ADAPTIVE RADIANT HEATING SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR ACHIEVING VEHICLE OCCUPANT THERMAL COMFORT
20200346517 ยท 2020-11-05
Assignee
Inventors
- Taeyoung Han (Bloomfield Hills, MI)
- Shailendra Kaushik (Novi, MI)
- Kuo-huey Chen (Troy, MI, US)
- Chih-hung Yen (Bloomfield Hills, MI, US)
- Bahram Khalighi (Birmingham, MI)
Cpc classification
B60H1/00892
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60H1/00742
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01W1/17
PHYSICS
B60H1/2218
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60H1/2226
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B60H1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60H1/03
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method of regulating thermal comfort of an occupant of a vehicle cabin uses a radiant heating tile powered via an energy storage device to generate thermal energy. The method also includes detecting the occupant's position via a position sensor and detecting the occupant's surface temperature and detecting a temperature of the tile via at least one temperature sensor. The method additionally includes determining, via an electronic controller, a rate of change of occupant's surface temperature and a difference between the tile temperature and the occupant's surface temperature relative to a predetermined temperature set-point. The method further includes regulating, via the electronic controller, a power input from the energy storage device to the tile in response to the determined rate of change of the surface temperature and the determined difference between the tile temperature and the occupant's surface temperature to thereby regulate the occupant's surface temperature.
Claims
1. An adaptive radiant heating system for regulating thermal comfort of a vehicle occupant supported by a seat in cabin of a motor vehicle, the system comprising: a radiant heating tile arranged inside the cabin proximate the seat and configured to generate thermal energy; an energy storage device configured to power the radiant heating tile; a position sensor configured to detect a position of the vehicle occupant in the cabin and generate a first signal indicative of the detected position; at least one temperature sensor configured to detect a surface temperature of the vehicle occupant and generate a second signal indicative of the detected surface temperature, and configured to detect a temperature of the radiant heating tile and generate a third signal indicative of the detected temperature of the radiant heating tile; and an electronic controller in operative communication with the radiant heating tile, the position sensor, and the at least one temperature sensor, wherein the electronic controller is configured to: receive the first, second, and third signals; determine a rate of change of the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant and a difference between the temperature of the radiant heating tile and the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant relative to a predetermined temperature set-point; and regulate a power input from the energy storage device to the radiant heating tile in response to the determined rate of change of the surface temperature and the determined difference between the temperature of the radiant heating tile and the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant to thereby regulate the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant.
2. The system according to claim 1, wherein the radiant heating tile is one of a plurality of radiant heating tiles arranged inside the cabin proximate the seat, and wherein the electronic controller is additionally configured to: identify the radiant heating tile corresponding to the detected position of the vehicle occupant from among the plurality of radiant heating tiles; and activate the identified radiant heating tile to regulate the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant.
3. The system according to claim 2, wherein the motor vehicle includes a vehicle body defining the cabin, arranged along a longitudinal axis, and defined by longitudinal body sides, a floor, and a roof, and wherein the plurality of radiant heating tiles is arranged along the longitudinal axis in an array proximate one of the longitudinal body sides, the floor, or the roof.
4. The system according to claim 3, wherein the motor vehicle additionally includes a forced-air climate control system, and wherein the electronic controller is additionally configured to supplement a heat output of the forced-air climate control system with the thermal energy generated by the array of the plurality of radiant heating tiles, by coordinating regulation of the forced-air climate control system and the selective control of the plurality of radiant heating tiles.
5. The system according to claim 1, wherein the at least one temperature sensor is an infrared sensor configured to generate a sensor image indicative of the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant and the temperature of the radiant heating tile.
6. The system according to claim 1, wherein the at least one temperature sensor additionally includes a sensor configured to detect a temperature of ambient air in the cabin.
7. The system according to claim 6, wherein the electronic controller is further configured to execute an algorithm determinative of the power input from the energy storage device to the radiant heating tile in response to the detected surface temperature of the vehicle occupant, the temperature of the radiant heating tile, the determined rate of change of the surface temperature, and the detected temperature of ambient air in the cabin.
8. The system according to claim 1, wherein the position sensor is an in-vehicle camera configured to detect the position of the vehicle occupant.
9. The system according to claim 1, wherein the radiant heating tile is constructed from a positive temperature coefficient (PTC) material.
10. The system according to claim 1, further comprising an operator input to the electronic controller configured to over-ride the predetermined temperature set-point.
