1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for reducing the starting current of a multi-phase machine operated by block commutation.
2. Description of the Related Art
The use of a belt-driven starter generator for starting a motor vehicle is known. This belt-driven starter generator has an inverter situated between the battery of the motor vehicle and the machine. The inverter is an item of power electronics which includes a high side switch and a low side switch. The machine is operable in motor-driven mode and in generator mode.
When starting in motor-driven mode, the start-up of the internal combustion engine of the motor vehicle takes place while the vehicle is idle.
So-called block commutation is a simple and known method for controlling the switches of the power electronics. One advantage of this control method is that it requires no, or at best small, DC-link capacitors. DC-link capacitors of this type may usually be installed in a motor vehicle only with difficulty. A disadvantage of this control method is that high starting currents occur which have a disadvantageous effect on the design of the electronics and the packaging.
The use of PWM at low rotational speeds and block commutation at high rotational speeds is already known from U.S. Pat. No. 7,504,790 B2. This opens up the possibility of limiting the starting current with the aid of high-frequency pulsing. However, the disadvantage of this approach is that a DC-link capacitor having a comparatively high capacitance is needed.
A method for switching between a 120° control and a 180° control is already known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,577,097 B2. Although the need for a high-capacitance DC-link capacitor is eliminated, the problem remains that the starting current is very high in an idle or slowly rotating internal combustion engine, i.e., at a crankshaft speed in the range between 0 revolutions per minute and approximately 400 revolutions per minute. As a result, the load on the output stages is also high. To avoid destroying the output stages due to the high load, the output stages must be adjusted to this high load with the aid of suitable dimensioning. However, this causes the output stages to be overdimensioned for all additional operating points. Another disadvantage is that undesirable voltage drops may occur in the power supply to the vehicle electrical system, due to the high currents flowing during the startup phase. In block-commutated systems, there is no way to reduce the high currents mentioned above with the aid of high-frequency pulsing, for example at 16 KHz, since no DC-link capacitor having a sufficient capacitance is available for this purpose.
A method according to the present invention has the advantage over the related art that the starting current of a multi-phase machine operated by block commutation is reduced. This enables the output stages to be more favorably dimensioned, since the starting current is the relevant design criterion. At higher rotational speeds, the phase currents are automatically limited on the basis of the counter-induced voltage. Furthermore, the vehicle electrical system and the mechanical belt drive—if the machine is a belt-driven starter generator—are subjected to lighter loads at startup. In the event that the electric machine is blocked, immediate destruction of the output stage is also not to be expected.
Branch U of power electronics LE is connected to a phase winding LU of the stator of the starter generator at a connecting point between the two switches S1 and S2. Switch S1 of branch U is a high side switch. A diode D1 is connected antiparallel to switch S1. Switch S2 of branch U is a low side switch. A diode D2 is connected antiparallel to switch S2. Switches S1 and S2 are controlled by a control unit S.
Branch V of power electronics LE is connected to a phase winding LV of the stator of the starter generator at a connecting point between switches S3 and S4. Switch S3 of branch V is a high side switch. A diode D3 is connected antiparallel to switch S3. Switch S4 of branch V is a low side switch. A diode D4 is connected antiparallel to switch S4. Switches S3 and S4 are also controlled by control unit S.
Branch W of power electronics LE is connected to a phase winding LW of the stator of the starter generator at a connecting point between switches S5 and S6. Switch S5 of branch W is a high side switch. A diode D5 is connected antiparallel to switch S5. Switch S6 of branch W is a low side switch. A diode D6 is connected antiparallel to switch S6. Switches S5 and S6 are also controlled by control unit S.
Phase windings LU, LV and LW of the stator form a star connection in the illustrated exemplary embodiment. However, they can also be interconnected in the manner of a delta connection. If switches S1 through S6 are each implemented in the form of a MOSFET switch, they include diodes D1 through D6, which have already been illustrated separately.
In starter mode, power taken from battery B is fed into the system and converted into mechanical energy. In rectifier mode, the energy flows from the phase windings of the stator to the battery via the power electronics acting as the rectifier and on to the consumers of the vehicle electrical system, which are not illustrated in
In starter mode, a torque of the rotor must be built up by suitably controlling the stator windings. A maximum torque may be achieved if the stator field and the rotor field are positioned at an offset angle of 90 degrees from each other.
A 120° block commutation is understood to be a control method in which only two of six switches, in the case of a 3-phase machine, are closed at the same time. A 180° block commutation is understood to be a control method in which three of six switches, in the case of a 3-phase machine, are closed at the same time.
In the left-hand representation in
In the starting phase, the instantaneous position or angle position of the rotor relative to the stator is usually measured with the aid of an angle measuring device. As a function of the measurement result, a stator magnetic field is set in such a way that the associated stator magnetic field vector approaches the desired 90° offset as closely as possible with regard to the rotor magnetic field or the rotor magnetic field vector.
The magnetic vectors for a 5-phase machine are shown in the right-hand representation in
The situation for a 3-phase machine is shown by way of example in the left-hand representation in
In the right-hand representation in
Studies have shown that different effects on the temperatures to be expected at the output stages occur in the known block commutation. Lower output stage currents occur in the case of a 120° block commutation than in the case of a 180° block commutation. It has furthermore been shown that the currents flowing in the output stages are further reduced in the event of a pulsed block commutation. This reduces the averaged battery current as well as the built-up torque. Due to the extinction voltages of the lead inductance, however, the temperature load on the output stages is only insignificantly reduced. According to the related art, such a reduction of the temperature load on the output stages is induced by the use of a high-capacitance DC-link capacitor.
