The present invention relates to a motor vehicle steering system having the features of the preamble of claim 1, and to a method for controlling an electric motor of a motor vehicle steering system having the features of the preamble of claim 11.
Electromechanical steering systems have servomotors for providing steering assistance. When there is a short circuit in the motor controller, a fault is conventionally detected, but said fault can propagate unimpeded owing to the sudden failure of the voltage. This is undesired.
An object of the present invention is to specify a motor vehicle steering system, which has a protective device, which prevents propagation of a voltage failure in the motor controller.
This object is achieved by a motor vehicle steering system having the features of claim 1 and by a method for controlling an electric motor of a motor vehicle steering system having the features of claim 11. Advantageous developments of the invention are specified in the dependent claims.
Accordingly, a motor vehicle steering system comprising an electric motor for assisting the steering movement, and a control unit which controls the electric motor, are provided, wherein the control unit has at least two redundant control paths for controlling the electric motor, and an asymmetry detection device, wherein the asymmetry detection device is configured to compare the electric current intensities of the two control paths, and to cause the faulty control path to be interrupted if there is asymmetry. This can prevent a fault from propagating and the control unit from becoming functionally incapable. The presence of two redundant control paths for controlling the electric motor comprises the fact that the electric motor can be controlled using two control paths which are respectively separate from one another. However, it is also possible to provide that the electric motor contains a plurality of coil sets or is composed of a plurality of separate motors whose rotational axes are mechanically coupled. In these cases, a control path is provided for controlling a coil set or is provided for controlling a motor, respectively.
Each control path preferably has at least one switching element which is connected to the asymmetry detection device in order to interrupt the control paths.
Each control path preferably has a current measuring device which measures the electric current intensity separately and individually for each control path.
It is advantageous if each control path comprises an inverter, wherein the current measuring device is arranged upstream of the inverter in the direction of the signals.
In one advantageous embodiment, each control path has a separate power source in order to increase the redundancy further.
Each control path preferably has a separate interface to a motor control unit of the electric motor.
In one preferred embodiment, the asymmetry detection device has an operational amplifier.
There can additionally be provision that the asymmetry detection device has, for each control path, a latching comparator which is configured to compare the signal with a pre-set reference voltage, and to generate an output signal on the basis of this voltage comparison.
In one advantageous embodiment, the motor vehicle steering system is an electromechanical motor vehicle power steering system, comprising an upper steering shaft, which is connected to a steering means, and a lower steering shaft, which is connected to the upper steering shaft via a torsion bar, a torque sensor unit, which senses a torque, introduced into the upper steering shaft by the driver, of a steering movement, the electric motor for assisting the steering movement, and the control unit as described above which is configured to control the electric motor as a function of the measured torque. The steering means is preferably a steering wheel or a joystick.
However, there can also be provision that the motor vehicle steering system is a steer-by-wire steering system, comprising a steering actuator which acts on the steered wheels, is controlled electronically as a function of a driver's steering request and acts on the steered wheels by means of a steering gear, and a feedback actuator which transmits reactions of the road to a steering wheel and has the electric motor and the control unit as described above.
Furthermore, a method is provided for controlling an electric motor of a motor vehicle steering system having a control unit comprising at least two redundant control paths and an asymmetry detection device, wherein each control path has at least one switching element and a current measuring device, and wherein the following method steps are provided:
Each control path preferably comprises an inverter, wherein the current measuring device is arranged upstream of the inverter in the direction of the signals.
In order to increase the redundancy further, each control path can have a separate power source.
Each control path preferably has a separate interface to a motor control unit of the electric motor.
In one preferred embodiment, the asymmetry detection device has an operational amplifier.
There can also be provision that the asymmetry detection device has, for each control path, a latching comparator which is configured to compare the signal with a pre-set reference voltage and to generate an output signal on the basis of this voltage comparison.
In a preferred embodiment, if a faulty control path exists, the comparator of the fault free control path is deactivated for a brief time, as a result of which faulty fault detection in the fault free control path can be prevented.
The method can also be used, as described above, both in electromechanical power steering systems and in steer-by-wire steering systems.
A preferred embodiment of the invention is explained in more detail below with reference to the drawings. Identical and functionally identical components are provided here with the same reference symbols in all the figures. In the drawings:
The redundantly configured control unit 12 is illustrated schematically in
The switching elements 153, 154, 163, 164 are preferably FETs, in particular MOSFETs.
A short circuit in one of the control paths 150, 160 can cause a transient overvoltage in the other fault free control path 150, 160. The transients can cause the fault free control path 150, 160 to switch off, since it cannot be ruled out that the overvoltage is detected as a short circuit in the asymmetry detection device 17. In order to prevent such an undesired event, a circuit (not illustrated here) for mutual deactivation of the comparators is provided. If a short circuit occurs in one of the control paths 150, 160 and if said short circuit is detected, the comparator of the fault free control path 150, 160 is deactivated for a brief period of time. In this way, it is possible to prevent transient overvoltage in the fault free control path 150, 160 from being interpreted as a short circuit.
There is preferably provision that the two control paths 150, 160 have a separate power supply, i.e. the power supply is also of redundant design.
The two control paths 150, 160 preferably have an interface (not illustrated here) to the motor control unit (MCU) which makes it possible to carry out motor tests, reset motor set-point values, switch the motor on and off and read back motor actual values.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2018 124 906.3 | Oct 2018 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2019/076906 | 10/4/2019 | WO | 00 |