Hybrid transmission wiring verification
10833622 ยท 2020-11-10
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02P29/024
ELECTRICITY
B60W20/50
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60W50/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T10/62
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
B60K6/445
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
H02P29/024
ELECTRICITY
B60W20/15
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
In an electrified vehicle having a synchronous traction motor, an inverter is connected to stator windings by three power cables. If these cables are accidentally connected to the wrong windings, the resulting torque will not match the desired torque, and may even be in the wrong direction. To avoid this problem, a test is performed any time that the cables may have been unplugged and re-connected. The inverter is commanded to generate a rotating magnetic field while the rotor is held stationary, resulting in a positive and a negative response current. A relationship between a phase angle of the negative response current and the rotor position indicates which cables are connected to which windings. If the cables are incorrectly connected, the controller disables the motor and informs an operator which cables to swap to achieve correct connection.
Claims
1. An electrified vehicle comprising: a synchronous motor having a stator and a rotor; an inverter connected to three stator windings by three cables; and a controller programmed to command the inverter to establish a rotating magnetic field in the motor while the rotor is stationary, measure a rotor position using a resolver, sample a current response, calculate a phase angle of a negative response current using a discrete Fourier transform, and selectively preclude motive motor operation based on the current response on the cables and the position of the rotor, wherein the current response comprises an absolute value of a difference between the phase angle of the negative response current and twice the rotor position minus pi/2 being greater than a threshold.
2. The electrified vehicle of claim 1 wherein a ratio of an inverter switching frequency and a frequency of the rotating magnetic field is between 10 and 20.
3. The electrified vehicle of claim 1 wherein the controller is further programmed to indicate to an operator which of the three cables should be swapped to establish correct connection.
4. The electrified vehicle of claim 1 wherein the controller is further programmed to inform an operator when the current response is consistent with both correct connection and an incorrect connection.
5. The electrified vehicle of claim 1 wherein the controller is further programmed to command the inverter to establish two voltage pulses into the cables while the rotor is stationary, the pulses being equal in magnitude and opposite in phase angle, and disable vehicle operation in response to a resulting direct current component being inconsistent with correct connection of a resolver.
6. The electrified vehicle of claim 1 further comprising a planetary gearset having a first component driveably coupled to an output shaft and to the rotor, a second component driveably connected to an internal combustion engine, and a third component driveably connected to a second electric machine.
7. The electrified vehicle of claim 1 further comprising a planetary gearset having a first component driveably coupled to an output shaft and to a second electric machine, a second component driveably connected to an internal combustion engine, and a third component driveably connected to the rotor.
8. A method of detecting incorrect connection of power cables between an inverter and a synchronous motor comprising: holding a rotor stationary; measuring a rotor position; commanding the inverter to vary voltages of the cables to establish a rotating magnetic field in the motor; measuring a response current; and reporting incorrect connection in response to a relationship between a phase angle of a negative response current and the rotor position, wherein the relationship between the phase angle of the negative response current and the rotor position comprises an absolute value of a difference between the phase angle of the negative response current and twice the rotor position minus pi/2 being greater than a threshold.
9. The method of claim 8 wherein a ratio of an inverter switching frequency and a frequency of the rotating magnetic field is between 10 and 20.
10. The method of claim 8 further comprising reporting which of the power cables should be swapped to establish correct connection.
11. The method of claim 8 further comprising: commanding the inverter to establish two voltage pulses into the cables while the rotor is stationary, the pulses being equal in magnitude and opposite in phase angle, and reporting incorrect connection of the resolver in response to a resulting direct current component being inconsistent with correct connection of a resolver.
12. The method of claim 8 wherein the synchronous motor and inverter are installed in a vehicle and the method is performed by a controller also installed in the vehicle.
13. An electrified vehicle comprising: a synchronous motor having a stator and a rotor; a resolver configured to measure a position of the rotor; an inverter connected to three stator windings by three cables; and a controller programmed to command the inverter to vary voltages of the cables to establish a rotating magnetic field in the motor while the rotor is stationary, calculate a phase angle of a negative response current, and disable vehicle operation in response to an absolute value of a difference between the phase angle and twice the rotor position minus pi/2 being greater than a threshold.
14. The electrified vehicle of claim 13 wherein the controller is further programmed to indicate to an operator which of the three cables should be swapped to establish correct connection.
15. The electrified vehicle of claim 13 wherein the controller is further programmed to command the inverter to establish two voltage pulses into the cables while the rotor is stationary, the pulses being equal in magnitude and opposite in phase angle, and disable vehicle operation in response to a resulting direct current component being inconsistent with correct connection of the resolver.
16. The electrified vehicle of claim 13 further comprising a planetary gearset having a first component driveably coupled to an output shaft and to the rotor, a second component driveably connected to an internal combustion engine, and a third component driveably connected to a second electric machine.
17. The electrified vehicle of claim 13 further comprising a planetary gearset having a first component driveably coupled to an output shaft and to a second electric machine, a second component driveably connected to an internal combustion engine, and a third component driveably connected to the rotor.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale; some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention.
