Method, system and apparatus for detecting injector closing time
10871120 ยท 2020-12-22
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02D2041/286
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02A50/20
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
F02D41/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2041/2055
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D2041/2058
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/221
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64C13/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T10/12
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
B64C2003/445
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F01N2610/146
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
F01N3/208
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/2467
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B64C13/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64C13/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F02D41/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A control unit, controller and non-transitory machine-readable medium for detecting a closing time of an injector valve are disclosed. The control unit is configured to receive a valve current profile of the injector valve, process the valve current profile using at least a slope discriminator, and determine a stuck status and a closing time (if applicable) of the injector valve based on an output of the slope discriminator.
Claims
1. An apparatus for a vehicle system having at least one injector and a least one sensor therefor, comprising: a controller connected to the at least one sensor, the controller being operable to receive a profile of the current draw of the injector, the controller being operable to process the profile using a slope discriminator and to determine a stuck status and a closing time of the injector based on an output of the slope discriminator, wherein the controller is further operable to determine the output of the slope discriminator based on the valve current profile, and wherein the controller is further operable to compare the output to a predetermined closing time detection threshold, wherein the controller is further operable to determine whether a maximum output value of the slope discriminator is below the predetermined closing detection time detection threshold; and if the maximum output value is below the predetermined closing time detection threshold, the controller is operable to determine that the stuck status is stuck; and if the maximum output value is above the predetermined closing time detection threshold, the controller is operable to determine that the stuck status is not stuck, and wherein the controller is further operable to determine the closing time of the injector valve based on a location of the maximum output value, if the stuck status is that the injector valve is not stuck.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, the controller being further operable to start a delay timer at an end of an injector current clamp, to cause delay for a predetermined period of time starting at the end of the injector current clamp prior to receiving the valve current profile of the injector valve, and to collect valve current data.
3. The apparatus of claim 2, the controller being further operable to filter the valve current data to remove high frequency noise, to report the injector status and closing time, and to process the valve current profile using a nonlinear digital filtering technique.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, the controller being further operable to determine median values within a median window and mean values within a mean window, and to calculate a series of mean output data points and a series of median output data points, wherein each median output data point in the median window is a median value of data points within the median window at a corresponding time; wherein the data points within the median window are sorted in increasing value; wherein each mean output data point in the mean window is a mean value of data points within the mean window at a corresponding time; wherein the mean window encompasses fewer data points than the median window; and wherein the mean window begins at a predefined offset from the median window start point.
5. The apparatus of claim 4, wherein the controller is further configured to generate a slope discriminator output according the relationship Output=median term times gain factor for median term minus (mean term times gain factor for mean term minus offset term), where Output is the slope discriminator output at a given time, median term is the median value of the sorted data points in the median window at the given time, mean term is the mean value of the data points in the mean window at the given time, and the gain factors are variable amplification factors, wherein the gain factor for the median term is one plus the absolute value of the difference between the median value of the sorted data points in the median window at the given time and the mean value of the data points in the mean window at the given time; and the gain factor for the mean term is one minus the absolute value of the difference between the median value of the sorted data points in the median window at the given time and the mean value of the data points in the mean window at the given time.
6. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the injector is one of a selective catalytic reduction injector and a fuel injector.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the controller is further operable to report the closing time and/or the stuck status to an on-board diagnostic system.
8. A non-transitory machine-readable medium that provides instructions, which when executed by a control unit for a vehicle having an injector valve, cause the control unit to perform operations comprising: receiving a valve current profile of the injector valve; processing the valve current profile using at least a slope discriminator; determining a stuck status of the injector valve based on an output of the slope discriminator; and if the injector valve is not stuck, determining the closing time of the injector valve based on the output of the slope discriminator, wherein processing the valve current profile includes determining an output of the slope discriminator based on the valve current profile, and determining the stuck status and the closing time of the injector valve includes comparing the output to a predetermined closing time detection threshold, wherein processing the valve current profile comprises determining median values within a median window and mean values within a mean window, processing the valve current profile comprises calculating a series of mean output data points and a series of median output data points, each median output data point in the median window is a median value of data points within the median window at a corresponding time, the data points within the median window are sorted in increasing value, each mean output data point in the mean window is a mean value of data points within the mean window at a corresponding time, the mean window encompasses fewer data points than the median window, and the mean window begins at a predefined offset from the median window start point.
9. The non-transitory machine-readable medium of claim 8, further comprising instructions which, when executed by the control unit, causes the control unit to perform operations comprising: determining whether a maximum output value of the slope discriminator is below the predetermined closing detection time detection threshold; if the maximum output value is below the predetermined closing time detection threshold, determining that the stuck status is stuck; and if the maximum output value is above the predetermined closing time detection threshold, determining that the stuck status is not stuck.
10. The non-transitory machine-readable medium of claim 8, wherein processing the valve current profile comprises generating a slope discriminator output according the relationship Output=median term times gain factor for median term minus (mean term times gain factor for mean term minus offset term), where Output is the slope discriminator output at a given time, median term is the median value of the sorted data points in the median window at the given time, mean term is the mean value of the data points in the mean window at the given time, and the gain factors are variable amplification factors, the gain factor for the median term is one plus the absolute value of the difference between the median value of the sorted data points in the median window at the given time and the mean value of the data points in the mean window at the given time, and the gain factor for the mean term is one minus the absolute value of the difference between the median value of the sorted data points in the median window at the given time and the mean value of the data points in the mean window at the given time.
11. The non-transitory machine-readable medium of claim 8, wherein the instructions, when executed by the control unit, cause the control unit to report the closing time and/or the stuck status to an on-board diagnostic system of the vehicle.
12. An apparatus for a vehicle system, the vehicle system having at least one injector and a least one sensor therefor, comprising: a controller connected to the at least one sensor, the controller being operable to receive a profile of the current draw of the injector, the controller being operable to process the profile using a slope discriminator and to determine a stuck status and a closing time of the injector based on an output of the slope discriminator, wherein the controller is further operable to determine the output of the slope discriminator based on the valve current profile, and wherein the controller is further operable to compare the output to a predetermined closing time detection threshold, the controller being further operable to determine median values within a median window and mean values within a mean window, and to calculate a series of mean output data points and a series of median output data points, wherein each median output data point in the median window is a median value of data points within the median window at a corresponding time; wherein the data points within the median window are sorted in increasing value; wherein each mean output data point in the mean window is a mean value of data points within the mean window at a corresponding time; wherein the mean window encompasses fewer data points than the median window; and wherein the mean window begins at a predefined offset from the median window start point.
13. The apparatus of claim 12, wherein the controller is further configured to generate a slope discriminator output according the relationship Output=median term times gain factor for median term minus (mean term times gain factor for mean term minus offset term), where Output is the slope discriminator output at a given time, median term is the median value of the sorted data points in the median window at the given time, mean term is the mean value of the data points in the mean window at the given time, and the gain factors are variable amplification factors, wherein the gain factor for the median term is one plus the absolute value of the difference between the median value of the sorted data points in the median window at the given time and the mean value of the data points in the mean window at the given time; and the gain factor for the mean term is one minus the absolute value of the difference between the median value of the sorted data points in the median window at the given time and the mean value of the data points in the mean window at the given time.
14. A non-transitory machine-readable medium that provides instructions, which when executed by a control unit for a vehicle having an injector valve, cause the control unit to perform operations comprising: receiving a valve current profile of the injector valve; processing the valve current profile using at least a slope discriminator; determining a stuck status of the injector valve based on an output of the slope discriminator; if the injector valve is not stuck, determining the closing time of the injector valve based on the output of the slope discriminator, wherein processing the valve current profile includes determining an output of the slope discriminator based on the valve current profile, and determining the stuck status and the closing time of the injector valve includes comparing the output to a predetermined closing time detection threshold, determining whether a maximum output value of the slope discriminator is below the predetermined closing detection time detection threshold; and if the maximum output value is below the predetermined closing time detection threshold, the controller is operable to determine that the stuck status is stuck; and if the maximum output value is above the predetermined closing time detection threshold, the controller is operable to determine that the stuck status is not stuck, and determining the closing time of the injector valve based on a location of the maximum output value, if the stuck status is that the injector valve is not stuck.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The following figures are provided for illustration purposes only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the present application and claims:
(2)
(3)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8)
(9) One of the inputs that the sensor package can detect, and communicate back to the controller 50, is a current draw of the selective catalytic injector 40. This current draw can be aggregated by the controller 50 to determine a current profile of the selective catalytic reduction injector 40. Based on the current profile of the selective catalytic reduction injector 40, the controller 50 can determine a precise injector closing time and whether the injector is stuck or unstuck using the below described process.
(10) The current profile of the selective catalytic reduction injector 40 is a function of battery voltage supplied to the injector, injector temperature and injector fluid pressure. At the conditions of low temperature, low pressure, and high voltage, the current profile of a nominal selective catalytic reduction injector 40 is almost the same as (superficially similar to) a stuck selective catalytic reduction injector, and a top level, or visual, inspection of the current profile is insufficient to identify a stuck injector or to precisely identify the closing time of the injector 40.
(11) Though an SCR injector 40 is shown in
(12) With continued reference to
(13) A data collection window of a current profile 110, 120 is the window during which the analog-to-digital converter (ADC) of controller 50 collects injector current profile data for detecting the current drawn by the injector 40. The ADC of controller 50 can be configured to read and filter injector closing data with a high sampling rate. During this window 116, the injector closing current data is processed by the ADC of controller 50 and stored in a data buffer. The data in the buffer can be fed to a slope discriminator to determine the selective catalytic reduction injector 40 stuck status and closing time. The slope discriminator can be another controller, a software module stored in a memory of the controller 50, or any other similar system. For example, the controller 50 can be configured to receive the valve current profile 110, 120, process the valve current profile with the slope discriminator, and determine the stuck status and the closing time (if applicable) of the injector valve based on the output of the slope discriminator.
