This patent disclosure relates generally to onboard engine diagnostics and, more particularly to a robust system for determining whether a multi-cylinder engine is misfiring on one or more cylinders.
Internal combustion engines are typically driven by a series of combustion events timed to drive one or more pistons within cylinders. Each such combustion event in a cylinder initiates what is often referred to as a “power stroke” for that cylinder. In 4-cycle engines, there are two crankshaft revolutions (4 one-way strokes) for each power stroke. Most engines in use today for transportation and industry are of a 4-stroke design, although 2-stroke engines are still employed for smaller engines where emission regulations are more lax. Although the disclosed technology offers the greatest benefit in 4-stroke engines, 2-stroke engines may also benefit from these principles.
During the power stroke, the reciprocating motion of the pistons is converted to useful rotary motion via a crankshaft. After the power stroke, the momentum of the crankshaft and flywheel, as well as the power strokes of other cylinders, drive the piston through an exhaust cycle and back into position for another power stroke.
In the present document, a “misfire” is an absence of a combustion event during a power stroke of a cylinder. Generally, a multi-cylinder engine will still run when a small percentage of cylinders are continually misfiring. However, the engine will not develop full power under such circumstances due to the absent power strokes. In addition, the presence of continual misfires will reduce engine efficiency, increase harmful engine emissions, and may damage exhaust treatment components. The reduction in engine efficiency is the result of nonfunctioning cylinders imposing drag on the other cylinders, as well as the ejection of raw fuel into the exhaust stream. The thermal cycling induced by the presence of raw fuel in the exhaust may also degrade catalytic converter components, further exacerbating the emissions problems caused by the misfires.
Thus, it is desirable to detect cylinder misfires so that appropriate repairs or adjustments may be undertaken. However, it has traditionally been difficult to reliably detect misfires. One attempt to identify misfiring cylinders is illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 5,044,195 to James et al., entitled “Misfire Detection in an Internal Combustion Engine.” The James patent describes an apparatus for detecting misfires occurring during operation of a multi-cylinder internal combustion engine. The system measures the engine acceleration corresponding to each cylinder firing and determines an average acceleration over a series of the cylinder firings centered around a selected cylinder. The deviation of acceleration of the selected cylinder firing from the average acceleration and of the engine torque during each cylinder firing are used to determine a misfire, the idea being that a significant deviation in torque and acceleration indicate a misfire.
However, the present inventors have discovered that such techniques, while functioning satisfactorily to detect single-cylinder misfires, do not reliably identify misfires when multiple cylinders are misfiring. At the same time, such systems are much more likely to signal false positives, i.e., to signal a misfire when none is present. Although some implementations of the examples disclosed herein will operate to solve this problem, it will be appreciated that resolving the shortcomings of James is not a limitation or essential feature of the present innovation.
This background discussion is presented for the reader's convenience, and is not intended to identify relevant prior art or to conclusively characterize any art. The teachings of James will be best understood by reference to James itself, and the foregoing discussion is not intended to extend the teachings of James in any way. Any inconsistency in this characterization should be resolved in favor of the James disclosure, not this background section.
The disclosed principles pertain to a method for onboard diagnosis of engine performance for a multi-cylinder internal combustion engine. The onboard diagnosis process determines whether one or more cylinders of the engine are misfiring by detecting the engine speed as a function of the rotational angle of the crankshaft and determining crankshaft acceleration as a function of the power stroke of each cylinder. After ordering the cylinders in order of their respective accelerations, the process averages the accelerations of a group of consecutively ordered cylinders, including the second greatest acceleration and excluding the greatest acceleration and determines a deviation of the remaining cylinders from the average acceleration. Based on the determined deviation of the remaining cylinders, the process determines whether one or more of the remaining cylinders are misfiring.