11. A method of regulating thermal comfort of a vehicle occupant supported by a seat in a cabin of a motor vehicle, the method comprising: providing a radiant heating tile arranged inside the cabin proximate the seat and powered via an energy storage device to generate thermal energy; detecting a position of the vehicle occupant in the cabin and generating a first signal indicative of the detected position via a position sensor; detecting a surface temperature of the vehicle occupant and generating a second signal indicative of the detected surface temperature and detecting a temperature of the radiant heating tile and generating a third signal indicative of the detected temperature of the radiant heating tile via at least one temperature sensor; receiving the first, second, and third signals via an electronic controller in operative communication with the radiant heating tile, the position sensor, and the at least one temperature sensor; determining, via the electronic controller, a rate of change of the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant and a difference between the temperature of the radiant heating tile and the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant relative to a predetermined temperature set-point; and regulating, via the electronic controller, a power input from the energy storage device to the radiant heating tile in response to the determined rate of change of the surface temperature and the determined difference between the temperature of the radiant heating tile and the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant to thereby regulate the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant.
12. The method according to claim 11, wherein the radiant heating tile is one of a plurality of radiant heating tiles arranged inside the cabin proximate the seat, and wherein providing the radiant heating tile includes: identifying, via the electronic controller, the radiant heating tile corresponding to the detected position of the vehicle occupant from among the plurality of radiant heating tiles; and activating, via the electronic controller, the identified radiant heating tile to regulate the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant.
13. The method according to claim 12, wherein the motor vehicle includes a vehicle body defining the cabin, arranged along a longitudinal axis, and defined by longitudinal body sides, a floor, and a roof, and wherein the plurality of radiant heating tiles is arranged along the longitudinal axis in an array proximate one of the longitudinal body sides, the floor, or the roof.
14. The method according to claim 13, wherein the motor vehicle additionally includes a forced-air climate control system, the method additionally comprising supplementing a heat output of the forced-air climate control system with the thermal energy generated by the array of the radiant heating tiles, by coordinating regulation of the forced-air climate control system and the selective control of the radiant heating tiles via the electronic controller.
15. The method according to claim 11, wherein the at least one temperature sensor is an infrared sensor, the method additionally comprising generating, via the infrared sensor, a sensor image indicative of the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant and the temperature of the radiant heating tile.
16. The method according to claim 11, further comprising detecting a temperature of ambient air in the cabin via the at least one temperature sensor.
17. The method according to claim 16, further comprising executing, via the electronic controller, an algorithm determinative of the power input from the energy storage device to the radiant heating tile in response to the detected surface temperature of the vehicle occupant, the temperature of the radiant heating tile, the determined rate of change of the surface temperature, and the detected temperature of ambient air in the cabin.
18. The method according to claim 11, wherein the position sensor is an in-vehicle camera, the method further comprising detecting, via the in-vehicle camera, the position of the vehicle occupant.
19. The method according to claim 11, wherein the radiant heating tile is constructed from a positive temperature coefficient (PTC) material.
20. The method according to claim 11, further comprising over-riding the predetermined temperature set-point via an operator input to the electronic controller.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0024] Referring to the drawings, wherein like reference numbers refer to like components throughout the several views,
[0025] The vehicle 10 may be configured as an autonomous vehicle in which assistance from various vehicle systems is employed in operating the vehicle, up to and including full automation which eschews operator involvement. The vehicle 10 is generally characterized by a vehicle body 14 arranged along a longitudinal axis X in a vehicle body plane P, and defined by longitudinal body sides 14-1, 14-2 (shown in
[0026] As shown in
[0027] An energy storage device 24 (shown in
[0028] An embodiment of the first sensor 26 may be an electronic position sensor 26-1, for example mounted on the seat 18, configured to detect a position of the seat relative to the cabin 16, such as along the axis X. In the embodiment of the seat 18 having the seatback recliner 18-3, the first sensor 26-1 may be configured to detect a position of the recliner, and therefore of the seatback 18-1. In another embodiment, the first sensor 26 may be an in-vehicle camera 26-2 configured to detect the position of the vehicle occupant 17 within the cabin 16. Overall, the adaptive radiant heating system 20 may include a plurality of first sensors, such that more than one embodiment of the first sensor 26-1 and 26-2, with attendant specific parameters being detected, is included on the particular vehicle 10.
