METHOD FOR OPERATING A MULTIPLE DIRECT INJECTION INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE AND MASS-BASED SWITCHING OF THE NUMBER OF INJECTIONS
20230304455 · 2023-09-28
Assignee
Inventors
- Stefan HAASE (Wolfsburg, DE)
- Lasse FRUEHLING (Hamburg, DE)
- Mario BEYER (Berlin, DE)
- Rene MATSCHENZ (Braunschweig, DE)
Cpc classification
F02D41/247
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2200/0614
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2200/0602
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/402
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T10/40
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
F02D41/029
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/024
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2041/389
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/0295
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02D41/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A method for operating an internal combustion engine, in particular of a motor vehicle, wherein fuel is injected in a fuel injection device in a plurality of time-spaced partial injections per duty cycle directly into a combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine.
Claims
1. A method for operating an internal combustion engine of a motor vehicle, in which fuel is injected in a fuel injection device directly into a combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine in a plurality of time-spaced partial injections per duty cycle, the method comprising: determining a total injection mass per duty cycle into the combustion chamber as a function of an output requirement for the internal combustion engine as a function of an air mass supplied into the combustion chamber; and producing a fuel/air mixture, taking into account a predetermined air-fuel ratio, via the steps of: verifying a maximum possible number of partial injections per duty cycle as a function of a critical mass threshold of a fuel injector assigned to the respective combustion chamber, in which the fuel mass per partial injection is not undercut, and of the desired determined total fuel mass per duty cycle to be injected; determining a mass-based target injection number as a function of the verified maximum possible number of partial injections and distribution of the total fuel mass to the specified mass-based target injection count; and injecting the total fuel mass per duty cycle according to the mass-based specified target injection number with the fuel masses distributed to the partial injections.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein by verifying, a mass-based switching of a previously verified target injection count to a lower maximum possible verified target injection count is carried out due to a possible undercutting of the critical mass threshold, which is defined dependent on the rail pressure at a minimum possible opening time of the fuel injector, and determining a distribution of the total fuel mass over the verified maximum possible lower count of partial injections.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein by verifying, a mass-based switching of a previously verified target injection count to a maximum possible verified target injection count, taking into account the possible undercutting of the critical mass threshold, which is achieved dependent on the rail pressure at a minimum possible opening time of the fuel injector, and determination of a distribution of the total fuel mass over the verified maximum possible count of partial injections.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein in a duty cycle within the intake and compression phase several partial injections are injected on a mass-based basis, wherein at different injection times several partial injections up to ten partial injections are distributed in two injection bundles to the intake and compression phase.
5. The method according to claim 2, wherein the mass-based switching to a verified lower count of partial injections is carried out in a timely manner so that the critical mass threshold of at least one of the partial injections is not undercut in which the distribution of the total injection mass within the verified possible count of partial injections is safely possible.
6. The method according to claim 3, wherein the mass-based switching to a verified maximum possible number of partial injections is made when a mass threshold is reached, in which the distribution of the total injection mass within the verified maximum possible number of partial injections is safely possible.
7. The method according to claim 5, wherein a switching back and forth in a hysteresis takes place between the critical mass threshold and the mass threshold value.
8. The method according to claim 2, wherein the switching of the previously verified target injection number, starting from a stoichiometric operation of the internal combustion engine, is made in certain operating states, such as a) cold start (start adaptation) and/or a b) catalytic converter diagnosis (parallelization) and/or c) catalytic converter purging and/or a d) component protection event, wherein deviation is made from stoichiometric operation (λ=1) so that a change in the total fuel mass put through per duty cycle and, if necessary, the verified target injection number is achieved.
9. The method according to claim 2, wherein the switching of the previously verified target injection number is made when the air-fuel mixture has stabilized to a stoichiometric value, and the internal combustion engine is operated in the torque reserve, such as idling, catalytic converter heating, particulate filter regeneration and coolant heating, wherein as a function of a deterioration in the efficiency of the internal combustion engine, switching to at least one additional partial injection takes place, so that an increase in the verified target injection number is made.
10. A computer program adapted to carry out the method according to claim 1 when executed on a computer, wherein the computer program is stored in a memory or a flash memory.