This disclosure relates to an on board diagnostic system for detecting cylinder misfires in a multi-cylinder engine. As noted above, cylinder misfires cause fuel inefficiency and harmful emissions. In the case of heavy-duty industrial engines, these problems can have significant cost and regulatory impacts. Indeed, it appears that as of 2010, engines will be required by the United States Environmental Protection Agency and California Air Resources Board to have an onboard diagnostics system capable of detecting a cylinder that continually misfires (i.e., with no intervening partial or full combustion power strokes during the test period). These regulations will require that the onboard diagnostics system detect a cylinder that continuously misfires during engine idle. For purposes of those regulations, the term “idle” denotes a situation wherein the accelerator pedal or other throttle actuator is released and the machine speed and load are less than respective predefined small percentages (e.g., 1% and 2% respectively). The misfire detection should begin within two revolutions of engine start, i.e., the time that the engine speed is within 150 RPM of the engine idle speed, and should not take longer than 15 seconds of idle time or 1000 revolutions to complete. While the described system will meet these requirements in many implementations, it is not required that all implementations meet these limitations. Moreover, while the operations of some implementations may meet or exceed the foregoing requirements, some implementations will fall short of these requirements since the disclosed principles and techniques are also applicable to operating environments other than those contemplated by the EPA or CARB rules of interest
In order to understand the disclosed system, it is useful to understand the way in which cylinders are typically designated. Most present day multi-cylinder engines are “in-line” engines, meaning that the cylinder bores are perpendicular to the engine shaft axis and are arranged in a row or “line” along the axis. The cylinders are numbered conceptually in order along the axis. Thus, as shown in the engine diagram 10 of
The speed wheel 20 of
The speed wheel 20 can be used to track crankshaft speed with relatively high resolution, e.g., approximately every 5 degrees. From the detected speed, the instantaneous crankshaft acceleration can be calculated. Those of skill in the art will be familiar with the design and operation of speed wheels, so that no further explanation is necessary at this point.
Prior to each power stroke, there is a compression event in the cylinder of interest. Thus, the crankshaft slows slightly before combustion under the resistance of the compression stroke, and accelerates slightly during combustion. The timing plot of
In reality, as shown in the timing plot 40 of
In overview, in order to detect cylinders providing an abnormally low amount of rotational energy, and thus identify misfiring cylinders, the power stroke acceleration of the crankshaft is first quantified as shown in the plot 50 of
The cylinders are then ranked in order of acceleration as shown in the plot 60 of
Given the foregoing overview, the details of exemplary implementations of the disclosed misfire detection system will be discussed with reference to the flow chart of
At stage 83, the set of accelerations is reduced by eliminating the cylinder having the highest power stroke acceleration. This reduces the probability of false positives by acknowledging that very often one cylinder will be “hotter” or more powerful than the others. By eliminating this cylinder from the remaining diagnostic calculations, the cylinders under evaluation (e.g., the weakest cylinders) will be measured against a more typical power stroke acceleration standard. The highest three cylinders (the standard set) in the remaining set are averaged at stage 84 to derive an average power level, or assessment level, against which to judge the remaining cylinders, and a deviation or pseudo deviation value is calculated based on the standard set. The pseudo deviation value is chosen to reflect how far apart the cylinder accelerations are expected to be during proper operation, in view of the actuality that different engines have different such deviations. Alternatively, a deviation may be measured based solely on the calculated accelerations in the cylinders of the standard set.
At stage 85, the diagnostic system calculates the distance between the accelerations of the cylinders under evaluation and the average acceleration previously calculated in stage 84. In
Although any suitable technique may be used to evaluate and characterize the effect of the distance between a cylinder under analysis and the average acceleration calculated in stage 84, in an embodiment the diagnostic system determines based on the distance and other factors whether a trip threshold is triggered as well as a probability of misfire (0-100%).
According to this embodiment, the trip threshold is calculated as xfail=((kx·
where kp is gain constant so that the returned value PC is within 0-100% and xC is the change in engine speed for each power stroke for the cylinder.
If at stage 86 one or more cylinders are flagged as misfiring, then the diagnostic system triggers a warning light to alert the operator regarding the misfiring cylinder(s). Finally, at stage 87, the diagnostic system exits the misfire detection routine until another drive cycle has expired or until such other time as a misfire diagnostic is desired or required.
It will be appreciated that during the misfire analysis, the diagnostic system may store the collected data for later review by a technician or other service personnel. In this manner, trends in cylinder performance may be observed even when they do not immediately result in a misfire diagnosis.
In an alternative embodiment as briefly noted above, the lowest cylinder in the standard set 71 may be moved from the standard set to the remaining cylinders to be evaluated if it deviates more from the standard set 72 than from the remaining cylinders. In particular, in this embodiment, if the acceleration exhibited by the lowest cylinder in the putative standard set has an acceleration that is nearer to the average of the accelerations of the cylinders under analysis than to the average of the other cylinders in the standard set, then the cylinder of interest is included in the cylinders under analysis rather than the standard set. Otherwise, the cylinder of interest in included in the standard set. Thus, if the lowest cylinder in the putative standard set is misfiring, this can be detected. Without this technique, there is a possibility that a misfiring cylinder in the standard set will reduce the average acceleration in that set to the point that misfires in the weakest two cylinders of the engine will go undetected.
