The present invention relates to a method of limiting a power supply, and particularly to a method of limiting a power supply of an optical driver within an optical device. The present invention further relates to an optical device in which a method of limiting a power supply current can be implemented.
In an optical device the optical disc, driven by an electrical motor, often needs to be accelerated or decelerated, for example at starting up or stopping of the drive, or when changing from one speed mode to the other. Changing the speed of the disc in an optical drive will cause high current peaks drawn from the power supply. Especially in battery-powered portable equipment these high current peaks form a problem, because they will heavily load the battery.
The problem of high current peaks at speed changes of the disc is already known, and also solutions are known. These solutions, however, suffer from the disadvantages that they need to be implemented in hardware, for example as a part of a driver circuit, and/or that they limit the motor current instead of the actual current drawn from the power supply, i.e. the battery.
It is an object of the invention to provide a method and an optical device so that accelerating and decelerating of the disc with reduced current peaks is possible.
The above objects are solved by the features of the independent claims. Further developments and preferred embodiments of the invention are outlined in the dependent claims.
In accordance with the invention, there is provided a method of limiting a power supply current in a system comprising a power supply, a motor operating at different speeds, a driver for driving the motor and a controller for controlling the driver, the method comprising the steps of:
specifying a first value that is related to a maximum power supply current (IPSmax);
determining a second value that is related to an electromagnetic force-dependent voltage (VEMF) of the motor;
determining a desired third value (cdes) that is related to a desired motor current (IMdes);
determining a first boundary value (a) and a second boundary value (b) for the third value, taking into account the first value and the second value;
comparing the boundary values (a) and (b) to the third value (cdes); and
setting the third value in dependence on the result of the comparing step.
Thus, the power supply current can be limited, thereby avoiding undesired effects caused by high current peaks, particularly when accelerating or decelerating an optical disc.
According to a preferred embodiment the first value is the maximum power supply current;
the second value is the electromagnetic force-dependent voltage (VEMF) of the motor; and
the third value (c) is the desired motor current (IMdes).
Based on this the present invention can be performed by evaluating the current and voltage values.
In this regard, it is advantageous that the step of determining the second value comprises the steps of:
determining the current motor speed; and
multiplying the current motor speed by a motor constant.
Thereby, the electromagnetic force-dependent voltage (VEMF) can be calculated on the basis of a tacho measurement and a multiplication of the measurement results by a well-known motor-specific value.
According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention the step of determining the boundary value (a) comprises the step of:
calculating the boundary value (a) by using the equation:
wherein:
RM is the ohmic resistance of the motor; and
VCC is the source voltage supplied to the driver.
Similarly, the step of determining the boundary value (b) comprises the step of:
calculating the boundary value (b) by using the equation:
wherein:
RM is the ohmic resistance of the motor; and
VCC is the source voltage supplied to the driver.
Thus, the values a and b can be exactly calculated from previously determined values and from well-known properties of the motor. The calculation can take place in a digital signal processor (DSP) in which the controller for controlling the driver of the motor is generally embedded.
According to a further embodiment of the present invention the step of determining the boundary value comprises the step of approximating the boundary value on the basis of a relation between a value that is related to the power supply current (IPS), a value that is related to the electromagnetic force-dependent voltage (VEMF), and a value that is related to the motor current (IM).
Similarly, the step of determining the boundary value (b) comprises the step of approximating the boundary value (b) on the basis of a relation between a value that is related to the power supply current (IPS), a value that is related to the electromagnetic force-dependent voltage (VEMF), and a value that is related to the motor current (IM).
Thus an exact calculation of the values a and b is not necessarily required; a simple approximation by a linear relation of IM as a function of IPS and VEMF can also lead to acceptable results.
According to a particular embodiment of the present invention, the power supply current to be limited is a current drawn from the power supply;
the third value is set to cdes, if cdes is situated between a and b;
the third value is set to a, if cdes is smaller than a; and
the third value is set to b, if cdes is larger than b.
Therefore, in case of limiting the current drawn from the power supply a simple algorithm on the basis of the previously determined values is sufficient to effectively limit the current drawn from the power supply.
Similarly, the power supply current to be limited is a current fed back to the power supply;
the third value is set to cdes, if cdes is smaller than a or larger than b; and
the third value is set to a, if cdes is situated between a and b.
Thus, the present invention can also be employed in connection with a system in which feeding back of the motor current is possible.
In accordance with the invention, there is further provided an optical device comprising a power supply, a motor operating at different speeds, a driver for driving the motor and a controller for controlling the driver, the device being capable of limiting a power supply current and the device further comprising:
means for specifying a first value that is related to a maximum power supply current (IPSmax);
means for determining a second value that is related to an electromagnetic force-dependent voltage (VEMF) of the motor;
means for determining a third value (cdes) that is related to a desired motor current (IMdes);
means for determining a first boundary value (a) and a second boundary value (b) for the third value, taking into account the first value and the second value;
means for comparing the boundary values (a) and (b) to the third value (c); and
means for setting the third value in dependence on the result of the comparing step.