11. A control and/or regulation device for operating an internal combustion engine, in particular a motor vehicle, in which the fuel is injected directly into a combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine, wherein the device is configured to controlling and/or regulating the method according to claim 1.
12. An internal combustion engine comprising at least one combustion chamber and a fuel injection device which injects the fuel directly into the combustion chamber, wherein the internal combustion engine comprises a control and/or regulation device according to claim 11.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0027] The present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description given hereinbelow and the accompanying drawings which are given by way of illustration only, and thus, are not limitive of the present invention, and wherein:
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0039]
[0040] An unspecified internal combustion engine is operated in a known manner according to the four-stroke principle, a duty cycle therefore comprises four cycles. It comprises a combustion chamber to which air is supplied via an intake pipe as a function of an opening and closing intake valve according to the stroke characteristic KL.sub.Hub.
[0041] Fuel is injected into the combustion chamber through the unspecified fuel injection valve. The fuel injector is fed from an unshown fuel collection line, which is also referred to as a “rail” and in which the fuel is provided under very high pressure, for example 350 bar. The ignition of the fuel-air mixture formed in the combustion chamber is carried out by an unspecified ignition device, in particular a spark plug. By the expansion of the burning air-fuel mixture a piston is moved in a known manner, whose piston characteristic KL.sub.Kolben is shown in
[0042] The operating state of the internal combustion engine, in particular the position of the piston, is detected by an unspecified sensor. The hot combustion exhaust gases are discharged in a known manner via an exhaust pipe and fed to a catalytic converter, also not shown, within an unshown exhaust system.
[0043] The internal combustion engine comprises a control and regulation device to which the power requirement of a user is communicated by an accelerator pedal. Furthermore, the control and regulation device receives signals from a sensor which detects the relevant angle °KW of the crankshaft KW of the internal combustion engine and transmits a corresponding signal to the control and regulation device. On the output side, the control and regulation device is also connected, among other things, to the injection valve of an injection system and to the ignition system for igniting the air-fuel mixture.
[0044] In order to achieve homogenization, i.e., a mixture that is as uniform as possible between the fuel injected by the injector into the combustion chamber and the air drawn in through the intake manifold, the fuel is generally injected very early, that is, at the beginning of the downward movement of the piston in the intake phase of the internal combustion engine.
[0045] In the conventional operation shown in
[0046] A fourth and fifth partial injection TE.sub.n=2; TE.sub.4, TE.sub.5, takes place in the specific exemplary operating point BP in the conventional operation in a late injection bundle in the compression stroke at predetermined crank angles °KW at 155°KW and at 140°KW.
[0047] In an operation with a maximum of five of the partial injections TE.sub.n=5 shown in
[0048] In an operation with the five partial injections TE.sub.n=5 shown in
[0049] As
[0050] It is provided that according to
[0051] It is further provided that according to
[0052] In an operation with ten partial injections TE.sub.n=10 shown in
[0053] In an operation with ten partial injections TE.sub.n=10 shown in
[0054] Since there is a relatively low pressure in the combustion chamber, especially during the intake phase, there is a risk that the fuel injected into the combustion chamber by the fuel injector under high pressure collides with the wall of the combustion chamber opposite the fuel injector or the top of the piston and adheres there. Such a fuel application to the wall or the piston is difficult to evaporate and does not partake, or at least does not partake in the desired way, in the combustion in the combustion chamber, which increases fuel consumption and worsens the emission behavior.
[0055] The problem of the fuel depositing on a wall of the combustion chamber is—as mentioned—particularly striking when the wall of the combustion chamber is cold. In this case, the cold start behavior of the internal combustion engine is affected in a known manner.
[0056] In order to avoid such a deposit of fuel on a wall of the combustion chamber, in particular in cold operation, it is provided that the fuel injection valve is controlled by the control and regulation device so that it opens and closes as often as possible impulsively, that is, that as many partial injections as possible TE.sub.n-max are provided to keep the penetration depth of the fuel in the combustion chamber so low that the fuel no longer collides with the wall of the combustion chamber opposite the injector.
