1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method and a device for detecting the rolling movement of a wheel in a vehicle or motor vehicle.
2. Description of Related Art
Tire pressure monitoring systems are known in modern motor vehicles. These monitoring systems, as a rule, include several pressure sensors which are mounted to the wheels of the vehicles, in common with transmitting electronics. In case of a pressure drop, a radio signal is sent to a control unit. However, for the purpose of monitoring the sensor system, a signal is also cyclically sent, as a rule, without there being a pressure loss. The pressure sensor, complete with signal evaluation and transmitting unit, is mostly fed by a battery that is also installed in the wheel.
For the broadening of the functioning of the sensor, a rolling detection is frequently used, that is, a system which recognizes whether the wheel is turning or not. This function is meaningful, for example, in order to:
Such a setup is described, for example, in published German patent document DE 10 2005 002 240. From this document, a device is known for measuring a vehicle movement. It includes an acceleration sensor arranged at the wheel and an associated evaluation circuit. This sensor system operates especially accurately and reliably if the acceleration sensor is mounted on the wheel in such a way that the main sensing direction lies essentially in the tangential direction of the wheel.
Published German patent document DE 197 53,971 also discloses a method for detecting a rolling motion of a wheel in a motor vehicle.
The present invention provides a method for detecting a rolling motion of a wheel in a motor vehicle in which
The crux of the present invention is that the wheel acceleration variable is scanned in a cycle or a scanning cycle or a series or a succession or a sequence, including at least three scanning points in time, of predetermined, nonequidistant points in time. Because of the use of predetermined, nonequidistant scanning points in time, the possibility opens up of carrying out a sure rolling detection using a much lower number of scanning points compared to an equidistant scanning.
One advantageous embodiment of the present invention is characterized in that the wheel acceleration variable is essentially a radial acceleration occurring at the wheel, or essentially a tangential acceleration.
One advantageous embodiment of the present invention is characterized by the wheel acceleration variable having at least one component that refers to a radial acceleration.
In the last-mentioned application, the properties are utilized that, independently of the alignment of the sensors, that is, independently of whether their measuring direction points in the radial direction, the tangential direction or a linear combination of these directions, a sinusoidal output signal is consistently generated which has superimposed on it a constant offset value that is a function of the radial component of the sensor alignment.
One advantageous embodiment of the present invention is characterized in that the nonequidistant scanning points in time within the cycle are arranged in time in such a way that the distances in time of two successive adjacent scanning points in time becomes less and less. This selection of the scanning points in time has proven, in experiments, to be particularly suitable.
One advantageous refinement of the present invention is characterized by the fact that
One advantageous embodiment of the present invention is characterized in that a rolling motion is detected as being present when the difference exceeds a specified threshold value.
One advantageous embodiment of the present invention is characterized by the scanning cycle being repeated at specified points in time.
One advantageous refinement of the present invention is characterized in that
One advantageous embodiment is characterized in that, in the case of a rolling motion not being detected as being present, that is, there is no wheel rotation, the tire pressure values ascertained by the tire pressure monitoring system are not transmitted, or are transmitted at greater time intervals than if a wheel rotation had been present. This makes possible an energy-saving operation of the tire pressure monitoring system.
One advantageous refinement of the present invention is characterized in that the sensor element is a piezoceramic sensor element.
Another advantageous embodiment of the present invention is characterized in that the piezoceramic sensor element has a capacitor connected in parallel to it.
In common with the sensor element and possibly additionally present component parts, the capacitor forms a passive circuit having a frequency response (a type of bandpass) which is essentially determined additionally by this capacitance. The capacitance makes possible the observation of the sensor signals and their coupling out via the switches, without the sensor element being short circuited in the process. Consequently, a type of impedance conversion takes place; piezo-elements are extremely high-ohmic. That being the case, the capacitor has the following tasks:
One advantageous refinement of the present invention is characterized in that
This makes possible an energy-saving operation.
Yet another advantageous embodiment of the present invention is characterized in that the electronic circuit includes a charge-voltage converter.