It has been observed that even during normal operation, certain cylinders will contribute more to crankshaft acceleration than other cylinders. In an embodiment, prior to stage 82, the diagnostic system applies individual cylinder gains to account for known variations under normal circumstances, such that any resultant abnormal readings can accurately be attributed to abnormal operation.
Although the diagnostic system described thus far is nonintrusive, e.g., the operator is not aware that the system is functioning, it is possible to improve the robustness of the diagnostic by adding one or more intrusive verifier steps. Thus, in a further embodiment, if a cylinder is flagged as misfiring, the diagnostic system cuts the fuel delivery to that cylinder momentarily to observe the affect on crankshaft acceleration. If the power stroke acceleration for that cylinder significantly decreases when fuel is withheld, then the misfire flag is removed. On the other hand, if the power stroke acceleration for that cylinder remains the same when fuel is withheld, then, the cylinder is confirmed as misfiring. Furthermore, misfiring cylinders can then be flagged by the controller 91 to have the fuel delivery disabled (turned off) to protect other engine or machine components such as emissions aftertreatment devices.
Alternatively, to minimize the degree of disruption imposed on the engine operation, the fuel delivery to the potentially misfiring cylinder may be incrementally decreased while the crankshaft response is observed. In particular, in this embodiment, after a cylinder is flagged as potentially misfiring, the diagnostic system confirms or refutes this diagnosis by slowly decreasing the fuel delivery in incremental steps until a statistically significant variation in the crankshaft acceleration and/or deceleration for that cylinder is observed. The fuel delivery may be finely or coarsely incremented, but in an embodiment, the fuel delivery is incremented in steps of about 5%.
If at some fuel delivery level, a statistically significant variation in the crankshaft acceleration and/or deceleration for that cylinder is observed, the cylinder is flagged as not misfiring and the fuel delivery is returned to a normal level. If instead, the fuel delivery reaches a predetermined lower limit, such as zero fuel delivery, with no statistically significant variation occurring, then the cylinder is confirmed as misfiring. In this case, the fuel delivery may be reduced to zero to avoid continued fuel waste, emissions problems, and the deterioration of sensitive exhaust system components.
Although the immediately foregoing embodiment pertains to evaluating the crankshaft acceleration and/or deceleration for the potentially misfiring cylinder, the diagnostic system may additionally or alternatively evaluate the crankshaft acceleration associated with one or more other cylinders. In particular, if the decreasing fuel flow to the flagged cylinder causes a loss of power from that cylinder, the power from the other cylinders of the engine may automatically increase, e.g., via the ECU, to maintain engine speed. This will be reflected as an increase in the acceleration of the crankshaft during the power strokes of the other cylinders.
In a further embodiment, other confirmation steps are additionally or alternatively employed to determine whether a flagged cylinder is actually misfiring. With respect to certain engine configurations and environments, periodic engine loads may disproportionately affect one cylinder or a subset of the cylinders. For example, a periodic engine load that occurs at the same frequency as the combustion cycle at a certain RPM will decrease the acceleration detected from the cylinders firing during the load at that RPM. An example of this phenomenon is a pump load that loads the engine in a periodic manner. In this case, it may appear that the loaded cylinder is misfiring.
Thus, in this embodiment, once a cylinder is flagged as misfiring at a current RPM, the diagnostic system alters the speed of the engine, and thus the combustion cycle frequency. The degree of alteration depends upon the engine speed and configuration, but may be approximately 1% of current RPM by way of example. In this way, the disruptive effect of the alteration is not apparent to the user, but is enough to separate the frequencies of the combustion cycle and any periodic loads. If re-diagnosis of the flagged cylinder at the altered engine speed results in a decision that the cylinder is not misfiring, then the cylinder is confirmed as not misfiring. Otherwise, the cylinder continues to be flagged as misfiring, since the cause of the lack of cylinder power is not attributable to coincidental periodic loading.
The industrial applicability of the misfire detection system described herein will be readily appreciated from the foregoing discussion. In particular, the disclosed system is applicable to any system incorporating a multi-cylinder internal combustion engine. Such systems include industrial machines, construction machines, and other fuel-driven equipment, whether used for transportation or other operations. In addition to the benefits provided by this system in terms of better engine performance, fuel efficiency, and emissions levels, the system may also assist in meeting governmental guidelines for onboard diagnostics systems. For example, EPA and CARB regulations coming into effect in 2010 will require onboard diagnostics that are capable of meeting certain requirements, and the disclosed principles can be used to meet these requirements.