[0057] Due to this discontinuous fuel injection of the fuel by means of an optimized number n of the plurality n of individual injection pulses or partial injections TE.sub.n into the combustion chamber, the penetration depth of the fuel into the combustion chamber is reduced. The risk of the fuel depositing on the wall of the combustion chamber opposite the fuel injector or on the piston surface of the cylinder piston forming the combustion chamber is effectively reduced. This ensures that the fuel injected into the combustion chamber is present as completely as possible as an air-fuel mixture in the combustion chamber and thus an optimal combustion of the injected fuel takes place. This reduces fuel consumption and improves emission behavior, especially HC, NMHC and soot emissions. The reduced penetration depth of the fuel into the combustion chamber has a particularly favorable effect when the wall of the combustion chamber is cold, i.e., when the combustion engine starts cold.
[0058] It becomes clear that it is of great advantage to deliver the largest possible number n of partial injections TE.sub.n, wherein so far, the approach has been as explained below.
[0059] Operating point-dependent operation is understood to be that in a characteristic map K.sub.BP, as a function of the speed DRZ and the relative filling of a combustion chamber, a desired number n of partial injections TE.sub.n is specified as a fixed operating point-dependent specification within parametrization in the characteristic map K.sub.BP. The total fuel mass to be injected per duty cycle is known to depend on the relative filling of the combustion chamber, i.e., on the air mass that enters the combustion chamber. Taking into account lambda λ=1 as a function of the relative filling in %, the total fuel mass to be injected per duty cycle is divided into a desired number n of partial injections TE.sub.n, linear or non-linear, as a fixed operating point-dependent specification within the characteristic map K.sub.BP.
[0060] The described operating point-dependent operation is then illustrated in more detail by means of
[0061] In a diagram,
[0062] In
[0063] Within the characteristic map K.sub.BPkalt, as illustrated by one of the other exemplary operating points BP with a filling of the combustion chamber of 75% and a speed DRZ of 2500 in 1/min (pressure in the rail 350 bar), eight partial injections TE.sub.n=8 are specified as a function of the operating point.
[0064] In other words, the map specification in the exemplary cold operating point 75(%)/2500(1/min) leads to the fact that only eight partial injections TE.sub.n=8 are made, which are distributed according to
[0065] This means that this map specification, in an exemplary other operating point BP of the map K.sub.BPkalt deviating from the number of partial injections TE.sub.n=10, has only eight partial injections TE.sub.n=8 in the operating point filling=75% and speed DRZ=2500 in 1/min. This is due to the fact that at this operating point BP, for example, the maximum desired number of ten partial injections TE.sub.n-max=10 cannot be realized due to the operating point-dependent total injection mass m.sub.Ges by means of ten partial injections TE.sub.n=10, taking into account a minimum possible opening time t.sub.min=of the fuel injector which cannot be undercut and a given constant interval time ΔP, as will be further explained below.
[0066] In the case of a fuel injector, the minimum possible, i.e., available opening time t.sub.min of the fuel injector is t.sub.min=t.sub.oe+t.sub.as+t.sub.s. This time t.sub.min cannot be undercut.
[0067] In this case, t.sub.min is the minimum opening time of the switching valve and t.sub.oe is the opening time, t.sub.as is the time at the stroke stop and t.sub.s is the closing time.
[0068] The longer the time t.sub.min, the more mass (fuel mass) is taken from the control chamber of the fuel injector and the greater the fuel injection mass of the fuel injector, which is injected into the combustion chamber by adjusting an injector needle controlled by the switching valve by the fluid pressure in the control room.
[0069] This also means that the minimum possible opening time t.sub.min of the fuel injector, taking into account the rail pressure, is assigned a critical mass threshold m.sub.krit, which cannot be undercut in terms of a certain critical mass m.sub.krit per partial injection TE.sub.n. In other words, an even smaller injection mass than m.sub.krit per partial injection TE.sub.n cannot be put through by the fuel injector.
[0070] Each fuel injector has a known injector specification, that is, without taking into account operationally relevant influences (such as aging, etc.), t.sub.min is known as the minimum opening time t.sub.min of the fuel injector and the associated injector-specific critical mass threshold m.sub.krit.
