The present invention relates to an opening/closing control device that controls movement of an opening/closing body.
Patent document 1 discloses a power window system that functions to prevent entrapment as one example of an opening/closing control device. In such type of a power window system, when an operation switch receives an operation input, an opening or closing movement of a door window is performed. That is, the opening movement that lowers (down) the door window is performed when a user performs an opening operation on the operation switch, and the closing movement that lifts (up) the door window is performed when the user performs a closing operation on the operation switch.
The opening operation and the closing operation each include a manual operation that stops movement of the door window when an operation performed by the user is canceled and an automatic operation that continues the movement of the door window until the door window reaches a fully-open position or a fully-closed position even when the operation performed by the user is canceled. The manual operation includes a manual down operation for instructing the lowering movement and a manual up operation for instructing the lifting movement. The automatic operation includes an automatic down operation for instructing the lowering movement and an automatic up operation for instructing the lifting movement. For example, when the automatic up operation is performed, the lifting movement of the door window is continued until the door window reaches the fully-closed position.
The power window system usually acknowledges the position of the door window by setting the fully-closed position as a reference. A detected zone where the entrapment prevention function is active and a non-detected zone where the entrapment prevention function is inactive are set between the fully-open position and the fully-closed position of the door window.
Thus, when the automatic up operation is performed on the operation switch and entrapment is detected by an entrapment detection sensor in the detected zone of the door window, the occurrence of an entrapment is determined. This reverses movement of the door window and releases an entrapment subject from the door window. When the automatic up operation is performed on the operation switch and entrapment is detected by the entrapment detection sensor in the non-detected zone of the door window, the door window is determined to have reached the fully-closed position. This stops the movement of the door window.
Patent Document 1: Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 2005-314949
The position of the window is unknown immediately after the door is assembled or the battery is exchanged. Thus, the detected zone and the non-detected zone of the door window cannot be set. Accordingly, if the automatic up operation is performed on the operation switch immediately after the power is turned on, the occurrence of entrapment is determined at the fully-closed position. This reverses the door window. That is, the automatic up operation cannot be performed immediately after the power is turned on. In order to enable the automatic up operation immediately after the power is turned on, the entrapment prevention function has to be disabled.
Thus, the manual up operation and an initialization task need to be performed with the operation switch immediately after the power is turned on to detect the fully-closed position of the door window. The initialization task and the manual up operation need to be performed on each door and require time to perform the manual up operation and time to check the fully-closed position of the door window. This lowers the working efficiency.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an opening/closing control device that improves the working efficiency of the initialization task for detecting the fully-closed position.
One aspect of the present invention is an opening/closing control device that controls movement of an opening/closing body. The opening/closing control device includes an entrapment detection sensor configured to perform entrapment detection in a closing movement of the opening/closing body, a pulse generator configured to generate pulses in accordance with a movement speed of the opening/closing body, and a control unit configured to determine that the opening/closing body has reached a fully-closed position when the entrapment detection sensor detects entrapment after the pulses generated by the pulse generator indicates that movement of the opening/closing body has stopped.
In this configuration, when the opening/closing body reaches the fully-closed position, pulses generated from the pulse generator detect that the opening/closing body has stopped, and an affirmative detection performed by the entrapment detection sensor detects that the opening/closing body is fully closed. The defining of the order of the detections avoids situations in which the fully-closed position is determined as entrapment. That is, when the automatic operation that continues the movement of the door window until the door window reaches the fully-open position is performed by combining the entrapment detection sensor and the pulse output means, the fully-closed position is automatically detected. This completes the initialization task. Thus, the automatic operation can be performed immediately after the power is turned on.
In the automatic operation, once the first operation input instructs movement of the opening/closing body, the movement of the opening/closing body is automatically detected. This is different from the manual operation that stops movement of the door window when an operation is canceled. Thus, when performing the initialization task with the automatic operation, a worker does not need to continue an operation input until the opening/closing body reaches the fully-closed position. Thus, the working time and burden are reduced. This improves the working efficiency of the initialization task for detecting the fully-closed position.
The present invention improves the working efficiency of the initialization task for detecting the fully-closed position.
One embodiment of an opening/closing control device will now be described.