Since the disclosed system operates by way of sensors that are already in place in many machines, there is little additional cost imposed by the system. Moreover, because measurements are relative, there are no calibration problems in moving the system between chassis. The use of direct crankshaft measurements eliminates problems due to external noise.
Although the signal to noise ratio for crankshaft acceleration measurements is typically not high, the techniques described herein allow the accurate gathering and interpretation of data nonetheless. Finally, in most embodiments, the disclosed system is non-intrusive from the operator's viewpoint. Even in the enhanced accuracy embodiment wherein fuel supply to a cylinder in question in interrupted, the intrusive effect is minimal and temporary.
Although the onboard diagnostics system described herein may be executed within any of the machine electronic systems having the necessary computational capabilities, in an embodiment, the onboard diagnostics are executed by an engine controller 91 as shown in
In addition, the engine controller 91 includes a memory 95, e.g., RAM, ROM, or flash memory, including volatile and nonvolatile memories, readable by the processor 94. The memory 95 stores computer-executable instructions for determining the power stroke acceleration of each engine cylinder based on the speed of the engine 90 and for ranking the cylinders in order of acceleration as discussed above. The memory 95 further includes instructions for excluding the highest ranked cylinder and averaging the accelerations of the next highest consecutive group of cylinders and comparing any remaining cylinder accelerations to the average to determine whether one or more cylinders of the engine 90 are misfiring.
It will be appreciated that the engine controller 91 is also operable to execute the other diagnosis functions and activities described herein. An output 92 is provided for performing control instructions such as those traditionally executed by an engine controller, as well for executing any control functions entailed in the diagnosis process, e.g., fuel shut-off.
In keeping with the disclosed principles, the diagnostic system may command a fuel interruption prior to the detection of misfires to determine the inertia of the system in order to more accurately set the misfire thresholds. In particular, by adding, subtracting, or multiplying the amount of fuel to a cylinder, the system can determine the rotational inertia of the system. The fuel base (current fuel draw) determines the overall load on the engine, but does not identify the rotational inertia of the system, since no torque is needed to overcome rotational inertia in such circumstances. However, causing a change in the fuel and tracking the engine reaction dynamically, e.g., by observing and quantifying a rise or fall in engine RPM, can be used to determine the approximate rotational inertia of the system.
In an embodiment, the system executes a comparison of (1) engine behavior with the addition of fuel and (2) engine behavior with the subtraction of fuel, to (3) the base operating RPM levels. The well-known force equation F=ma is applicable to linear forces and accelerations. The counterpart relationship for rotational force, or Torque, is T=Ia, where a is the rotational acceleration and I is the object inertia.
This relationship can be used to empirically identify the inertia of the crankshaft and any components linked thereto, and to thus identify the acceleration change to be expected when a cylinder is or is not contributing to the system acceleration. In one embodiment, the system accelerations under fully operation conditions when fuel changes are introduced are defined as aincreased
Having defined the rotational inertia based on the fuel reduction and supplementation results, this value is used to set the misfire thresholds. For example, for systems with very high rotational inertia, a misfire event will generate a lower perturbation on the system acceleration. In such circumstances, a low threshold should be selected. Similarly, in a system with low rotational inertia, higher acceleration perturbations are to be expected, and the threshold should be set at a higher value to avoid false positives.
It will be appreciated that the foregoing description provides examples of the disclosed system and technique. However, it is contemplated that other implementations of the disclosure may differ in detail from the foregoing examples. All references to the invention or examples thereof are intended to reference the particular example being discussed at that point and are not intended to imply any limitation as to the scope of the invention more generally. All language of distinction and disparagement with respect to certain features is intended to indicate a lack of preference for those features, but not to exclude such from the scope of the invention entirely unless otherwise indicated.
Recitation of ranges of values herein are merely intended to serve as a shorthand method of referring individually to each separate value falling within the range, unless otherwise indicated herein, and each separate value is incorporated into the specification as if it were individually recited herein. All methods described herein can be performed in any suitable order unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context.
Accordingly, this invention includes all modifications and equivalents of the subject matter recited in the claims appended hereto as permitted by applicable law. Moreover, any combination of the above-described elements in all possible variations thereof is encompassed by the invention unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context.
This patent application is a continuation-in-part of copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/863,107, filed Sep. 27, 2007, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11863107 | Sep 2007 | US |
Child | 11868154 | US |