[0071] According to the invention, the approach is as follows:
[0072] With the aim of realizing the largest possible number TE.sub.n-max of partial injections TE.sub.n, in any operating mode (cold or warm operation) of the internal combustion engine, but in particular in cold operation, it is provided according to the invention, as a function of the minimum opening time t.sub.min of the fuel injector, to determine the maximum possible number of partial injections TE.sub.n-max taking into account the total fuel mass m.sub.Ges to be injected and taking into account that in certain operating states the critical mass threshold m.sub.krit of the fuel injector is not undercut.
[0073] By means of the previous approach on the basis of characteristic maps K.sub.BPkalt (see
[0074] In other words, lambda target jumps which, starting from stoichiometric operation λ=1, are deviated from by operating states a) cold start (start adaptation), b) catalytic converter diagnosis (parallelization) or c) catalytic converter purging or d) component protection events and in which a change in the total fuel mass m.sub.Ges per duty cycle is caused, unfortunately are not taken into account in the operating point-dependent approach with regard to the maximum possible number n of partial injections TE.sub.n-max.
[0075] A further problem occurs in the operating point-dependent approach, which is to be solved by the invention. The problem is that with a change in the total fuel mass to be injected m.sub.Ges per duty cycle and with the same number n of partial injections TE.sub.n and unchanged interval times ΔP between the partial injections TE.sub.n, due to lambda jumps, there is a risk that a critical state arises within the operating point-dependent characteristic map which is caused by the fact that the fuel injector injects a fuel mass that is too low due to its minimum possible opening time t.sub.min at a specified number n of partial injections TE.sub.n per partial injection in the operating point-dependent characteristic map, if the total fuel mass m.sub.Ges per duty cycle is reduced by a certain amount, for example in lean-burn operating conditions or in other operating conditions.
[0076] In other words, if, for example, in an operating point-dependent addressing of the target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-BP in the operating point-dependent characteristic map, for example, six partial injections TE.sub.n=6 (see in advance
[0077] As mentioned earlier, the internal combustion engine comprises a control and regulation device to which a user's output requirement is communicated by a fuel pedal so that an operating point-dependent fuel mass is transmitted to the control and regulation device.
[0078] If, as a function of the respective operating point BP, an increased or decreased fuel mass occurs in the described operating states, the total injection mass m.sub.Ges to be observed changes. An exclusively operating point-dependent parametrization of the total injection mass m.sub.BP does not take into account the total injection mass m.sub.Ges changed due to the named operating states.
[0079] For this reason, the invention provides that in the control and regulation device to which the output requirement is transmitted, no operating point-dependent total injection masses m.sub.BP are transmitted, but instead only mass-based total injection masses m.sub.Ges are calculated and determined, as explained below.
[0080] In accordance with the output requirement, a mass-based operation is understood to mean that a certain total injection mass m.sub.Ges is desired or specified for each duty cycle. As a function of the air mass supplied to the combustion chamber, the determined total injection mass m.sub.Ges is added to the supplied air mass, taking into account a predetermined lambda value A, wherein it is provided that before the actual injection, it is always verified “automatically” and “continuously” as to which number n of partial injections TE.sub.n—as a function of m.sub.krit and the desired specified total fuel mass m.sub.Ges to be injected—per duty cycle is maximally possible. Subsequently, the injection of the total injection mass m.sub.Ges always takes place in the maximum possible number n of partial injections TE.sub.n-max, wherein the total injection mass m.sub.Ges is distributed mass-based to the partial injections TE.sub.n, the individual partial injections TE.sub.n, linearly or non-linearly, taking into account a non-undercutting of m.sub.krit. The goal is to never fall below the critical mass threshold m.sub.krit, taking the rail pressure into account.
[0081] A total mass m.sub.Ges to be injected is assigned, for example in cold operation, in the mass-based map K.sub.MBkalt according to
[0082] This specification is transmitted via the control and regulation device and taken into account by the mass-based approach in an advantageous manner by increasing the total injection mass m.sub.Ges and then proceeding as explained above.
