The invention relates to a method for regulating the lambda value of an internal combustion engine with a catalytic converter for subsequently treating the exhaust gases and with a binary lambda probe which is arranged upstream of the catalytic converter, with a lean/rich amplitude superimposing the lambda target value.
With a regulator of this type, preferably a cascade regulator, the exhaust gas composition is sensed using the lambda probe arranged upstream or downstream of the catalytic converter and the injection quantity of the fuel supply of the internal combustion engine is correspondingly controlled so that the desired exhaust gas composition can finally be reached again. This ensures that the lambda value lies within a desired range, as a result of which the content of HC, NOX and CO is reduced to a minimum.
The exhaust gas emission values are dependent here on the control speed of the regulating circuit, in particular in the warm-up phase of the internal combustion engine.
With regulating methods having two binary lambda probes, one is arranged upstream of the catalytic converter and the other is arranged downstream of the catalytic converter in the flow direction of the exhaust gas. The voltage of the binary lambda probe upstream of the catalytic converter is converted into an item of binary information, which specifies whether this currently concerns an enriched or a lean exhaust gas concentration. A value is determined on the basis of this item of information; with which value the injected fuel quantity in the fuel supply of the internal combustion engine is controlled.
If the lambda probe upstream of the catalytic converter senses a lean exhaust gas composition, the value of the mixture formation is reduced step-by-step from a value of λ=1.0 to a value of 0.98 . . . 0.97, until the lambda probe senses a status of the rich exhaust gas composition. As a result of recognizing the rich exhaust gas composition, the value of the mixture formation is now increased by an increment to λ=1.0 and subsequently step-by-step to 1.02-1.03. The step-by-step increase and/or drop in the lambda value is referred to as an integral component and the abrupt feedback of the lambda value is referred to as a discontinuous component. This cycle is referred to as a so-called lean/rich amplitude, with a rich amplitude being assumed for instance with a lambda value of 0.97 and a lean status being assumed for instance with a lambda value of 1.03, based on a lambda target value of 1.0.
This regulating method is however disadvantageous in that if unexpected changes occur, the enrichment and/or enleanment of the mixture continues after the provided step-by-step increase and/or drop in the lambda value until the exhaust gas probe has redetected a change in the status from lean to rich and/or from rich to lean. The regulating circuit thus responds to changes in a delayed manner.
Based on this prior art, the object of the invention is to provide a method for regulating the lambda value of an internal combustion engine, which features an increased control speed in the event of malfunctions so that the predetermined lambda target values are reached more quickly.
To this achieve this object, a method according to the preamble of claim 1 proposes to change the coefficient of the integral component and/or to add or subtract a discontinuous component to/from said integral component if a change deviating from the fluctuation of the exhaust gas composition generated by the lean/rich amplitude is recognized.
This enables the regulator to respond more rapidly and individually to changes occurring in the exhaust gas composition. The coefficient and/or the discontinuous component can be individually selected according to the size of the change, so that the respective change can be responded to individually.
The discontinuous component is preferably added to counter the change in a targeted manner and/or the coefficient of the integral component is increased to counter the change.
It is further proposed for the lean/rich amplitude to feature a predetermined cycle time, which identifies the normal operation without malfunctions and which herewith renders a malfunction recognizable, if the time of the actual cycle deviates from the predetermined cycle time.
Alternatively, the oxygen loading in the catalytic converter can also be determined, with a malfunction then being identified, if the value of the oxygen loading deviates from a predetermined value.
The invention is described in more detail below with reference to a preferred exemplary embodiment. The drawings show detailed versions of:
a a lean/rich amplitude having a malfunction and an added discontinuous component
b a lean/rich amplitude having a malfunction and a changed coefficient of the integral component.
An internal combustion engine 10 having a crankcase 1, an inlet channel 2 and an outlet channel 3 can be recognized first in
In
Alternatively, the same success can be achieved in that after change D has occurred and its recognition of the coefficient of the integral component I is enlarged, i.e. the curve falls more steeply, according to Is (see
The malfunction is detected in the diagrams
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 050 092.4 | Oct 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/054605 | 9/16/2005 | WO | 00 | 10/31/2008 |