[0029] The adaptive radiant heating system 20 also includes at least one second or temperature sensor 30 (shown in
[0030] In one embodiment, one second sensor 30 is a temperature sensor 30-1 configured to detect the surface temperature T.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17. A number of second temperature sensors 30-1 configured to detect individual temperatures of areas of the vehicle occupant 17, such as the head, the torso, and the leg areas is also envisioned. Furthermore, another second temperature sensor 30-2 is configured to detect a temperature of specifically identified radiant heating tile(s) 22, such as a tile(s) proximate an area of the occupant 17 having the detected surface temperature T.sub.O. Alternatively, a separate embodiment of the second sensor 30-3 may utilize infrared technology. Such an infrared second sensor 30-3 may, therefore, be configured to generate a thermal image data indicative of each of the surface temperature T.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17 and the temperature T.sub.1 of the radiant heating tile(s) 22, and communicate such data via the second signal 32 and the third signal 33. Additionally, the signal generated by the infrared sensor 30-3 may combine both signals 32 and 33 into a single transmission. In a separate embodiment, the second sensor 30 may be a temperature sensor 30-4 specifically configured to detect a temperature T.sub.a of the ambient air in the cabin 16 proximate the vehicle occupant 17. Overall, the adaptive radiant heating system 20 may include a plurality of second sensors, such that more than one embodiment of the second sensor 30-1, 30-2, 30-3, and 30-4 with attendant specific parameters being detected, is included on the particular vehicle 10.
[0031] The adaptive radiant heating system 20 further includes an electronic controller 34. The electronic controller 34 is in operative communication with the plurality of radiant heating tiles 22, the first or position sensor(s) 26, and the second or temperature sensor(s) 30, and configured or programmed to regulate the thermal comfort of the vehicle occupant 17 via selective control of the plurality of tiles. The electronic controller 34 is configured to receive the first signal(s) 28, the second signal(s) 32, and the third signal(s) 33. The signals from the first and second sensors 26, 30 may be communicated to the electronic controller 34 via a data network, e.g. a Controller Area Network (CAN bus), arranged in the vehicle 10. The electronic controller 34 is configured, i.e., structured and programmed, to activate at least one of the plurality of radiant heating tiles 22 in response to the first, second, and third signals and 28, 32, 33 to thereby regulate the climate proximate the seat 18 and provide thermal comfort of the vehicle occupant 17.
[0032] As shown in
[0033] Volatile media of each of the controller's memory may include, for example, dynamic random-access memory (DRAM), which may constitute a main memory. Such instructions may be transmitted by one or more transmission medium, including coaxial cables, copper wire and fiber optics, including the wires that comprise a system bus coupled to respective first and second sensors 26, 30. Memory of the electronic controller 34 may also include a flexible disk, hard disk, magnetic tape, other magnetic medium, a CD-ROM, DVD, other optical medium, etc. The electronic controller 34 may be equipped with a high-speed primary clock, requisite Analog-to-Digital (A/D) and/or Digital-to-Analog (D/A) circuitry, input/output circuitry and devices (I/O), as well as appropriate signal conditioning and/or buffer circuitry. Algorithms required by the electronic controller 34 or accessible thereby may be stored in the memory and automatically executed to provide the required functionality.
[0034] The electronic controller 34 may also be configured to select or identify one or more of the plurality of radiant heating tiles 22 corresponding to the detected position P.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17 in the cabin 16, i.e., via the first sensor 26. The electronic controller 34 is additionally configured to compare the surface temperature T.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17 and the temperature T.sub.t of the identified radiant heating tile(s) 22 to a predetermined climate or temperature set-point 36. Furthermore, the electronic controller 34 may be configured to automatically activate the identified one or more of the plurality of radiant heating tiles 22 based on the comparison of the detected surface temperature T.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17 and the predetermined temperature set-point 36, as will be described below.
[0035] The electronic controller 34 is specifically configured to determine a rate of change of the surface temperature dT.sub.O/dt of the vehicle occupant 17. The electronic controller 34 is additionally configured to determine a difference T between the temperature T.sub.t of the radiant heating tile(s) 22 and the surface temperature T.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17 relative to the predetermined temperature set-point 36. The electronic controller 34 is additionally configured to regulate a power input from the energy storage device 24 to the radiant heating tile(s) 22 in response to determined temperature parameters. The energy storage device 24 power input to the radiant heating tile(s) 22 may be regulated via Pulse-width modulation (PWM) to generate a square wave current signal to reduce the average power delivered to the tile(s). Specifically, the electronic controller 34 may be programmed with and configured to execute an algorithm 37 using equivalent homogeneous temperature (EHT) derived from the determined dT.sub.O/dt, T, T.sub.O, and T.sub.a parameters to assess the PMV (Predicted Mean Vote) for the subject occupant 17 situated in the cabin 16 at a particular instance in time. As such, the algorithm 37 is used to determine the power input from the energy storage device 24 to the radiant heating tile(s) 22 in response to determined parameters.
[0036] PMV is an industry-wide standard for thermal comfort metric. The PMV scale extends from 3 through 0 to +3, wherein 3 signifies cold, 0 signifies neutral, and +3 signifies hot. PMV is intended to take into account factors relevant to thermal comfort of an individualfrom three modes of heat transfer between an individual and the surrounding environment (conduction, convection, and radiation) to personal factors, such as individual's metabolic rate, physical activity level, and clothing insulation. A standard PMV computation requires inputs such as air velocity, convective heat transfer coefficient, mean radiant temperature, relative humidity, etc. for its computation. However, presently, real-time measurements of such values inside a vehicle cabin are not practical. Accordingly, a modified PMV formula, the above noted algorithm 37, using EHT may avoid the requirement of direct measurements of air-velocity, heat transfer coefficient around the occupant(s), and the surrounding mean radiant temperature (MRT) to compute real-time PMV.