(14) With continued reference to
(15) If injection has ended, the process 200 starts a delay timer in step 212. The delay timer step 212 causes delay for a predetermined, calibrated period of time. As illustrated in
(16) Next, the process 200 moves to a check step 214 of whether the delay timer has expired. If the delay timer has not expired when the controller 50 performs the delay timer expired check 214, the process 200 loops back to wait for the delay timer to expire and checks again at step 214. The delay timer is updated every time when the function is executed.
(17) If, however, the delay timer has expired, the controller 50 begins collecting and filtering current data to construct an injector closing current profile of the injector 40 in a collect injector closing data step 218. The current data can be processed using any acceptable sensor arrangement. In some examples, the current data is collected using an extremely high sampling rate. The sampling rate is the rate at which data samples are detected. By way of example, a sampling rate of 1 microsecond corresponds to one current detection occurring every microsecond, and this sampling rate may be used in the current application.
(18) After the collect injector closing data step 218, the process moves to a check step 220 to determine whether data collection is complete. If data collection is not complete, the process 200 loops back around to the collect injector closing data step 218, in the collection window 116. After it is determined in step 220 that data collection is complete, the process 200 moves to step 222.
(19) In order to reduce the detected current data to a manageable condition and amount, the detected data may be filtered by the controller 50 to remove high frequency noise using a standard digital filter. In example utilizing a high sampling rate, the data may be further downsampled using known downsampling techniques to reduce the amount of data in the current profile. The filtered and downsampled data forms an injector closing current profile, such as the current profiles 110, 120 illustrated in
(20) The slope discriminator may utilize nonlinear digital filtering techniques to distinguish the difference in the slope between a stuck injector and a non-stuck injector during closing time. Thus, after the step 222 of applying the slope discriminator, the process 200 moves on to determine the injector closing time (if not stuck) and/or the stuck status of being stuck or not stuck in step 224.
(21) Once the closing time and/or stuck status of the injector 40 has been determined, the controller 50 reports the stuck status and/or the closing time in a report closing time and status step 226. The reporting can be to another separate controller, a subprogram within the controller 50, or a diagnostic system, such as an OBD (On-Board Diagnostic) or OBDII (On-Board Diagnostic II). Alternately, the closing time and status can be reported to any other system where the opening time and status of the injector 40 is needed.
(22) With continued reference to
(23) The slope discriminator utilizes a modified median filter to determine a slope of the injector profile 302. The slope discriminator processes the current profile 302 entry by entry, replacing each entry with the centered value of neighboring entries falling within a median window 320 to determine a median current profile. The entries within the median window 320 are then sorted in increasing value. The slope discriminator further processes the current profile 302 entry by entry, replacing each entry with the mean value of neighboring entries falling with a mean window 310 to determine a mean current profile.
(24) As can be seen in
(25) The value of the output at point 340, and all output values 302, is determined by the following relationship:
Output=median term*gain factor for median term(mean term*gain factor for mean termoffset term);
(26) where Output is the output value;
(27) median term is the center value of the median window 320, which is calculated in sliding window 320 entry by entry;
(28) mean term is the mean value of the mean window 310, which is calculated in sliding window 310 entry by entry;
gain factor for median term=1+abs(median termmean term); and
gain factor for mean term=1abs(median termmean term);
offset term=abs(median termmean term)/length of median sliding window 320.
(29) As known in mathematics, abs is the absolute value function. Thus, the gain factors are variable gain factors, which depend on the difference between the median term and the mean term. The gain factor for the median term is always greater than or equal to one; and the gain factor for the mean term is always less than or equal to one. The offset term is also related to the difference between the mean term and the median term.
(30) As a result of the above relationships, the bigger the difference between the value of the median window 320 and the mean window 310, the greater the factor gain factor for the median term will be. Similarly, the bigger the difference between the value of the median window 320 and the mean window 310, the smaller factor gain factor for the mean term will be. This difference in the gain factors results in an output term that greatly magnifies the slope, thus showing a separation between the stuck injector current profile and the non-stuck injector closing profile at closing time.
(31) With continued reference to
(32) The precise injector closing time can be easily calculated based on the location of the maximum value 422. The precise closing time of the selective catalytic reduction injector 40 is precise to within a time period of the downsampled data rate. Thus, if the downsampled data rate is 1 microsecond, the time of the maximum value point 422 can fall within 1 microsecond of the actual fully open time of the selective catalytic reduction injector 40, depending on the system tolerances and slope discriminator filter calibration.
(33) By utilizing the above described process, the controller 50 can determine the precise closing time of a selective catalytic reduction injector and whether the selective catalytic reduction injector is stuck or non-stuck. As can be appreciated by one of skill in the art having the benefit of this disclosure, the above described process can be applied to any number of injector valves exhibiting similar slope reflection characteristics, and is not limited to selective catalytic reduction injectors.
(34) It is further understood that any of the above described concepts can be used alone or in combination with any or all of the other above described concepts. Although an embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.