1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to a method for determining the tire lateral force in a motor vehicle with an electromechanical or electrohydraulic steering system.
2. Description of the Related Art
In addition to very customary ABS brake systems, many up-to-date motor vehicles are equipped at an increasing rate with driving dynamics control systems in order to enhance the active safety of vehicles. Driving dynamics control systems are employed to check and limit yaw movements of the vehicle about its vertical axis. Sensors detect variables predetermined by the driver such as the steering angle, the accelerator pedal position, and the brake pressure, for example. In addition, the lateral acceleration and the rotational behavior of the individual vehicle wheels are measured. The efficiency of driving dynamics control systems could be increased still further by gathering further variables, which influence the dynamic performance of the motor vehicle. For example, among these variables is the coefficient of friction of the vehicle wheels on the roadway or the sideslip angle, which indicates the angular deviation of the speed vector from the vehicle's center line.
The invention discloses a method, by which at least one additional variable can be determined, which influences the dynamic performance of a vehicle.
This is achieved by calculating the lateral force in a motor vehicle equipped with an electromechanical or electrohydraulic steering system. The method comprises the following steps:
The lateral force at the wheels is a favorable input variable for many driving dynamics control systems. The lateral force can be used to determine the coefficient of friction or to estimate the sideslip angle, for example.
Modern electromechanically or electrohydraulically assisted steering systems or electromechanical or electrohydraulic steering systems, which are mechanically uncoupled from the driver, due to their principle comprise force or torque sensors, from which the steering rod force (toothed rack in rack-and-pinion steering) or steering tie rod forces are measured or calculated. The tire lateral forces can be determined from the above-mentioned forces. The method of the invention makes use of this sensor equipment in order to define the tire lateral forces.
In an improvement of the invention, a transmission ratio between the steering rod force and the total restoring torque is included in the determination of the lateral force.
Suitably, the transmission ratio can be responsive to the steering angle. Favorably, a kingpin inclination and/or a caster angle are included in the determination of the lateral force.
The other restoring torques that are important for the invention can comprise restoring torques generated by rolling resistance, brake force, driving power, and/or by vertical force.
In different embodiments of the method of the invention, the steering rod force can be detected as a force acting on the left and right steering tie rod or as the total steering rod force.
Advantageously, the total steering rod force is calculated from a steering torque generated by the driver, steering amplification, and a steering ratio. It can be provided that a steering-angle-responsive steering ratio enters into the calculation of the steering rod force.
In an embodiment of the invention, the total steering rod force is determined from the motor current and/or the motor position of one or more electric motors of the electromechanical or electrohydraulic steering system.
Thus, the method of the invention can be extended suitably in such a fashion that a sideslip angle and/or a coefficient of friction are determined from the determined lateral force.
The drawings schematically illustrate an electromechanical steering system in which a method according to the invention can be implemented. In the drawings:
The mode of operation of the steering system and the method of calculating the lateral force Fy are described below.
Characteristic values of the front-wheel suspension have been explained graphically in
a shows a side view of the wheel 7. The angle between the steering axis 16 and the normal line of the road 17 in the longitudinal plane of the vehicle is referred to as caster angle τ. The distance between the point 18 where the steering axis 16 intersects the roadway 21 and an ideal tire contact point 19 in the vehicle longitudinal plane is referred to as caster offset rτ,k.
b shows a front view of the wheel 7. The angle between the steering axis 16 and the road normal line 17 in the vehicle transversal plane is referred to as kingpin inclination σ. The distance between the intersection point 18 of the steering axis 16 through the roadway 21 and the ideal tire contact point 19 in the vehicle transversal plane are referred to as roll radius rσ.
Further,
In electromechanically or electrohydraulically assisted steering systems, the steering torque ML generated by the driver is measured in order to calculate and adjust the rate of amplification VL to be provided by the electric motor. Based on the usually steering-angle responsive transmission ratio iLl (δ) between the steering wheel moment and the summed steering rod force FL,sum as well as the steering amplification VL, the summed steering rod force is calculated as follows:
F
L,sum
=M
L
·V
L
·i
L1(δ) (1).
The summed steering rod force FL,sum results from the addition of the forces FLr and FLl that act from the right and the left steering tie rod vertically on the steering rod.
In electromechanical or electrohydraulic steering operations, which are uncoupled mechanically from the driver, either both steering tie rod forces are measured separately (FL,r and FL,l) or the summed steering tie rod force FL,sum is measured or estimated based on the motor current and/or the motor position of the electric motor(s). These forces are e.g. required for the generation of the haptic steering feeling.
The procedure for calculating the single steering rod forces FLr and FLl is identical, except for the parameters and the directions of force transferred and is therefore performed using the example of a wheel 7 without wheel indices. The steering rod force FL compensates restoring torques, which act on the wheel 7 and are generated by different forces. The sum of the restoring torques is referred to by Mz because the total restoring torque acts about the z-axis of the system of coordinates illustrated in
A second, likewise steering-angle-responsive transmission ratio iL2 (δ) acts between the steering rod force FL the total restoring torque M, about the steering axis 16:
M
z
=F
L
·i
L2(δ) (2).
A restoring torque generated by a lateral force Fy is also comprised in the total restoring torque. The relation between the lateral force Fy and the restoring torque generated by it will be explained in the following.
a again shows a side view of the vehicle wheel 7. A lateral force Fy acts upon the wheel 7 at the tire contact point. As the steering axis 16 is tilted in relation to the vertical line by the caster angle τ, the lateral force Fy is applied relative to the steering axis 16 in an offset manner. The distance between the point of application of the lateral force Fy, which corresponds to the tire contact point, and the steering axis 16 is referred to as kinematic lateral force lever arm nτk. The lateral force Fy, which is applied to the lateral force lever arm nτk, generates a restoring torque Mz,y according to:
M
z,y
=F
y
·n
τ,k (3).