In the method according to the present invention, the use of a high-capacitance DC-link capacitor is not necessary. In the method according to the present invention, a reduction of the temperature load on the output stages is induced by the fact that, during the starting phase, either the high side switch assigned to one current phase is held in the closed state and the low side switches assigned to the other current phases are alternately controlled, or a low side switch is held in the closed state and the two high side switches of the other phases are alternately controlled. In the exemplary embodiment according to the left-hand representation in
This alternating control of the low side switches corresponds to an oscillation of the stator magnetic field around the ideal angle position of 90°.
This procedure provides the opportunity to control the averaged battery current in a desirable manner without significantly increasing the temperature load on the output stages. The upper switching branch, i.e., the associated high side switch, is being held in the closed state.
When the rotational speed of the rotor exceeds a predefined rotational speed threshold value, the system switches to a normal control pattern in the sense of a 120° block commutation or a 180° block commutation, i.e., a block-commutated control of the power electronic switches is carried out.
One advantage of the procedure according to the present invention is that, while a continuous load is placed on the upper switching branch, the extinction voltages are alternately applied in the two low side switches. A compensation of the occurring power losses, and thus a temperature compensation, occurs between the three participating switches. The current level may be controlled by varying the pauses between the switching states of the low side switches. During the control pauses, a free-wheeling of the phase current in the inverse diodes of the opposite path occurs. This free-wheeling may be prolonged by actively controlling the corresponding switching path, which reduces the power loss in the switching element.
If other starting positions exist which deviate from the angle described above, the 120° control patterns located on both sides of the 90° angle must be determined, and switching back and forth between the relevant control patterns must be carried out in the manner described above. Once the value drops below an angle of 30° between the rotor field and the stator field, due to a rotation of the rotor, the control pattern must be revised. The control pattern may be revised arbitrarily, depending on the rotational speed reached.
Control patterns which generate only one phase current, i.e., corresponding to the 120° block commutation in 3-phase machines, are illustrated for a 5-phase machine in the right-hand representation in
According to one preferred specific embodiment of the present invention, the alternating control of the low side switches is carried out with a switching duration which is shorter than the time constant of the stator winding, which lies in the range of a few milliseconds. On the one hand, this causes the resulting currents and thus also the generated torque to have a minimal ripple. On the other hand, the switching frequency is sufficiently low so that a DC-link capacitor is not needed.
According to another preferred specific embodiment, an asymmetrical activation ratio between the two low side switches may be selected. This has the advantage that the ideal magnetic vector offset of 90° between the stator and rotor magnetic fields may still be revised to some extent.
A method according to the present invention is described above by way of example for switching vectors “10 -” and “1 - 0” or “- 01” and “0 - 1”. The selection of these vectors depends on the idle position of the machine rotor. Other switching vectors may be used in other idle positions of the rotor.
In the method described above, the high side switch assigned to one current phase was held in the closed state, and the low side switches assigned to the other current phases were controlled alternately for the purpose of reducing the starting current. Alternatively, in another idle position of the rotor, the low side switch assigned to one current phase may be held in the closed state, and the high side switches assigned to the other current phases may be controlled alternately for the purpose of reducing the starting current.
Furthermore, switching vectors of the 180° block commutation, or a combination of the two, may be used, for example, by moving back and forth between “10 -” and “100.”
Another specific embodiment involves switching between more than two states. This is advantageous, in particular, in machines having more than three phases.
In the method according to the present invention, not only the starting current but also the starting torque are reduced. A further specific embodiment therefore involves developing the method according to the present invention in such a way that it is activatable and/or deactivatable as a function of the operating state of the motor vehicle in which the machine is situated. In particular, it is possible to avoid using the claimed method in the event of a vehicle cold start in the presence of a low ambient temperature and instead to start the vehicle conventionally. It is furthermore possible, in principle, to activate the method according to the present invention in the event of a warm start.
A method according to the present invention is usable, in particular, when starting multi-phase machines operated by block commutation for the purpose of reducing the starting current. The claimed method is suitable mainly for use in conjunction with belt-driven starter generators and integrated starter generators. An advantageous refinement is to control a coasting of the machine in such a way that the machine rotor comes to a stop in an angle position suitable for a restart.
In the discussion above, it is always assumed that the rotor position and the rotor speed are ascertained, and the control of the switches according to the present invention is carried out at a rotor speed which is less than a predefined threshold value. Alternatively, the control of the switches according to the present invention may be activated or deactivated as a function of the measured stator current.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2010 001 774 | Feb 2010 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2011/051892 | 2/9/2011 | WO | 00 | 10/25/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/098485 | 8/18/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4998053 | Hamann et al. | Mar 1991 | A |
5581169 | Kerkman et al. | Dec 1996 | A |
6577097 | Krefta et al. | Jun 2003 | B2 |
7504790 | Tsuji et al. | Mar 2009 | B2 |
20030062860 | Wu et al. | Apr 2003 | A1 |
20080116840 | Welchko et al. | May 2008 | A1 |
20090174350 | Kuroda et al. | Jul 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1921282 | Feb 2007 | CN |
101188399 | May 2008 | CN |
101483403 | Jul 2009 | CN |
101 56 939 | Jun 2003 | DE |
10 207 338 | Sep 2003 | DE |
WO 2008 012 212 | Jan 2008 | WO |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report for PCT/EP2011/051892, dated Apr. 4, 2012. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20130038252 A1 | Feb 2013 | US |