METHOD OF OPERATING AN ADJUSTABLE ROLL STABILIZER
20210061050 · 2021-03-04
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60G17/0157
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60G21/0555
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02P21/10
ELECTRICITY
B60G2600/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B60G17/015
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02P21/10
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method of operating an adjustable roll stabilizer (1) of a motor vehicle. The adjustable roll stabilizer (1) has an actuator (2) which can be rotated through a system angle () relative to a rotational axis (3) in order to twist two stabilizer sections (6a, 6b), connected thereto, relative to one another. The stabilizer sections (6a, 6b) are each a radial spaced away from the rotational axis (3) and each is coupled to a wheel suspension (7a, 7b, 8a, 8b, 9a, 9b). The method includes controlling the actuator with a field-orientated regulator (20) as a function of input signals which include at least a target motor torque (21), and checking the control of the actuator (2), brought about by the field-orientated regulator (20), for plausibility independently of the field-orientated regulator (20).
Claims
1-9. (canceled)
10. A method of operating an adjustable roll stabilizer (1) of a motor vehicle, the adjustable roll stabilizer (1) has an actuator (2) which is rotatable through a system angle () relative to a rotational axis (3) in order to twist two stabilizer sections (6a, 6b) connected thereto relative to one another, the two stabilizer sections (6a, 6b) are each a radial distance away from the rotation axis (3) and each is coupled to a wheel suspension (7a, 7b, 8a, 8b, 9a, 9b), the method comprising: controlling the actuator (2) with a field-orientated regulator (20) as a function of input signals which include at least a target motor torque (21); and checking the control of the actuator (2) brought about by the field-orientated regulator (20) for plausibility independently of the field-orientated regulator (20).
11. The method according to claim 10, further comprising basing the plausibility check substantially on a comparison of the target motor torque (21) with an actual motor torque (22).
12. The method according to claim 11, further comprising calculating the actual motor torque (22) from motor phase currents of the motor (4).
13. The method according to claim 10, further comprising accomplishing the plausibility check by defining, around the target motor torque (21), a tolerance band having an upper tolerance limit (27) and an lower tolerance limit (28), and comparing the actual motor torque (22) to the target motor torque (21), and considering the target motor torque (21) as plausible when the actual motor torque (22) is both above the lower tolerance limit and below the upper tolerance limit.
14. The method according to claim 13, further comprising determining a width of the tolerance band from a deviation, permissible at a level of the motor vehicle, of a torque (M.sub.Wank) applied by the adjustable roll stabilizer (1) which is expediently converted to a torque related to the motor.
15. The method according to claim 11, further comprising taking a time delay (29) into account when carrying out the comparison in a context of the plausibility check between the actual motor torque (22) and the target motor torque (21).
16. The method according to claim 10, further comprising specifying the target motor torque (21) by a position-rotational speed a regulator that is at least one of upstream from and superordinate relative to the field-orientated regulator.
17. The method according to claim 10, wherein the control of the actuator (2) comprises controlling a motor (4) associated with the actuator (2).
18. A roll stabilization system suitable for implementing a method operating an adjustable roll stabilizer (1) of a motor vehicle, the adjustable roll stabilizer (1) comprising an actuator (2) which is rotatable through a system angle () relative to a rotational axis (3) in order to twist two stabilizer sections (6a, 6b) connected thereto relative to one another, the two stabilizer sections (6a, 6b) are each a radial distance away from the rotation axis (3) and each is coupled to a wheel suspension (7a, 7b, 8a, 8b, 9a, 9b), the method including: controlling the actuator (2) with a field-orientated regulator (20) as a function of input signals which include at least a target motor torque (21), and checking the control of the actuator (2) brought about by the field-orientated regulator (20) for plausibility independently of the field-orientated regulator (20).
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] Below, the invention is explained in greater detail with reference to a drawing, from which further advantageous design features of the invention emerge. The drawing shows:
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0024] To clarify the field of use of the invention,
[0025] As shown in
[0026] In a manner known as such, the adjustable roll stabilizer 1 is mounted so that it can rotate relative to the vehicle body 10 about a rotational axis 3, for which purpose a stabilizer mounting 11a on the left and a stabilizer mounting 11b on the right are provided, which mountings, as shown in
[0027] The actuator 2 represented here as a cylindrical body 2 comprises a housing (not indexed) which is essentially rotationally symmetrical relative to the rotational axis 3 and in which an electric motor 4, a multi-step planetary gearset 5 and a rotational speed sensor 13 (each indicated only by indexes) are arranged. By way of the electric motor 4 and the multi-step planetary gearset 5, the stabilizer sections 6a and 6b are in driving connection with one another. When the actuator 2 is inactive, the two stabilizer sections 6a, 6b are connected solidly to one another by way of the inactive electric motor 4 and the multi-step planetary gearset 5 in driving connection with it. By operating the electric motor 4, however, and depending on the rotational direction of the electric motor 4 about the rotational axis 3, the stabilizer sections 6a, 6b can be twisted relative to one another. During this the multi-step planetary gearset 5 produces a fixed rotational speed ratio between the drive input (electric motor 4) and the drive output (stabilizer section 6b on the right, which is coupled to the output of the gearset). In that way the adjustable roll stabilizer 1 can be adjusted in a manner known as such.
[0028] Depending on the operating condition of the adjustable roll stabilizer 1 or the vehicle equipped with it, torsion can be produced between the stabilizer sections 6a, 6b coupled to one another by the actuator 2, depending on which a torque M.sub.System acting about the rotational axis 3 is developed. That torque M.sub.System applied at the actuator 2 constitutes a system torque.
