This application claims priority to EP Patent Application No. 08020648 filed Nov. 27, 2008, the contents of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The invention relates to a low computation method for operating auto ignition combustion engines, in which outputs, in particular the requested torque set point TQI_SP and/or an estimation of a torque realization TQI, are directly linked to an injected fuel mass flow distribution and to an injection timing by taking into account engine out emissions, the air path control & drivability constraints by using a multi-objective optimization method. A method to monitor in the embedded controller the indicated torque, TQI is also proposed.
In order to be able to satisfy increasingly strictly conceived emission limits, while simultaneously providing high outputs, such as high driving torques in a motor vehicle, improved management systems for more efficient operation of the internal combustion engine are also continuously required in relation to internal combustion engines, in particular in the field of motoring. The relationships between requested torque TQI_SP, start of a fuel injection SOI, duration of a fuel injection TI, the number of injections and injected fuel quantity MF in particular play a crucial role in the engine operating point definition which is a compromised between reduced engine out emissions target, such as the Euro 6 emission standards for diesel combustion engines, and the best fuel conversion for torque production. The values of the above-mentioned parameters must be constantly updated and processed during the operation of the vehicle, requiring computing power and computing time.
According to various embodiments, a generic internal combustion engines may be able to operate more efficiently and with less computing time.
According to an embodiment, in a method for operating auto ignition combustion engines, outputs, in particular a requested torque set point TQI_SP and/or an estimation of a torque realization TQI, are directly linked to an injected fuel mass flow distribution and to an injection timing by taking into account engine out emissions and/or drivability constraints by using an optimization method.
According to a further embodiment, the torque realization set point directly linked to an injected fuel mass flow distribution and to an injection timing may be optimized by taking into account engine out emissions and/or drivability constraints. According to a further embodiment, the indicated torque realization used for torque production monitoring can be TQI=η*30*LHV*MF/(N*π), where MF is the fuel mass injected per combustion cycle [g/stroke] dedicated to torque production, where LHV is the fuel combustion lowest heating value [J/g], where N is the engine speed and where η is the global fuel to torque conversion efficiency. According to a further embodiment, the global fuel to torque conversion efficiency η may be given by the product of the combustion efficiency ηcomb ad of the engine mechanical efficiency ηmech, with η=ηcomb*ηmech. According to a further embodiment, an overall fuel mass injected in a combustion chamber for lean combustion can be burnt during the auto-ignition process if the start of injections SOI are calibrated to compensate the injector response, the auto ignition delay and the EGR effect on the auto ignition delay, ideally thus the combustion efficiency variation ηcomb can be ignored and fixed to ηcomb=1, at least for a selected SOI bandwidth that respects engine out emission constrains. According to a further embodiment, a mechanical efficiency ηmech can be used in an embedded software as a 2D look up table depending both on the engine speed N and the engine cooling temperature TCO, ηmech=ηmech (N, TCO). According to a further embodiment, a global equivalence ratio Φ=(MF/MA)/(MF/MA)stoich=(MF/MA)*αstoich can be used to adapt the air mass flow via the air path control and turbocharger position control because MA the air mass flow can be continuously measured on modern engine management systems and MF is known by in the embedded software. According to a further embodiment, the realisation of the indicated torque set point TQI_SP can be done considering several constrains, whereas these constrains are:
According to a further embodiment, optimized realization TQI_SP may be found by minimizing the error of a multi-objective function J for the overall engine operating points, with
J=WTQI
and where:
According to a further embodiment, an engine actuator used to minimize an error of a multi-objective function J for each operating point in the case of modern EMS dedicated to auto ignition engine control may be:
Further advantages, aims and properties of the present invention will be described with reference to the following description of the appended drawings.
In the drawings:
According to various embodiments, in a method for operating auto ignition combustion engines, outputs, in particular a requested torque set point TQI_SP and an estimation of the torque realization TQI, are directly linked to an injected fuel mass flow distribution and to an injection timing by taking into account engine out emissions and/or drivability constraints by using an optimization method.
Operation of an internal combustion engine, in particular auto ignition combustion engines, the combustion management system can in particular also be simplified if the main focus is the torque realization set point. If the engine out emission and/or for example noise reduction constraints are introduced the complexity of the control appears because of the number of degrees of freedom due to the possibility to have several injections per combustion cycle.
The method proposed here to manage auto ignition engines takes into account both the best torque production objective, the engine out emission constrains and the drivability request.
To reach a given operating point, the engine control unit calculates an indicated torque set point TQI_SP, according to the acceleration pedal position PV, the engine speed N and the vehicle speed Vs. In the other hand, the indicated torque realization TQI can also be estimated and compared to the set point TQI_SP [see
The state of the art of the control algorithms embedded in the engine management unit (ECU) is the ability to reach the torque request set point by acting mainly on the engine actuators such as injectors, EGR valves, turbochargers actuators by minimizing the difference between TQI_SP and TQI. [see
The estimation of the indicated torque TQI at a given operating point in the embedded software proposed here can be achieved advantageously by TQI=η*30 *LHV*MF/(N*π), where MF is the fuel mass injected per combustion cycle [g/stroke] dedicated to torque production (for example the fuel mass flow used for a particle filter regeneration of is not considered), where LHV is the fuel combustion lowest heating value [J/g], where N is the engine speed and where η is the global fuel to torque conversion efficiency.