Preferably, the means for specifying, determining, comparing and setting are at least partly provided by a proportional integral (PI) controller.
Thus, the invention provides a method for accelerating and decelerating the disc in such a way that the high current peaks are reduced. The method provided by the invention will not suffer from the disadvantages as described with respect to solutions already known. One reason for this is that it can be implemented as a piece of code on a digital signal processor (DSP) that will often already be available in the optical drive system because the controllers are implemented in a DSP. The other reason is that the proposed method actually limits the current drawn from the power supply, rather than relying on a limitation of the motor current. The invention will provide an extra function apart from the limitation of a current drawn from the power supply: if a driver is used that is capable of feeding back current to the power supply, the invention can be used to limit this current or even to prevent the current from flowing back to the power supply.
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
The motor current IM is proportional to the output of the PI controller when using a current output driver. Because the properties of this controller can be easily modified, particularly when implemented in a DSP, it is useful to derive the relation between the current drawn from the power supply ISP and the motor current IM. When this relation is known, a strategy for limiting the power supply current by means of controlling the motor current can be proposed.
The power consumed by the motor will be:
P
M
=I
M
2
R
M
+I
M
V
EMF
If it is assumed that the switching driver has ideal properties, then the power requested from the power supply that feeds the driver will be equal to the power that the motor consumes. In practice this driver will not be free of loss of course. For example the output impedance will not be 0, which can dissipate a significant amount of energy. The effect of these non-ideal system aspects can simply be included in the calculations, but they are omitted from this description because they are of minor importance to the invention. So:
P
PS
=P
M
=I
M
2
R
M
+I
M
V
EMF
Then, the current drawn from the power supply is:
To find at which motor currents the power supply current crosses the specified maximum IPSmax the following equation has to be solved:
This provides the following two solutions a and b for boundary values of IM:
From these equations for a and b five different situations grouped in group I and group II can be defined:
I: Positive IPS, i.e. current is drawn from the power supply:
1. the motor is either accelerating or decelerating, and the current drawn from the power supply does not exceed the specified limit IPSmax.
2. the motor is accelerating and the current drawn from the power supply exceeds the maximum current IPSmax.
3. the motor is decelerating and the current drawn from the power supply exceeds the maximum current IPSmax.
II: Negative IPS, i.e. current is fed back to the power supply:
1. the motor is decelerating and the absolute value of the current flowing back to the power supply exceeds the maximum current IPSmax.
2. the motor is decelerating and the absolute value of the current flowing back to the power supply does not exceed the maximum current IPSmax.
The invention now uses the relations described above to propose two types I and II of motor control strategies, as a part of the motor PI control loop:
I. Limiting of the power supply current peaks during accelerating and decelerating of the motor (the gain of the driver is assumed to be 1 A/V for this example):
1. specify a maximum current from the power supply IPSmax (IPSmax>0)
2. apply desired motor speed setpoint to the controller
3. while controller is active
4. read current motor speed from tacho information
5. calculate VEMF by multiplying the motor speed by the appropriate motor constant
6. calculate a and b
7. calculate next controller output sample for IM (cdes)
8. if cdes<a then set controller output to a else if cdes>b then set controller output to b else set controller output to cdes
9. end
II. Limiting of the current fed back to the power supply when decelerating the motor (the gain of the driver is assumed to be 1 A/V for this example): meant for this purpose:
1. specify a maximum current to the power supply IPSmax (IPSmax<0)
2. apply desired motor speed setpoint to the controller
3. while controller is active
4. read current motor speed from tacho information
5. calculate VEMF by multiplying the motor speed by the appropriate motor constant
6. calculate a and b
7. calculate next controller output sample for IM (ca.)
8. if cdes>a and cdes<b then set controller output to a else set controller output to cdes
9. end
In principle, in the previously mentioned steps 8, when the controller output is set to a or b, this is not necessarily required. As far as only the appropriate current limitation is concerned, the controller output could also be set to any value that leads to an “allowed” power supply current.
The calculation of a and b can be done by implementing the above formulae in the DSP code, but a simple approximation by a linear relation between IM and IPS will give acceptable results as well.
The method according to the present invention is further explained with reference to
According to the method that is illustrated in
The present invention can be applied in many technical fields. A particular area of interest is that of optical drivers for portable equipment such as notebook computers or portable AV devices.
Equivalents and modifications not described above may also be employed without departing from the scope of the invention, which is defined in the accompanying claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
05102511.2 | Mar 2005 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2006/050817 | 3/16/2006 | WO | 00 | 9/25/2007 |