio of the first quantity to the second quantity is determined in several different operating states of the engine, and this ratio is used to establish a reference characteristic curve. The drift of the second sensor then results from the distance of the second quantity ascertained at a later point in time from this characteristic curve for the same first quantity situated on the characteristic curve.
An internal combustion engine, which is generally identified by numeral 10 in
The pressure in combustion chamber 14a of cylinder 12a designated as guide cylinder is detected directly by a first sensor, namely a pressure sensor 22. A second sensor, designed as a structure-borne noise sensor 24a, is situated between cylinders 12a and 12b. There is a further sensor, designed as a structure-borne noise sensor 24b, between cylinders 14b and 14c, and a third structure-borne noise sensor 24c is situated between cylinders 12d and 12e. Pressure sensor 22 delivers a pressure signal 26 to a control and regulating unit 28. In a similar manner, structure-borne noise sensors 24a through 24c deliver structure-borne noise signals 30a through 30c to control and regulating unit 28.
Pressure signal 26 and structure-borne noise signals 30a through 30c are analyzed, and the start of combustion, the center of gravity of combustion, the gas torque, the maximum pressure, the indicated work, and other engine performance quantities relevant for the current combustion in individual combustion chambers 14a through 14e are ascertained in control and regulating unit 28. The variation of the corresponding pressure signal 26 is plotted against angle αKW of a crankshaft (not shown in
Curves 26 and 30a shown in
In a state of engine 10 in which it may be assumed that structure-borne noise sensors 24a through 24c have not yet aged and thus have no drift, the properties of the signals at crank angles αP and αKS24a_14a, shown in
In this way, a reference characteristic curve may be established which links first quantity αP and second quantity αKS24a_14a. This characteristic curve is depicted in
During operation of engine 10, quantities αKS24a_14a and αP are also detected and a check is made as to whether or not the pair of values thus defined is still on the characteristic curve 32. As soon as the corresponding pair of values (reference numeral 34 in
A similar procedure is followed for structure-borne noise sensor 24b (“third sensor”), drift-compensated structure-borne noise sensor 24a being used as reference (
In further operation at later points in time, quantities αKS24a_14b and αKS24b_14b are detected again in one or more reference states, the drift compensation previously explained in
Another procedure for drift compensation is now explained with reference to
In this way, position αP_14e of pressure maximum P_max, referred to combustion chamber 14e and detected by pressure sensor 22, is obtained. Together with position αKS24c_14e of the maximum pressure detected by structure-borne noise sensor 24c, it is used, in the case of combustion chamber 14e, for forming a reference characteristic curve 38 (see
The value pairs obtained move away from the corresponding reference characteristic curves 38 and 40 via a drift. Thus, for example, in the present exemplary embodiment, after a certain time it is determined in one or more reference states that, for example, for combustion chamber 14e, a position of maximum KS_max of structure-borne noise signal 30c is detected for a certain position αP_14e of the phase-shifted pressure signal maximum of structure-borne noise sensor 24c, which is shifted from reference characteristic curve 40 by a difference dαKS24c_14e. Similarly, a shift dαKS24c_14d results for combustion chamber 14d. A mean value is now formed from the two shifts dαKS24c_14d and dαKS24c_14e, and is assumed to be the actual drift of structure-borne noise sensor 24c. Drift-compensated new characteristic curves 38′ and 40′ similarly result (
It is understood that the above-named three procedures for drift compensation of structure-borne noise sensors 24a through 24c may be performed in any desired combination, which considerably increases the accuracy in ascertaining the compensation. In addition, it should be mentioned that, as in the previously mentioned exemplary embodiments, the differences obtained over time with respect to a reference state were used for the drift compensation. However, it is also possible to perform the drift compensation in a regulated (i.e., closed-loop controlled) operation instead of an (open-loop) controlled operation, in which an appropriate manipulated variable, obtained to maintain said differences at zero, is used for ascertaining the drift. If the manipulated variable deviates from zero, a drift may be inferred.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 039 757.3 | Aug 2005 | DE | national |