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(11) The voltage across the stator windings results in a current through the stator windings, which creates a magnetic field in the motor. The rotor includes permanent magnets that are attracted or repulsed by the magnetic field. These magnetic forces result in mechanical torque on the rotor. The magnitude of the torque depends upon the magnitude of the current and also on the orientation of the magnetic field relative to the position of the rotor. Rotation of the rotor also induces current in the stator windings. In order to achieve a desired torque, the current through the windings must change as the rotor rotates. To accomplish that, the voltage across the windings must vary as the rotor rotates. The controller may specify the voltage relative to the rotor. In other words, the voltage is specified in a rotating reference frame. Commonly, the voltage command is specified in a rotating Cartesian reference frame by d and q components, V.sub.d.sup.r and V.sub.q.sup.r. To convert V.sub.d.sup.r and V.sub.q.sup.r to voltages on the three power cables 36, inverter 34 must know the position of the rotor. Inverter 34 determines the position of the rotor using resolver 40 which is connected to connected to inverter 34 by signal bus 42. Inverter 36 also measures the current through the windings, converts the values to the rotating reference frame, and reports the d and q components, I.sub.d.sup.r and I.sub.q.sup.r, to controller 28. For the most accurate torque control, controller 28 may adjust V.sub.d.sup.r and V.sub.q.sup.r in a closed loop fashion to achieve a desired I.sub.d.sup.r and I.sub.q.sup.r.
(12) For a motor with two poles, the voltage and current will go through one complete cycle for every physical rotation of the rotor during steady state operation. However, many motors have more than two poles. For a motor with N poles, the voltage and current will go through N/2 cycles per physical revolution of the rotor. For control of the motor electronics, the position of the rotor relative to the poles, called the electrical position, is the significant criteria. Throughout this document, any discussion of rotor position or velocity refers to electrical position unless otherwise specified.
(13) The motor, resolver, and inverter are manufactured separately, so the power cables 36 and the resolver signal bus 42 must be connected after the components are assembled into the transmission. Servicing or repair of the hybrid transmission may require disconnecting and reconnecting this wiring. It may be possible for the resolver signal bus 42 to be installed with reverse polarity. If that occurs, the inverter may mis-calculate the rotor position, resulting in improper translation of the controller commands into phase voltages and improper translation of phase currents into Cartesian coordinates. Also, the power cables may be swapped with one another. If that occurs, motor torque may have unexpected magnitude or even direction. For these reasons, it is desirable to verify that the connections have been made properly following assembly or re-assembly of the transmission.
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(15) Referring now to
(16) Returning now to
(17) Referring now to
I.sup.s=I.sub.cpe.sup.j(t+.sup.
(18) At 82, a discrete Fourier transform is used to calculate the magnitudes, I.sub.cp and I.sub.cn, and the phase angles, .sub.cp and .sub.cm, of the positive and negative sequence current response, respectively, from the time series of measured currents. At 84, the rotor position, .sub.e, is determined based on signals from the resolver. Table 1 below indicates a relationship between the rotor position, .sub.e, and the phase angle of the negative sequence current response, .sub.cn. The relationship varies depending on how the power cables are connected. The actual connection is indicated by a three letter sequence wherein abc indicates correct connection, bac represents reversal of the a and b cables, acb represents reversal of the b and c cables, and so on. Six different actual connection possibilities exist, assuming each cable is plugged into a socket.
(19) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Actual Connection Theoretical Relationship Consistency Criteria abc - correct
(20) At 86, the controller tests the checks whether the calculated .sub.e and .sub.cn values are consistent with the relationships in Table 1. Note that there are some combinations of .sub.e and .sub.cn that are consistent with more than one arrangement of power cables. Specifically, when .sub.e is a multiple of 2/6, the combination will likely satisfy two of the consistency criteria. If the values fail to satisfy the consistency criteria for correct wiring at 88, then the controller concludes at 90 that the wiring is incorrect. If the values satisfy the consistency criteria for correct wiring at 88, and fail to satisfy the consistency criteria for any of the five incorrect possibilities at 92, then the controller concludes at 94 that the power cables are connected correctly. If the values satisfy the consistency criteria for correct wiring at 88, and also satisfy the consistency criteria for one or more of the five incorrect possibilities at 92, then no conclusion is reached regarding whether the power cables are connected correctly.
(21) Returning now to
(22) Unlike other known methods of detecting mis-connection of the three power cables, the methods proposed above do not require rotation of the rotor and may be performed with voltages and currents of less magnitude. The vibrations that may be induced by these known methods is thereby avoided. Furthermore, the known methods do not determine which cables must be swapped to remedy the mis-connection.
(23) While exemplary embodiments are described above, it is not intended that these embodiments describe all possible forms of the invention. Rather, the words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation, and it is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, the features of various implementing embodiments may be combined to form further embodiments of the invention.