One advantageous refinement of the present invention is characterized in that
Furthermore, the present invention includes a device having means designed for implementing the methods described above.
The present invention makes possible the detection of rolling of a motor vehicle wheel, having the following advantages:
The present invention uses the output signals of a piezoelement. This output signal is scanned at certain scanning points in time, with the aid of a circuit configuration. Because of the selection of the scanning points in time according to the present invention, the invention enables a sure detection of a rolling motion, that is present, over a large range of speeds, for instance, from 20 km/h up to 250 km/h, using a very small number of scanning values. The number of scanning values that are required is typically below the number that would be required in an equidistant scanning by a factor of 5-10.
The circuit configuration is designed, in this context, in such a way that it has to be supplied with current only during the scanning points in time, and other than that, it is able to be in a current-saving passive mode. Based on this energy-saving property, it is possible to cover a long time interval using the scannings, even without high energy usage. This long time interval is necessary in order also to be able to detect motions at low speeds.
The rolling detection is carried out from the scanning values thus obtained, via simple signal processing. This signal processing is supported by the evaluation of the so-called fundamental wave, and will be described in greater detail. The evaluation of the fundamental wave lends great robustness to the system with respect to variance and aging, as well as special properties of the vehicle, of the wheel or of the tire, such as, for example, mechanical resonances.
In a schematic representation,
In order to achieve great robustness at low costs per piece, as many as possible of the blocks shown in
In response to the rotation of the wheel, both in the tangential and in the radial direction, a sinusoidal acceleration curve is created.
In the radial direction, a centrifugal acceleration, that is constant at constant rotational speed, is superimposed on it. The sinusoidal curve caused by gravity has an amplitude of 1 g (with g=acceleration due to gravity), and the frequency is equivalent to the frequency of the wheel's rotation. The centrifugal acceleration superposed in the radial direction is able to amount to several hundred to several thousand g. Even in response to a rapidly accelerating vehicle, its value changes only slowly compared to the wheel rotation.
A typical curve of a recorded radial acceleration is shown in
Sensor element 100 thereby converts the acceleration into a sinusoidal electrical signal. A possibly present centrifugal acceleration is filtered out by a separate high pass filter or by a high pass filtering property that is inherently already included in a piezo element (separate charges become equalized again via a high ohmic resistance in the piezo element). With that, there comes about a purely sinusoidal signal as shown in
A typical implementation of the entire system for rolling detection is shown in
Between the scanning processes, the circuit may be put in a stand-by mode, in order to save energy. This makes it possible to extend the observation period, that is, the time interval in which the scanning values lie, to such a degree that this time interval typically continues over a complete period in response to the slightest rolling speed that is to be detected.
In
The scanning values obtained are advantageously processed digitally in block 403. For this, in a first step, the maximum and minimum values of the scanning values are formed:
In
For the simulation results plotted in
The fact that in
The sequence in principle of the method according to the present invention is shown in
It becomes clear, in this context, that an unequivocal detection of a rolling motion is still possible even in response to clear fluctuations in sensor sensitivity, based, for instance, on aging or a temperature change.
Besides the evaluation via the maximum and minimum values that was introduced, the formation of one or more weighted sums of the scanning values and subsequent comparison is also a possibility. So is the filtering of the scanning values and
Fluctuations in the sensitivity of the overall system may be compensated for by a suitable adjustment of the barriers or the threshold values. To do this, one may use a follow-up of the signals over many measuring cycles, or the feeding in of self-generated signal values into the evaluation path. The circuit configuration presented may also be implemented in principle in analog circuit technology.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2006 054 317 | Nov 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2007/059891 | 9/19/2007 | WO | 00 | 8/13/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2008/058790 | 5/22/2008 | WO | A |
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20050156722 | McCall et al. | Jul 2005 | A1 |
20060161327 | Emmerich et al. | Jul 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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197 53 971 | Jun 1999 | DE |
10 2004 042 191 | Feb 2006 | DE |
10 2005 002 240 | Jul 2006 | DE |
WO 2005070707 | Aug 2005 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20110130919 A1 | Jun 2011 | US |