[0083] This means that according to the increased total injection mass m.sub.Ges formed by the output requirement and the cold start adaptation, the determined total injection mass m.sub.Ges, now increased by the cold start adaptation, is specified for each duty cycle in the mass-based operation. As a function of the air mass supplied to the combustion chamber, this increased total injection mass m.sub.Ges due to cold start is added to the supplied air mass, taking into account a predetermined lambda value λ, wherein it is provided that before the actual injection, it is always “automatically” and “continuously” verified as to which number n of partial injections TE.sub.n—as a function of m.sub.krit and the desired total fuel mass m.sub.Ges to be injected increased due to cold start—per duty cycle is maximally possible. Subsequently, the injection of the total injection mass m.sub.Ges always takes place in the maximum possible number n of partial injections TE.sub.n-max, wherein the total injection mass m.sub.Ges is distributed mass-based to the partial injections TE.sub.n, the individual partial injections TE.sub.n, linearly or non-linearly, also taking into account a non-undercutting of m.sub.krit.
[0084] In each duty cycle, a value for the maximum available total opening time Δt.sub.Ges of the fuel injector is available for the injection of the total injection mass m.sub.Ges in the n partial injections TE.sub.n if the total injection mass m.sub.Ges is injected in a single injection n=1. This total opening time Δt.sub.Ges is, according to the prerequisites explained above, distributed mass-based into a maximum possible number n of partial injections TE.sub.n-max with several partial opening times, taking into account a failure to undercut m.sub.krit, so that the target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB is available in the control and regulation device and is subsequently implemented as the actual injection number TE.sub.n-Ist-MB.
[0085] It is proceeded in such a way that the respective (current) total injection mass m.sub.Ges is divided into equal (linear) or non-equal (non-linear) fuel masses m per partial injection TE.sub.n, taking into account constant or changeable predetermined interval times ΔP and the critical mass threshold m.sub.krit, whereby the maximum possible number n of partial injections TE.sub.n-max is calculated which is then available in the control and regulation device as a verified target injection number TE.sub.n-soll-MB and is subsequently implemented as the actual injection number TE.sub.n-Ist-MB.
[0086] The advantage is illustrated by
[0087] By this increase in the number of partial injections, in this embodiment n+1, the desired advantages already explained with regard to the optimal combustion of the injected fuel and with regard to the reduction of fuel consumption and the improvement of the emission behavior, in particular the HC, NmHC and soot emissions, especially in cold operation (cold start) of the internal combustion engine, are achieved.
[0088] This approach is also illustrated by
[0089]
[0090]
[0091] According to
[0092] This means that in the control and regulation device, only verified target injection numbers TE.sub.n-soll-MB=1, 2 or 3 are processed in warm operation according to the mass-based characteristic map K.sub.MBwarm and injected as partial injections TE.sub.n as actual injection numbers TE.sub.n-Ist-MB.
[0093] The advantage of the mass-based approach is illustrated by
[0094] By a mass-based operating mode, it is thus advantageously possible that not only output-related parameters such as the desired torque are taken into account, because in the operation of the internal combustion engine, operating states such as catalytic converter purging of the exhaust system, in which the fuel mass, regardless of the output requirement of the user, is increased by pressing the accelerator pedal, can also occur. This increases the desired total fuel mass to be injected in the respective duty cycle, i.e., the total injection mass m.sub.Ges, which is taken into account by the mass-based operation in the characteristic maps K.sub.MBkalt (see
[0095] By means of a mass-based operation, it is advantageously possible that regardless of the cold or warm exemplary load-dependent operating point 75(%)/2500(1/min), it can be operated via a load-independent adjustment of the total injection mass m.sub.Ges to be injected in the respective characteristic map K.sub.MBkalt (see
[0096] This determination always takes into account whether the maximum possible number of TE.sub.n-max of partial injections TE.sub.n, determined as a function of the specified total injection mass m.sub.Ges to be injected in the characteristic maps K.sub.MBkalt or K.sub.MBwarm, can also be realized within a maximum total time Δt.sub.Ges available for injection.
[0097]
[0098] Diagram I shows the injected mass m per partial injection with six partial injections TE.sub.n=6.
[0099] In diagram II, the characteristic curves speed with associated scaling, the relative filling of the combustion chamber with associated scaling and the speed of the vehicle without associated scaling (constant>0) and the driver's request (pedal=constant>0) are also shown without scaling.
