The invention relates to an electronic regulating system, controlled by a pulse width-modulated signal, for regulating the voltage across a high-side load, in particular a fan regulator for motor vehicles.
Such regulating systems are generally well known through their use in motor vehicles.
Japanese Patent JP 01302409 AA discloses an electronic regulating system for regulating the voltage, having a reference input variable related to the positive potential of the supply voltage for the regulation.
Japanese Patent JP 09215321 AA discloses a regulating system having a circuit part that converts the pulse width-modulated signal into the reference input variable needed for the regulation. The earth is used here as a reference potential.
An important basic function of the regulating system is the regulation of the motor voltage as a function of a control signal. This control signal may be an analogue control voltage, an analogue control current or a digital signal. Control systems for fans according to the teaching of the prior art internally convert control currents and digital control signals into a control voltage, so that in principle a closed loop circuit that regulates the motor voltage as function of a control voltage is always present. If the control signal is a digital control signal, then a device that generates an analogue control voltage from the digital control signal is provided. The analogue control voltage is clearly functionally linked to the digital control signal. Generally speaking, the digital control signal is a PWM signal, in which the desired setpoint is encoded in the pulse duty cycle between active and inactive control signal.
Known linear control systems for fans having a digital control signal generally use the circuit topology illustrated in
Umot=V1*(R9/R8)
An important requirement of a control system for a fan is the smoothing out of on-board voltage fluctuations. Umot should be independent of V2. This applies only when R8/R9=R10/R11 exactly. Upon occurrence of on-board voltage fluctuations dV2, the response of the control system according to
The correlation Umot=f(V1), assuming ideal components and ideal pairing tolerances of R8/R9=R10/R11, is determined only by the resistance ratio of R8/R9. Umot is largely independent of V2. The operational amplifier smooths out onboard voltage fluctuations.
In standby operation, V1=0. The current consumption Ib of the arrangement is in this case called the quiescent current and should be as low as possible in order not to discharge the battery.
If V1=0, Umot=0, and hence also Id=0 (modern MOSFETs have very small off-state currents). Accordingly, Ib=I1+I2+I3. I3 can be maintained at a very low level by the use of an ultra low power op-amp.
If, for reasons of cost, it is desired to dispense with an encapsulation of the regulator electronics, then the use of high-impedance resistors is problematic. Condensation and the contaminations associated therewith on the circuit board surface that occur in the vehicle lead to leakage currents, which affect the function of switching circuits designed with high impedance. R8 to R11 cannot therefore be made with arbitrarily high impedance. I1 and I2 thus put no load on the battery in standby operation.
The invention addresses the problem of improving the regulation.
The invention enables a control system, in particular for a fan, to be constructed with comparatively few discrete components. The control system is distinguished by a good control response and an extremely small quiescent current consumption.
Two preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention are illustrated diagrammatically in the drawings and are explained below by means of the Figures in the drawings, in which:
According to
In the preferred embodiment, the pulse width-modulated control signal S1 is related to earth.
The two input voltages of the regulator U1A are related to the positive supply voltage V2. So according to the circuit diagram of
and so independent of V2.
In contrast to
According to the teaching of the invention, on-board voltage fluctuations are therefore smoothed out in an improved manner.
The regulator U1A recognises when the output signal of the PWM/DC inverter, i.e. U, falls below a specific threshold value and in that case transfers itself and the downstream transistor M1 into a zero-current state of rest. Then I2 becomes approximately equal to 0, I3 becomes approximately equal to 0, Id becomes approximately equal to 0, and hence Ib becomes approximately equal to 0. The circuit therefore has an extremely small current consumption when the transistor Q1 of the control unit is permanently blocked.
Even when of low-impedance design, I2 and I3 put no load on the battery V2 in idle operation.
In a further embodiment according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 016 338 | Apr 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE2007/000269 | 2/14/2007 | WO | 00 | 11/20/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/112713 | 10/11/2007 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090310948 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |