Vehicle or moving object detection
10755561 ยท 2020-08-25
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02J50/402
ELECTRICITY
Y02T90/14
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
H02J50/90
ELECTRICITY
B60L53/38
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02J50/60
ELECTRICITY
Y02T10/70
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
B60L53/126
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L53/39
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T90/12
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
B60L53/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T10/7072
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
International classification
B60L53/38
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L53/39
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L53/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H04B5/00
ELECTRICITY
H02J50/90
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The present application relates to the detection of moving vehicles and other objects, in particular though not exclusively for the application of switching stationary charging pads for moving electric vehicle charging. There is provided an electric vehicle detecting apparatus for switching a charging pad for charging a vehicle transmitting a locating signal, the apparatus comprising two sensors separated in the direction of travel of the vehicle, and a detector arranged to detect the vehicle by comparing the locating signals received by each of the two sensors.
Claims
1. An apparatus for switching a charging pad for charging a vehicle, the apparatus comprising: an inductive sense coil configured to sense a magnetic field from the vehicle; a filter to remove inductive power transfer signals from locating signals induced in the inductive sense coil by the magnetic field; and a circuit configured to detect the vehicle from the filtered locating signals.
2. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the magnetic field of the vehicle is a time varying magnetic field.
3. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the sense coil has parallel wires arranged substantially perpendicular to a direction of travel of the vehicle, and the parallel wires are spaced apart in the direction of travel of the vehicle.
4. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1 further including an additional sense coil for detecting a magnetic field from the vehicle, and wherein circuit is configured to combine locating signals received from the sense coil with locating signals received from the additional sense coil, and to use the combined signal to detect the vehicle.
5. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1 wherein the apparatus comprises a charging pad, and the circuit is configured to energise the charging pad when the vehicle is over the charging pad.
6. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1 wherein the apparatus comprises a charging pad, and the circuit is configured to de-energise the charging pad when the vehicle is moving away from the charging pad.
7. The apparatus as claimed in claim 1 wherein the circuit is configured to process the filtered locating signals to provide a peak, and to use peak detection to detect the vehicle.
8. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the circuit is configured to combine two or more filtered locating signals to form a composite signal, and use the composite signal to detect the vehicle.
9. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the circuit is configured to multiple two or more filtered locating signals to form a product of the two or more filtered signals, and use the product of the two or more filtered signals to detect the vehicle.
10. The apparatus according to claim 9 wherein the apparatus comprises an inductive power transfer (IPT) charging pad, and the apparatus is configured to energise the charging pad in response to detecting the vehicle.
11. The apparatus according to claim 8, wherein the apparatus is arranged to switch on the charging pad in response to detecting a first DC pulse of the product of the two or more filtered locating signals, and to switch off the charging pad in response to detecting a second DC pulse of the product of the two or more filtered locating signals.
12. The system according to claim 11 wherein the apparatus is further arranged to detect the time between the peak of the first DC pulse and the peak of the second DC pulse in order to determine the direction of travel of the vehicle.
13. A method of detecting an electric vehicle for switching a charging pad for wirelessly charging a vehicle, the method comprising: detecting from an inductive sense coil a magnetic field of the vehicle; filtering locating signals induced in the inductive sense coil by the magnetic field to remove inductive power transfer signals from the locating signals; detecting the vehicle from the filtered locating signals.
14. The method according to claim 13, further comprising determining when a zero-crossing has occurred in an envelope of one of the filtered locating signals but not in another of the filtered locating signals.
15. The method according to claim 13, further comprising determining when the phase of one of the filtered locating signals is substantially 180 degrees different to the phase of the other filtered locating signal.
16. The method according to claim 13, further comprising multiplying the filtered locating signals in order to detect a DC peak corresponding to detection of the vehicle.
17. The method according to claim 16, further comprising detecting a second DC peak in the product of the filtered locating signals corresponding to the vehicle passing the charging pad.
18. A method of controlling a wireless charging pad comprising filtering signals induced in a sense coil of the wireless charging pad to remove signal components in a first frequency range, the first frequency range corresponding to a charging frequency of the wireless charging pad, detecting a locating signal from a vehicle, induced in the sense coil, wherein the locating signal is induced by a time varying magnetic field having a frequency that is outside the first frequency range, and energising the wireless charging pad responsive to detecting the locating signal.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the method comprises combining two or more filtered locating signals to form a composite signal, and using the composite signal to determine the proximity of the vehicle to the wireless charging pad.
20. The method of claim 18, wherein the method comprises de-energising the wireless charging pad responsive to detecting a change in the locating signal.
Description
DRAWING DESCRIPTION
(1) One or more embodiments of the invention will be described further below with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DESCRIPTION OF ONE OR MORE EMBODIMENTS
(18) Referring to
(19) This situation is well known and accepted. Less well known is that the presence of a return wire causes a bias in the measurements and here that bias is used preferentially to allow a sensing area larger than the area of the pad so that the control of power from the roadway to the vehicle can be almost completely seamless and smooth and continuous. In practice the energy transferred to the vehicle goes to the wheels without being stored in the vehicle's battery but excess energy and regenerative power is scavenged by the system to keep the battery fully charged. To do this requires knowledge of the roadway pads' locations relative to the vehicle and this is the information needed for a viable system.
(20) Practical Considerations
(21) In practice a single wire cannot be used as there must be a path for a return current to flow. A return wire could be placed under the existing wire to keep the system without bias but usually it will be placed to the side of the wire causing a bias in the location of the zero. The arrangement is shown in
(22) A practical circuit is shown in
(23) A Car and Roadway System
(24) In this application the wires (send and return) are on the vehicle and it is best to separate them by a significant amount. The maximum possible (sensible) separation is defined by the edges of the on-vehicle pad. It is helpful to use two separate rectangular coils to allow more sophisticated detection and the straight edges of the wires and the coils are helpful to improve the response. The arrangement is shown in
(25) In practice sensing AC zeroes in the presence of noise is difficult and an improved method is shown in
(26) In the time domain this delay shows up as a delay in time between the two signalsshown in
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(28) A controller 60 uses the peak detection to switch the ground charging coil 70 to an energised state using a switch 75, so that the on-vehicle pad received wireless power from the energised charging coil 70 as it passes overhead. The second peak detected and shown in
(29) In effect the embodiment compares the received locating signal from the two spaced apart sense coils. In this case the signals are multiplied which is a simple cost effective solution. However other locating signal comparisons are possible, for example directly comparing when the envelope functions of the two signals have a zero-crossing, or when the two locating signals have different phases.
(30) Whilst sense coils have been used in this embodiment, other types of sensors may be employed, including for example coils vertically oriented where bias is less important.
(31) Practical Issues
(32) An IPT system works at frequencies typically in the range 20-80 kHz so the sensing method cannot use that frequency range. In the work done here we have used a frequency of 420-450 kHz which is quite easy to generate at the low powers involved here. This frequency is chosen to avoid interference at IPT frequencies and to be low enough to allow a range of electrical components to be used. We note that a range of frequencies could be used based on further optimisation. Perhaps more important when the sensing system is working much larger signals are present. The sensing system or detection means may measure a voltage of 200 mV but also present are voltages at the IPT frequency. If the coils are perfectly aligned this voltage can be zero but if they are not aligned then this unwanted voltage can be 50-100 V. Thus it is desirable to have good filters and very stable amplifiers. We have used band-pass filters tuned to 455 kHz with a 100 kHz pass band at 6 dB and an attenuation of 90 dB at 44 kHz, and highly stable transistor amplifiers with a voltage gain of 35 dB at 455 kHz and 0 dB at 44 kHz and these are able to keep all the signals separated from each other and allow the sensing/detection concept to work. The band-pass filters are connected directly to the outputs of coils A and B and the amplifier amplifies the outputs of the filters. The outputs are multiplied using an Analogue Devices multiplier to give signals that are easily processed from that point using either analogue or digital techniques.
(33) In this way as the vehicle pad passes over the ground pad the wires in the vehicle pad may be sensed by circuitry in the ground pad and the ground pad may be turned on by one of the negative pulses shown in
(34) A study of
(35) A plot of the waveforms involved is shown in
(36) Using this method a car travelling over a string of pads will turn the pads on as it comes to them and turn them off as it leaves them. The pads may be widely separated or in close proximity and multiple pads may be used on the vehicle to get more power from the string.
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(38) Alternatively the sense coils may be located around the circumference of the charging pad, with a wire of each in advance of the charging pad in order to allow for propagation time of the signalling to switch the charging pad. Typically the sense coils will include two parallel wires arranged perpendicular to the direction of travel of the vehicle in order to maximise the received locating signal.
(39) A plurality of inductive charging pads 10 may be placed in roadway 11, as shown in
(40) In an alternative system the sense coils may be associated with a plurality of inductive power transmission modules. In this situation a vehicle travelling over the system may initiate a series of pads to switch on and off. In an alternative situation in which a vehicle, or multiple vehicles travelling together, have a series of inductive power transmission modules the sense coil may be able to respond to this by staying on until a final inductive power transmission module is reached, or for a certain time period. This may mean that one in ten inductive power transmission modules have sense coils, or a vehicle has a single vehicle coil for a plurality of inductive power transmission modules. In addition to these features the signal generated by the car may be used to provide further information to the road, this may be through the use of some characteristic of the signal and may indicate information such as the type of vehicle or the size of inductive power transmission modules or charge level.
(41) The system for detection may have uses that apply to vehicles that may not be using electric power; in this sense the detected vehicle may desire special treatment from some part of the road. This may include the system being used to detect a type of vehicle approaching and switch traffic signals or make a section of the roadway accessible. In an alternative embodiment it may be used to determine the position of a passing vehicle, for instance a bus, and report this to a control means. Alternatively it may be used to determine the position of a vehicle in relation to a weigh station or other road feature. In one embodiment the system may provide a method for allowing preferential passage to vehicles with appropriate signals.
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(43) Although this disclosure has concentrated on the use of a detection scheme in an electric vehicle charging system we acknowledge that a wider scope of uses exists. In particular this system is applicable for detecting the position of any moving object on a surface with one or more sense coil present. This may include uses in conveyer belt systems, manufacturing environments or electronic device charging. Alternatively vehicles such as automated guided vehicles (AGVs) may use this system, including cranes and waterside ship loaders. It may be used in situations where a vehicle or other integers are not moving. This may include a situation in which an electric vehicle is parked and wishing to be charged.