[0037] The algorithm 37 is configured to determine the power input to the radiant heating tile(s) 22 in response to the detected surface temperature T.sub.O of the vehicle occupant, the temperature T.sub.t of the radiant heating tile, the determined rate of change of the surface temperature dT.sub.O/dt of the vehicle occupant 17, and the detected temperature T.sub.a of ambient air in the cabin 16. The above regulation of the energy storage device 24 power input to the radiant heating tile 22 is thereby intended to regulate the surface temperature T.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17. The algorithm 37 is based on the Predicted Mean Vote (PMV) model. The PMV model was developed using principles of heat balance and experimental data collected in a controlled climate chamber under steady state conditions. The PMV model may be applied to air-conditioned enclosures, such as buildings or vehicles.
[0038] The adaptive radiant heating system 20 may also include a gesture recognition feature, such as via a built-in camera, configured to acknowledge a vehicle occupant's physical gestures signifying operative system commands. The adaptive radiant heating system 20 may additionally include an over-ride feature 38A, such as a switch or an electronic operator input to the electronic controller 34 via a climate control panel 38 arranged in the cabin 16 (shown in
[0039] With resumed reference to
[0040] Specifically, the electronic controller 34 may be programmed to coordinate regulation of the forced-air climate control system 40 and the selective control of the plurality of radiant heating tiles 22 to provide more rapid cabin 16 warm-up. For example, as the IC engine 12A is started from cold at sub-freezing temperature, the electronic controller 34 may access exterior ambient temperature data via an exterior temperature sensor 42 (shown in
[0041]
[0042] In frame 104, the method includes detecting the position P.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17 in the cabin 16 and generating the first signal 28 indicative of the detected position via the first or position sensor 26. The position sensor 26 may be an in-vehicle camera. After frame 104, the method proceeds to frame 106. In frame 106, the method includes detecting the surface temperature T.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17 and generating the second signal 32 indicative of the detected surface temperature T.sub.O. Still in frame 106, the method also includes detecting the temperature T.sub.t of the identified radiant heating tile(s) 22 and generating the third signal 33 indicative of the detected temperature T.sub.t of the subject tile(s).
[0043] According to the disclosure, the temperature T.sub.t is detected and the third signal 33 is generated by at least one of the second or temperature sensors 30. As discussed with respect to
[0044] In frame 108, the method includes receiving the first, second, and third signals 28, 32, 33 via the electronic controller 34. After frame 108, the method advances to frame 110. In frame 110, the method includes determining, via the electronic controller 34, the rate of change of the surface temperature dT.sub.O/dt of the vehicle occupant 17. Still in frame 110, the method includes determining the difference T between the temperature T.sub.t of the radiant heating tile(s) 22 and the surface temperature T.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17 relative to the predetermined temperature set-point 36. Following frame 110, the method proceeds to frame 112.
[0045] In frame 112 the method includes regulating, via the electronic 34, the power input from the energy storage device 24 to the identified radiant heating tile(s) 22, in response to the determined rate of change of the surface temperature dT.sub.O/dt of the vehicle occupant 17, the difference T between the temperature T.sub.t of the radiant heating tile(s) 22, and the surface temperature T.sub.O of the vehicle occupant 17 to thereby regulate the surface temperature of the vehicle occupant 17. Additionally, in frame 112, the method may include executing, via the electronic controller 34, the algorithm 37 using EHT to assess the PMV for the subject occupant 17 situated in the cabin 16 in real-time. As described above with reference to
[0046] In frame 114, the method may include over-riding the predetermined temperature set-point 36 via an operator input to the electronic controller 34. As discussed above with respect to
[0047] The detailed description and the drawings or figures are supportive and descriptive of the disclosure, but the scope of the disclosure is defined solely by the claims. While some of the best modes and other embodiments for carrying out the claimed disclosure have been described in detail, various alternative designs and embodiments exist for practicing the disclosure defined in the appended claims. Furthermore, the embodiments shown in the drawings or the characteristics of various embodiments mentioned in the present description are not necessarily to be understood as embodiments independent of each other. Rather, it is possible that each of the characteristics described in one of the examples of an embodiment may be combined with one or a plurality of other desired characteristics from other embodiments, resulting in other embodiments not described in words or by reference to the drawings. Accordingly, such other embodiments fall within the framework of the scope of the appended claims.