Method of controlling a fuel injector
11352971 · 2022-06-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02T10/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F02M51/061
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2041/2051
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2041/2024
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2041/2055
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/2467
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A method is provided for controlling a solenoid actuated fuel injector having a solenoid actuator which moves a pintle and needle arrangement such that the needle moves away from a valve seat to an open position and also includes circuitry which applies chopped hysteresis control subsequent to an energisation phase. The method includes a) obtaining a signal of the current or voltage across the solenoid; b) analyzing the voltage or current to detect a chopped hysteresis pulse; c) determining the time point of the end of said chopped hysteresis pulse; and d) applying a braking pulse to the solenoid, the timing of which is dependent on the results of step c).
Claims
1. A method of controlling a solenoid actuated fuel injector, said solenoid actuated fuel injector including a solenoid actuator configured to be energized in an energization phase so as to move a pintle and needle arrangement such that the pintle and needle arrangement moves away from a valve seat to an open position and also including circuitry that provides recirculation control subsequent to the energization phase and prior to application of a braking pulse, the circuitry being configured to apply a chopped hysteresis pulse during recirculation control, said method comprising: a) obtaining a signal of current or voltage across the solenoid actuator; b) analyzing the signal of current or voltage to detect the chopped hysteresis pulse that is subsequent to the energization phase; c) determining a time point of an end of said chopped hysteresis pulse; and d) applying the braking pulse to the solenoid actuator, a timing of which is dependent on the results of step c).
2. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein step c) comprises identifying the chopped hysteresis pulse; and determining when voltage thereafter is at zero level for more than a predetermined time.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention is now described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
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(7)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Background
(8)
(9) As it will appear from
(10) Methodology According to Aspects of the Invention
(11) According to one aspect, the methodology detects the start of the closing movement of the injector pintle and uses this as a trigger to start the boost braking pulse. This ensures that the braking pulse is not started too early and avoids the risk of reopening. The application of a (boost) braking pulse after the fueling pulse can be used especially for DI-CNG injectors with higher stroke but might be applied as well to gasoline injectors.
(12) The core of the invention is to identify when the valve starts to close i.e. when the pintle starts to move from the open position. In aspect of the invention, this is done by looking at the chopped (hysteresis pulse) that arises from recirculation control at the end of a deactivation phase.
(13) Background to Re-Circulation Phase
(14)
(15) Typically after the end of the hold phase in order to de-energise the coil there is a de-energisation phase, shown with reference numeral 100. This is sometimes referred to as a fast transition phase where the voltage is reduced to zero or even a negative level and is applied is required to remove the magnetic force. After the fast transition phase, a low-hysteresis-controlled coil current is applied to the injector coil which is chopped in nature. This provides recirculation. Without this, the injector would not close for long time.
(16) The chopped hysteresis or recirculation pulse 6 starts in
(17) So to recap, the recirculation phase is when the magnetic energy stored in the coil drives the current therein and not the battery or boost voltage. This happens if the low side transistor is closed (conductive) and there is magnetic energy in the coil. Then the lower coil side is connected to GND and the upper side of the coil is connected to ground via a fly-back diode.
(18) It is important to note that the start of the pintle closing in the chopped hysteresis pulse 6 (after the fast transition phase) is detectable in the voltage or current. Thus by observing and analyzing plots of voltage or current, the pintle closing can be detected. This chopped hysteresis pulse is referenced by reference numeral 6 in
(19) Application of the Invention
(20) In aspects of the invention the re-circulation pulse is used to determine when the pintle starts to return to the closed position. This time can then be used, e.g. to optimally time a braking pulse applied to the solenoid coil to slow the movement of the armature/pintle arrangement on closing thus reducing wear.
(21) So as mentioned above and returning to
(22) When the armature movement starts to induce voltage and current in the coil during the low current chopped hysteresis pulse, the hysteresis controller will stop chopping because the current rises.
(23) So in aspects of the invention the end of the chopped hysteresis phase is identified i.e. detected (either in the voltage or the current plot) and this is used to determine the time the pintle starts to close. This in turn can be used to initiate the braking pulse and its timing as will be explained hereinafter.
(24) Braking Pulse Application
(25)
(26) The boost voltage of the braking pulse may be applied a set time 8 after the end of the chopped hysteresis pulse.
(27) The boost braking pulse may be triggered if an extended zero voltage phase is detected. An extended zero voltage phase may be considered when the transistor off time of the chopping is longer than a calibratable time e.g. twice the off time of the last 3 switching events.
(28)
(29) Correct Identification of the End of the Chopped Recirculation Phase
(30) If looking at the chopped voltage of the chopped hysteresis pulse, it is important that the end of chopping is correctly identified. As can be seen this identifies the valve starting to close may comprise a main pulse with some small pulses of very narrow width. After this the voltage of the chopped pulse drops to zero and there is an extended zero voltage period 9a which start at time-point 9b. The start of the extended zero voltage period 9b may be used to trigger the timing of braking pulse.
(31) However since the hysteresis control will periodically switch on and off, the braking pulse cannot be triggered right at the point 9b because at this point it is not yet known if it is an extended zero voltage phase or a normal zero voltage phase of the duty cycle of the recirculation. The end of the recirculation/chopped hysteresis phase can only be confirmed (identified) (and thus braking pulse can only be triggered) when the voltage is at zero for a relatively longer time i.e. if the usual zero voltage phase time in the recirculation mode is exceeded—or in other words when a predetermined time is exceeded.
(32) The pintle will be partially closed already by the time the magnetic force in the coil is fully developed. It is advantageous to apply the braking force only towards the end of the closing phase in order to realize a soft landing of the pintle without risk of reopening. The max. and min. current thresholds of the hysteresis/chopped control are preferably selected low enough in order to have no significant impact on the start of the closing.
(33) So after the end of the injector fueling pulse, a fast transition phase de-energizes the coil in order to take out the magnetic energy, thereafter a chopped hysteresis recirculation phase occurs and which finishes when the pintle/armature starts to close. The chopped hysteresis recirculation phase is provided by closing the low side transistor in the injector driver and requesting a low hysteresis-controlled coil current after the fast transition phase.
(34) So in summary the start of the pintle/armature movement can be detected by determining the end of the recirculation phase.
(35) Preferably the braking pulse is constant with a low current level that generates an actuator force level which remains below the reopening force but can reduce the closing velocity. This implementation does not require necessarily a control of the braking pulse parameters due to the low force level and is still more robust while it might not reach full deceleration capability.
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(39) Reference numeral 37 is the time of maximum current after closing.
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(41) Prior art methods do not trigger the braking pulse based on the measured start of the closing at the current pulse and with that represent not a real closed loop control. Using learned correction tables of previous pulses does not guarantee to place the braking pulse always at the right time with the right intensity, especially in transient phases. Other solutions measure the pintle closing event out of an inflection of the low side voltage during recirculation phase (both, upper and lower transistor of the injector driver remain, open), what is difficult at low pulse widths and requires more processing resources.
(42) This invention ensures to place the boost braking pulse always at the right time in closed loop control. The application of a low current braking pulse with battery voltage allows a slight reduction of the closing velocity for less acoustic noise and better life time expectation. The invention allows as well combining braking pulse and closing detection for each fueling pulse. The application of a 0 A detection pulse allows the detection of the closing time with higher robustness over a wider pulse width range compared to the prior art detection via the low-side voltage interpretation.