As shown in
The power window system 1 includes an electronic control unit (ECU) 5 that centrally controls the opening and closing movements of the window glass 3 and an operation switch (not shown) that receives an operation input for starting the opening or closing movement of the window glass 3. The operation switch is arranged, for example, near a seat. When the operation switch receives an operation input, the ECU 5 centrally controls the opening or closing movement of the window glass 3 through an actuator 6 in accordance with the operation input. The lowering movement of the window glass 3 is performed based on a down operation (one example of opening operation), and the lifting movement of the window glass 3 is performed based on an up operation (one example of closing operation). The down operation includes a manual down operation and an automatic down operation. The up operation includes a manual up operation and an automatic up operation.
The actuator 6 includes a DC motor that produces rotation in forward and reverse directions. A pulse sensor 7 is incorporated in the DC motor. The pulse sensor 7 generates pulses synchronized with rotation of an output shaft. That is, the pulse sensor 7 generates pulses in accordance with a movement speed of the window glass 3. The pulse sensor 7 corresponds to a pulse generator. The ECU 5 monitors the pulses generated by the pulse sensor 7 and the capacitance detected by the electrostatic sensor 4 to change the opening or closing movement of the window glass 3 in accordance with the monitoring result. For example, when the automatic up operation is performed on the operation switch and the ECU 5 determines that entrapment has occurred during the lifting of the window glass 3, the ECU 5 reverses the movement of the window glass 3. This releases an entrapment subject from the window glass 3. The ECU 5 corresponds to a control means.
The operation of the power window system 1 will now be described.
The position of the window glass 3 is unknown immediately after the window glass 3 is coupled to the door 2 (refer to
Accordingly, an initialization task for detecting the fully-closed position is necessary in the prior art. In the present example, an initialization task is executed when an automatic up operation is performed immediately after the coupling. The ECU 5 monitors a pulse speed of the pulse sensor 7 related to a movement speed of the window glass 3 and a detection level of capacitance detected by the electrostatic sensor 4 to perform various determinations in accordance with the monitoring result (refer to
As shown in
If the pulse speed is the normal speed when the detection level of the capacitance reaches a threshold value that indicates contact, the ECU 5 determines that entrapment of a charged object has occurred and reverses movement of the window glass 3. That is, when a charged object contacts the electrostatic sensor 4, the ECU 5 reverses movement of the window glass 3. In this case, the ECU 5 lowers the window glass 3 until the window glass 3 reaches the fully-open position or over a predetermined time. When the window glass 3 is lowered and the pulse speed indicates that the movement of the window glass 3 has stopped, the ECU 5 determines that the window glass 3 has reached the fully-open position and stops the movement of the window glass 3.
Further, if the pulse speed indicates that the movement of the window glass 3 has reduced speed when the detection level of the capacitance has not changed or the detection level of the capacitance has increased within a range less than the threshold value, it can be understood that such effects result from the window glass 3 sliding in the glass run. Thus, the ECU 5 determines entrapment based only on pulses. In this case, the ECU 5 detects entrapment when a physical quantity based on the pulses of the pulse sensor 7 becomes greater than or equal to a reversing threshold value. In the entrapment determination based on pulses, a first-time limited reversing threshold value is set exceeding the physical quantity based on the pulses of the pulse sensor 7 when assuming that the window glass 3 is sliding in the glass run. The first-time limited reversing threshold value is greater than the reversing threshold value set under the assumption that the window glass 3 is sliding outside the glass run. The first-time limited reversing threshold value is only used for the first lifting movement immediately after the power is turned on.
As described above, the first-time limited reversing threshold value is used only for the first lifting movement immediately after the power is turned on. Alternatively, during the first lifting movement after the power is turned on, the first-time limited reversing threshold value may be used if the pulse speed indicates that the movement of the window glass 3 has reduced speed when the detection level of the capacitance increases within a range less than the threshold value. This means that the use of the first-time limited reversing threshold value is limited to when sliding of the window glass 3 in the glass run is detected during the first lifting movement after the power is turned on.