[0029] With the help of the roll stabilizer 1, a roll torque M.sub.Wank can be supported, which acts between the vehicle body 10 and the wheels 7a, 7b. By adjusting the roll stabilizer 1 the supportable roll torque M.sub.Wank can be influenced. For the regulation of the roll stabilizer 1 according to need, respective height level sensors 12a and 12b are associated with the left-hand wheel 7a and the right-hand wheel 7b, which sensors enable detection of wheel stroke movements of the wheel concerned and which emit these in the form of a height level z7a for the left-hand wheel and a height level z7b for the right-hand wheel. In addition, by way of the rotational speed sensor 13 the rotation of the electric motor 4 can be determined and this is emitted in the form of a rotational speed signal as a motor rotational speed n.
[0030] Below, regulation of the adjustable roll stabilizer 1 shown schematically in
[0031] The target system torque is converted by way of a known system rigidity into a rotational angle for the torque requirement, wherein the known system rigidity is composed of individual rigidities, in particular the rigidity of the stabilizer itself (stabilizer sections, gearset, housing, decoupling elements if present, hinged supports, stabilizer mountings and the like).
[0032] In parallel, the regulation of the adjustable roll stabilizer adopts a magnitude for the compensation of perturbations. For this, wheel movement data are detected by the height level sensors associated with the wheels, in the form of height level signals (for individual wheels) and a table of characteristic values for a decoupling angle (with previously determined vehicle-specific data) for determining a so-termed zero-torque angle is used, i.e. that angle which corresponds to the outermost rotational angle of the adjustable roll stabilizer, perhaps caused by an uneven road, and which would put the actuator of the adjustable roll stabilizer in a torque-free position. The two angles determined in this way, namely the rotational angle for the torque requirement and the zero-torque angle, are then added to obtain a target angle.
[0033] The target angle is then fed into a cascading position-rotation speed regulator. This comprises a position regulator which from the incoming target angleand also having regard to a feedback signal from the motordetermines a target rotational speed, which in turn is passed to a rotational speed regulator. On the basis of the target rotational speed and a feedback from the electric motor (rotational speed), the rotational speed regulator determines a target motor torque for controlling the electric motor. The target motor torque is in turn fed into a field-orientated regulator whichagain having regard to feedback signals from the electric motorcontrols the electric motor 4 of the actuator 2. A motor output torque produced by the electric motor 4 is transformedthis time via a mechanical routeby way of a gear system 5 (multi-step planetary gearset) into a system torque, which acts between the stabilizer sections (see
[0034] The regulation scheme shown in
[0035] To explain the invention further, reference should now be made to
[0036] In the field-orientated regulator 20 the input signals are a target motor torque 21, a motor position 24 (feedback from the motor 4) and various magnitudes 25. As a function of the input signals, the field-orientated motor regulator 20 emits output signals 31, 32, 33 by which the motor 4 of the actuator 2 (not shown in
[0037] During operational use, for various reasons it is possible that with regard to the input signals, the field-orientated regulator 20 allows incorrect control of the actuator (motor 4). However, incorrect control of the actuator easily leads to disadvantages in relation to driving comfort and/or driving safety of the motor vehicle equipped with the adjustable roll stabilizer. Among other things, this can result in under-steering or over-steering of the vehicle or to inappropriately large roll angles of the vehicle.
[0038] Thus, in the context of the invention the control of the actuator is checked for plausibilityindependently of the field-orientated regulator 20. In this connection reference should first be made to
[0039]
[0040] The target motor torque 21 is checked for plausibility by defining a positive tolerance band and a negative tolerance band around the target motor torque 21, and then comparing the actual motor torque 22 with the target motor torque 21. For this, an upper tolerance in the sense of an upper threshold value is first added to the target motor torque 21, and a lower tolerance in the sense of a lower threshold value 28 is subtracted from the target motor torque 21. The actual motor torque 22 is then compared, on the one hand, against the upper tolerance limit and, on the other hand, against the lower tolerance limit, wherein the AND link shown in the middle of
[0041] A reverse link (NOT), combined with a subsequent debouncing, ensure that if one of the two comparison criteria is not fulfilled over a specified debouncing time, an error 26 is detected which therefore indicates the absence of plausibility in the control of the actuator by the field-orientated regulator. A lack of plausibility can be attributed to various sources of error, for example motor phases of the motor 4 may be defective, or there may be faults in the power electronics or faults in the software of the field-orientated regulator 20 itself.
INDEXES
[0042] 1 Adjustable roll stabilizer [0043] 2 Actuator [0044] 3 Rotational axis [0045] 4 Electric motor [0046] 5 Multi-step planetary transmission [0047] 6a, 6b Left-hand (or right-hand) stabilizer section [0048] 7a, 7b Left-hand (or right-hand) wheel [0049] 8a, 8b Left-hand (or right-hand) control arm arrangement [0050] 9a, 9b (Left-hand (or right-hand) hinged support [0051] 10 Vehicle body [0052] 11a, 11b Left-hand (or right-hand) stabilizer mounting [0053] 12a, 12b Height level sensor of the left-hand (or right-hand) wheel [0054] 13 Rotational speed sensor [0055] 20 Field-orientated (motor) regulator [0056] 21 Target motor torque [0057] 22 Actual motor torque [0058] 23 Monitoring of the field=-orientated regulation [0059] 24 Motor position [0060] 25 Various magnitudes [0061] 26 Error [0062] 27 Upper threshold value [0063] 28 Lower threshold value [0064] 29 Time-related debouncing [0065] 31 Pulse-width-modulated nominal phase 1 [0066] 32 Pulse-width-modulated nominal phase 2 [0067] 33 Pulse-width-modulated nominal phase 3 [0068] z7a, z7b Height level of the left-hand (or right-hand) wheel [0069] M.sub.Wank Roll torque (axis-related) [0070] M.sub.System System torque [0071] n Motor rotational speed [0072] System angle