[0100] Diagram III shows the number n of partial injections TE.sub.n=6 according to the operating point-dependent target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-BP=6.
[0101] Diagram IV shows the lambda value λ, which forms the basis for the characteristic curves shown in diagrams I to III.
[0102] The vertical line A in the figure shows that in lean-burn operation λ>1 according to diagram IV, with unchanged operating point-dependent target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-BP=6 according to diagram III and constant operation of the internal combustion engine according to diagram II, the injected fuel mass m per partial injection TE.sub.n, at the specified target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-BP=6 possibly disadvantageously reaches the critical mass threshold ?m.sub.krit of the fuel injector, as illustrated at the intersection of line A at the lowest amount of mass m per partial injection TE.sub.n in diagram I.
[0103] The total mass m.sub.Ges to be injected in this case is so small due to the lambda jump to λ>1 clarifying the invention that the associated fuel mass can no longer be safely injected within six partial injections TE.sub.n=6 because of t.sub.min, the minimum possible opening time t.sub.min of the fuel injector.
[0104] This problem is eliminated by the inventive approach, as explained below.
[0105]
[0106] Diagram I shows the injected fuel mass m per partial injection TE.sub.n=4 after the mass-based switching of the verified target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=6 to the verified target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=4.
[0107] In diagram II, the characteristic curves speed with associated scaling, the relative filling of the combustion chamber with associated scaling and the speed of the vehicle without associated scaling (constant>0) and the driver's request (pedal=constant<0) are also shown without scaling.
[0108] Diagram III shows the number n of partial injections TE.sub.n=6 and TE.sub.n=4 according to the mass-based n target injection numbers target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=6 and verified target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=4.
[0109] Diagram IV shows the lambda value λ, which forms the basis for the characteristic curves shown in diagrams I to III.
[0110] The vertical line B in the figure illustrates that in lean burn operation λ>1 according to diagram IV according to diagram III, the mass-based verified target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=6 is switched to the verified target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=4.
[0111] In diagram II it becomes clear that the constant operation of the internal combustion engine corresponds to diagram II, i.e., the load specified by the driver has not changed.
[0112] Since the injected fuel mass m per partial injection TE.sub.n at the specified target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-BP=6 reaches the critical mass threshold value ?m.sub.krit of the fuel injector according to diagram I in a disadvantageous manner, the number n of partial injections TEn is reduced to the target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=4. See diagram III at the intersection with line B.
[0113] This increases in the desired manner the injected fuel mass m per partial injection TE.sub.n at TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=4, as illustrated in diagram I at the intersection with line B, so that the risk of a possible undercutting of m.sub.krit as a function of the minimum possible opening time t.sub.min of the fuel injector no longer exists.
[0114] In the embodiment, due to the large amount of the lambda jump selected for clarification, the verified target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=6 is lowered to TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=4 by the number n−2.
[0115] The principle applies that in the control and regulation device, according to the above calculation of the possible mass-based verified target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB, n−1 or n+1, switching is carried out for mass-based adjustment of the verified target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB. In the embodiment, the reduction of the verified injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=6 to TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=4 has thus been carried out in quick succession in the control and regulation device by two switchings n−1 carried out in quick succession. This tiered mass-based switching cannot be seen in
[0116] Finally,
[0117] In addition, a mass threshold m.sub.krit+m.sub.offset, in which the injection of the predetermined masses of all partial injections TE.sub.n of a multiple injection in the operating point-dependent and mass-based operations is by all means safely possible, is shown in
[0118] In a multiple injection in a duty cycle, it is possible, for example, in six partial injections TE.sub.n=6 analogous to
[0119] According to legend L1 in
[0120] It is a different situation according to the invention as shown in
[0121] This diagram again shows the injected fuel mass m per partial injection TE.sub.n (ordinate) over the time t (abscissa) with the mass threshold m.sub.krit of the fuel injector, which is critical in mass-based operation.