This consideration applies only to the case without movement of the vehicle and without oblique motion of wheel 7.
Oblique motion causes the point of application of the lateral force Fy to displace by the wheel caster behind the middle of the wheel, with the result that the lateral force lever arm is extended. The lateral force lever arm extends in addition to the kinematic lateral force lever arm nτk by the component of the wheel caster rτ,T that is normal to the steering axis so that the following applies to the total lateral force lever rσ,t:
r
σ,t
=n
τ,k
+r
τ,T·cos τ (4).
The desired lateral force Fy enters into the restoring torque Mz by way of the lateral force lever arm rσ,t and the kinematic kingpin inclination σ. The restoring torque generated by the lateral force Fy is designated by Mz,y
M
z,Y
=F
y·cos σ·rσ,t (5).
The result of inserting the equation (4) into equation (5) is for the restoring torque Mz,y:
M
z,y
=F
y·cos σ·(nτ,k+rτ,T·cos τ) (6).
In addition to the lateral force Fy, further forces act on the steering axis in a torque-generating fashion. In order to separate these torques from the torque Mz,y generated by the lateral force, the individual calculation formulas are indicated in the following.
Among the other forces, which act on the steering axis 16 in a torque-generating fashion, is a brake force FB, which is transmitted from a roadway 21 to a wheel 7.
r
b
=r
σ·cos σ (7),
and σ indicates the kingpin inclination. In consideration of the caster angle τ, the torque about the steering axis 16 that is generated by the brake force FB is achieved by:
M
z,B
=F
B·cos τ·rb (8).
Thus, the restoring torque Mz,B generated by the brake force is obtained by:
M
z,B
=F
B·cos τ·rσ·cos σ (9)
This calculation applies only to vehicles with an outboard brake. For vehicles with an inboard brake, a disturbing force lever arm ra that will be introduced in the following paragraph must be used instead of the brake force lever arm rb.
As
M
Z,R
=F
R·cos τ·ra (10).
Herein, ra represents the disturbing force lever arm being normal to the steering axis 16, and cos τ takes into account the distribution of forces on account of the caster angle τ. The rolling resistance force FR can be obtained from the vertical force FZ and the coefficient of the rolling resistance.
A driving power FA produces likewise by way of the disturbing force lever arm ra a torque MA about the steering axis 16 according to:
M
Z,A
=F
A·cos τ·ra (11).
Further, a vertical force Fz generates a restoring torque, which is significant especially at lower speeds, when only minor lateral forces develop.
Due to the kingpin inclination σ, the vertical force Fz scaled with cos τ acts depending on the steering angle δ along with the vertical force lever arm q as a restoring torque as shown in
M
Z,Z1
=F
z·cos τ·sin σ·sin δ·q (12)
The vertical force lever arm or steering lever arm q is calculated from the tire radius rdyn, the roll radius rσ (
q=(rσ+rdyn·tan σ)·cos σ (13)
The restoring torque is calculated with the vertical force lever arm as follows:
M
Z,Z1
=F
z·cos τ·sin σ·sin δ·(rσ+rdyn·tan σ)·cos σ (14)
The geometric ratios described above are illustrated in
In addition to the torque generated by the kingpin inclination, the vertical force F, produces another restoring torque MZ,Z2 due to the caster angle τ:
M
Z,Z2
=F
z·sin σ·cos τ sin δ·nτ (15),
wherein the caster offset nτ indicates the distance between the point of application of the vertical force Fz and the point of attachment at the vehicle. The geometric ratios for this situation are illustrated in
The desired lateral force Fy is calculated from the total restoring torque Mz determined by way of the steering rod force FL as follows. It applies that the total restoring torque Mz is the sum of the individual restoring torques:
M
z
=M
z,y
+M
Z,B
+M
Z,R
+M
Z,A
+M
Z,Z1
+M
Z,Z2 (16)
Equation (6) is applicable for the lateral force torque Mz,y. When inserting equation (6) into equation (16) and rearranging, the following results:
F
y=(Mz−Mz,B−MZ,R−MZ,A−Mz,Z1−Mz,z2)/(cos σ·(nτ,k+rτ,T·cos τ)) (17).
It follows from this equation that the subsequent parameters must be determined in order to achieve the lateral force Fy:
σ: kingpin inclination
τ: caster angle
τδ: steering angle
rσ: roll radius
nτ: caster offset
rdyn: tire radius
ra: disturbing force lever arm
nτ,k: kinematic lateral force lever arm
rτ,T: wheel caster
The following variables are measured using the sensors already provided for customary driving dynamics control operations in addition to the above-mentioned steering torque ML, the steering rod force FL, the steering amplification VL and the transmission ratios iL1,iL2:
FB: brake force
FA: driving power
F2: vertical force
The total of parameters and measured quantities eventually permits determining the lateral force Fy according to equation (17), as has been described hereinabove.
The invention has been described based on the example of an electromechanical steering system, however, it lends itself to being implemented in a corresponding fashion in electrohydraulic steering systems as well.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2004 014 177.0 | Mar 2004 | DE | national |
This application is the U.S. National Phase Application of PCT International application No. PCT/EP2005/051338, filed Mar. 23, 2005, which claims priority to German Patent Application No. DE 10 2004 177.0 filed on Mar. 23, 2004.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP05/51338 | 3/23/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/14/2008 |