The global fuel to torque conversion efficiency η is usually given by the product of the combustion efficiency ηcomb and of the engine mechanical efficiency ηmech, with η=ηcomb*ηmech.
Especially for lean combustion an overall fuel mass injected in a combustion chamber is burnt during the auto-ignition process if the starts of injections SOI are calibrated to compensate the injector response and the auto ignition delay. In the same manner the EGR effect on the combustion efficiency is negligible as long as the effect of the ignition delay is compensated by shifting the start of injection SOI. Moreover, the start of injection SOI and the number of injection are tuned to reach the best global fuel conversion efficiency to limit unburned hydrocarbons.
Thus, the combustion efficiency variation ncomb advantageously can be ignored and ηcomb can be fixed to 1, ηcomb=1, at least for a selected SOI bandwidth correctly pre-calibrated.
The mechanical efficiency ηmech of the engine is defined by ηmech=((1−Pfriction)(Pfriction+Pexh)) where Pfriction designates a loss of power owing to cylinder pumping and friction losses, Pexh identifying a loss of power relating to the exhaust in the engine.
The mechanical efficiency ηmech can be easily determined on an engine test bench according to the engine speed N by measuring the torque at clutch and the energy sent to the exhaust line for different engine cooling temperature TCO. So ηmech=ηmech (N, TCO). The mechanical efficiency ηmech appears ideally in the embedded software preferably as a 2D look up table depending both on the engine speed N and the engine cooling temperature TCO [see
Finally calculation used to monitor the TQI in the embedded software is given by TQI=(η, TCO)*30* LHV*MF/[N*π] and leads to reduced level of computing power.
At the same time, the global equivalence ratio Φ=(MF/MA)/(MF/MA)stoich=(MF/MA)*αstoich can be calculated online because the air mass flow MA is continuously measured on modern engine management systems. The global equivalence ratio Φ gives information if the combustion is lean Φ<1, stoichiometric Φ=1 or rich Φ>1. Φ>1 never appears on auto-ignition engines because of the lean combustion mode specification.
The indicated torque set point TQI_SP has to be now defined according to several constraints. These constrains are listing in [List 1]:
[List 1]
The indicated torque set point TQI_SP definition derived from a compromise of all of these constraints which can be antagonistic. Moreover, modern engine management systems for autoignition engines can manage up to 6 injections per combustion cycle, this make more complex the tuning that could respect the aforementioned constrains.
The method presented allows to specify the indicated torque set point TQI_SP by specifying the number of injection Nbinj, the injected quantity per elementary injection MFi, the elementary start of injection SOIi, the EGR rate and the global equivalence ratio to respect above constrains.
Target values for each constrains are noted with the superscriptref.
So the best way to achieve TQI_SP is considering constrains listed in [list 1] by minimizing the error of a multi-objective function that depends on TQI_SPref, [Soot]ref, [Nox]ref, [CO2]ref, [CO]ref, [Noise]ref.
The error Ek on an objective k according to the reference value is calculated by Ek=k/kref. Depending on the importance of an objective relative to the others, a weight Wk is introduced. For example, if the CO2 emission constrains should be rigorously respected, WCO2 should be more important than the other weights by respecting ΣkWk=1.
The best TQI_SP taking into the overall objectives is found by minimizing the multi-objective error J, J is given by J=ΣkWkEk. Considering objectives listed in [list 1]. J can be rewrite like:
J=WTQI
The liberty degrees to find the best TQI_SP at a given operating point are in the case of modern EMS dedicated to auto ignition engine control:
These key parameters are linked to the engine actuators such like injectors, EGR valve, variable geometry turbine command, etc . . .
So the TQI_SP at a given operating point with tuned engine actuators is found by minimizing the multi-objective error J over several realizations considering constrains fixed by the operator.
The realizations can be done experimentally on engine test benches or by means of 0D/1D/3D simulation tools specially designed for computational engine system development field. This operation must be done for the overall engine speed range (0≦N≦Nmax) and for the overall indicated torque range (0≦TQI≦TQImax) of the engine.
By using this method to define the indicated torque set point TQI_SP, constraints due to the torque realization and to the engine out emission can be managed by engine control unit
(ECU) illustrated by the realization diagram illustrated on
The embedded maps for the torque realization acting the engine actuators according to the aforementioned constraints are then reduced to:
On figure [
The torque realization diagram shown in
In the second graph shown in
The further graph shown in
In the diagram shown in
The diagram shown in
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