[0122] In addition, in
[0123] In a multiple injection in a duty cycle, it is no longer possible, for example, with six partial injections TE.sub.n=6 analogous to
[0124] What takes place in an advantageous manner is that before falling below the critical range P1, the target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=6 is changed, that is, the target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=6 in the embodiment (see
[0125] If the mass threshold m.sub.krit+m.sub.offset is reached again within the hysteresis between m.sub.krit and m.sub.krit+m.sub.offset, according to the invention the target injection number TE.sub.n-Soll-MB=4 in the embodiment (see
[0126] The hysteresis advantageously ensures that a switching back and forth between the threshold values m.sub.krit+m.sub.offset and m.sub.krit takes place without leading to a permanent switching between the respective number n of partial injections TE.sub.n=6.
[0127] According to legend L2 in
[0128] According to legend L3 in
[0129] The legend L4 in
[0130] Lastly, a few embodiments of the aforementioned specific operating states, in which in particular lambda target jumps take place.
[0131] Starting from the stoichiometric operation λ=1, in these operating states a) cold start (start adaptation), b) catalytic converter diagnosis (parallelization) or c) catalytic converter purging or d) component protection events, stoichiometric operation λ=1 is deviated from, so that a change in the total fuel mass m.sub.Ges per duty cycle is achieved.
[0132] These operating states are taken into account using the inventive method of the “mass-based operation”, as follows.
[0133] a) Cold Start (Start Adaptation):
[0134] For example, as already explained, on the basis of a required enriching of the air-fuel mixture in the start adaptation, the additionally required fuel mass is realized with an additional partial injection TE.sub.n+1 after testing the mass-based switching in order to positively influence the homogenization of the air-fuel mixture in order to advantageously protect the internal combustion engine even better from fuel entry into the oil.
[0135] b) Catalytic Converter Diagnosis (Parallelization):
[0136] If the load-dependent operating point BP does not change and for other reasons there is an increased or decreased total injection amount m.sub.Ges in an operating state such as the catalytic converter diagnosis of the exhaust system, in which the amount of fuel is changed independently of the output requirement of the user, this operating mode “catalytic converter diagnosis” is hitherto unfortunately not taken into account in respect of the maximum possible number n of partial injections TE.sub.n-max.
[0137] According to the invention it is provided that in the catalytic converter diagnosis, in a lean adjustment (see
[0138] In the case of rich adjustment (see
[0139] c) Catalytic Converter Purging:
[0140] The air-fuel mixture is also enriched during catalytic converter purging. It is provided that in an advantageous manner, taking into account the mass-based switching, at least one additional partial injection TE.sub.n+1 is carried out.
[0141] d) Component Protection Events:
[0142] For component protection reasons, the air-fuel mixture is also enriched. This enrichment leads in an advantageous manner, similar to catalytic converter purging and taking into account the mass-based switching, to at least one additional partial injection TE.sub.n+1.
[0143] Torque Reserve:
[0144] Finally, it is provided as a further embodiment that, even if the air-fuel mixture has stabilized to a lambda value, but the internal combustion engine is operated in the torque reserve, such as idling, catalytic converter heating, particulate filter regeneration and coolant heating, the mass-based operation or its switching is used in an advantageous manner as a function of the efficiency deterioration of the engine by switching to at least one additional partial injection TE.sub.n+1.
[0145] The present invention as a whole also relates to a computer program which is suitable for carrying out the above method when it is executed on a computer. It is particularly preferred if the computer program is stored in a memory. The present invention also relates to said control and/or regulation device for operating a combustion engine, in particular of a motor vehicle, in which the fuel is injected directly into a combustion chamber of the internal combustion engine. In order to optimize the operation of the internal combustion engine with regard to fuel consumption and emission behavior, it is proposed according to the invention that the control and/or regulation device for controlling and/or regulating the above method are suitable and are used. It is particularly preferred if the control and/or regulation devices are each provided with a computer program of the above-mentioned type. Lastly, the invention relates to an internal combustion engine having at least one combustion chamber and a device which injects the fuel directly into the combustion chamber. In order to improve the operating behavior of this internal combustion engine, in particular the fuel consumption, the emission behavior and the cold start behavior, it is provided according to the invention that the internal combustion engine is equipped with the control and/or regulation device.
[0146] The invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are to be included within the scope of the following claims.