If the pulse speed indicates that the movement of the window glass 3 has reduced speed when the detection level of the capacitance reaches the threshold value indicating contact, the ECU 5 determines that entrapment of a charged object has occurred in the glass run and reverses the movement of the window glass 3. The ECU 5 lowers the window glass 3 until the window glass 3 reaches the fully-open position or over the predetermined time.
In addition, if the pulse speed indicates that the movement of the window glass 3 has stopped when the detection level of the capacitance does not change or the detection level of the capacitance increases within a range less than the threshold value, the ECU 5 determines that entrapment of a non-charged object has occurred in the glass run and reverses the movement of the window glass 3. The ECU 5 lowers the window glass 3 until the window glass 3 reaches the fully-open position or over the predetermined time.
When the capacitance detection level reaches the threshold value indicating contact after the pulse speed indicates that the movement of the window glass 3 has stopped, the ECU 5 determines that the window glass 3 has reached the fully-closed position and stops the movement of the window glass 3. This completes the initialization task for detecting the fully-closed position. The completion of the initialization task allows the position of the window glass 3 at the fully-closed position to be acknowledged as a reference. This enables position-related parameters (for example, detected zone and non-detected zone).
As described above, the present embodiment has the advantages described below.
(1) The initialization task for detecting the fully-closed position is completed by the first automatic up operation performed after the power is turned on (refer to bottom line of right column in
(2) When the electrostatic sensor 4 affirmatively detects entrapment before the pulses generated by the pulse sensor 7 indicate that the movement of the window glass 3 has stopped, the ECU 5 determines that entrapment has occurred (refer to bottom line of left column and bottom line of center column in
(3) When pulses generated by the pulse sensor 7 indicate that the movement of the window glass 3 has reduced speed and the electrostatic sensor 4 negatively detects entrapment, the ECU 5 performs an entrapment determination based on pulses (refer to top line of center column and middle line of center column in
(4) When the electrostatic sensor 4 affirmatively detects entrapment before pulses generated by the pulse sensor 7 indicate that movement of the window glass 3 has stopped, the ECU 5 determines that entrapment of a charged object has occurred (refer to bottom line of left column and bottom line of center column in
(5) If pulses generated by the pulse sensor 7 indicate that movement of the window glass 3 has stopped when the electrostatic sensor 4 negatively detects entrapment, the ECU 5 determines that entrapment of a non-charged object has occurred (refer to top line of right column and middle line of right column in
(6) During the first lifting movement after the power is turned on, the ECU 5 uses the first-time limited reversing threshold value to perform an entrapment determination based on pulses (refer to top line of center column and middle line of center column in
(7) In relation to (6), during the first lifting movement after the power is turned on, when pulses generated by the pulse sensor 7 indicate that the movement of the window glass 3 has reduced speed and the electrostatic sensor 4 detects capacitance that has an increasing tendency at a level less than the threshold value, the ECU 5 may use the first-time limited reversing threshold value to determine entrapment with the pulses (refer to middle line of center column in
(8) The automatic up operation is applicable while keeping the entrapment prevention function enabled immediately after the power is turned on.
The above embodiment may be modified as described below.
The present invention may be applied to an opening/closing control device that controls an opening/closing body such as a shutter of a building in which an opening movement is defined by a lifting operation and a closing movement is defined by a lowering operation.
The present invention may be applied to an opening/closing control device that controls an opening/closing body that moves in the horizontal direction, for example, a sliding door of a vehicle or an automatic door of a building.
The present invention may be applied to an opening/closing control device that controls a sunroof or the like of a vehicle.
In the entrapment determination based on pulses, the physical quantity based on pulses generated by the pulse sensor 7 may be defined as follows. Whenever the ECU 5 receives pulses from the pulse sensor 7, the ECU 5 calculates an average pulse cycle T (AVE) by adding the latest pulse cycle T(0), which was last received, and all previous pulse cycles T(1) to T(N−1), which were received 1 to N−1 cycles before the latest pulse, and then dividing the sum by N. Further, the ECU 5 calculates a cycle differential value ΔT(0) by subtracting the average pulse cycle T (AVE) from the latest pulse cycle T(0). The cycle differential value ΔT(0) may be set as the physical quantity.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2015-145055 | Jul 2015 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2016/071325 | 7/20/2016 | WO | 00 |