Thermal management systems, coolant valves and control logic for vehicle powertrains
10557401 ยท 2020-02-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F01P2060/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P7/165
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P5/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P2050/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P7/167
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B77/082
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02F1/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01P2060/045
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F01P7/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02M26/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02F1/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Disclosed are two-valve, split-layout engine cooling systems, methods for making and method for operating such cooling systems, engine coolant valve assembly configurations, and vehicles equipped with an active thermal management system for cooling select powertrain components. A disclosed thermal management system includes a radiator for cooling coolant fluid, and a coolant pump for circulating coolant fluid received from the radiator. A set of conduits fluidly connect the coolant pump to an engine block, a cylinder head, and an exhaust manifold. Another set of conduits fluidly connect the engine block, cylinder head, and exhaust manifold to the radiator, coolant pump, and one or more oil heaters. A first valve assembly is operable to regulate coolant flow between the coolant pump and the radiator. A second valve assembly is operable to regulate coolant fluid flow, individually and jointly, between the engine block, cylinder head, exhaust manifold, radiator, coolant pump, and oil heater(s).
Claims
1. A thermal management system for a vehicle powertrain, the vehicle powertrain including an oil heater and an engine assembly with an engine block, a cylinder head, and an exhaust manifold, the thermal management system comprising: an electronic heat exchanger configured to actively transfer heat from a coolant fluid to an ambient fluid; a coolant pump configured to circulate the coolant fluid emitted from the electronic heat exchanger; a first set of fluid conduits fluidly connecting the coolant pump and the electronic heat exchanger; a second set of fluid conduits configured to fluidly connect the coolant pump to the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold; a third set of fluid conduits configured to fluidly connect the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold to the electronic heat exchanger, the coolant pump, and the oil heater; a first valve assembly interposed within the first set of fluid conduits and operable to regulate coolant fluid flow between the coolant pump and the electronic heat exchanger; and a second valve assembly interposed within the third set of fluid conduits and operable to regulate coolant fluid flow, individually and jointly, between the engine block, the cylinder head, the exhaust manifold, the electronic heat exchanger, the coolant pump, and the oil heater, the second valve assembly including a second body with a first inlet port configured to fluidly connect to the exhaust manifold, a second inlet port configured to fluidly connect to the cylinder head, and a third inlet port configured to fluidly connect to the engine block.
2. The thermal management system of claim 1, wherein the second body of the second valve assembly further includes a first outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the oil heater, a third outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the coolant pump, and a fourth outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the electronic heat exchanger.
3. The thermal management system of claim 2, wherein the oil heater is an engine oil heater, the vehicle powertrain further including a multi-speed power transmission with a transmission oil heater, and wherein the second body of the second valve assembly further includes a second outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the transmission oil heater.
4. The thermal management system of claim 1, wherein the first valve assembly includes a first body with a first inlet port fluidly connected to the electronic heat exchanger, and a first outlet port fluidly connected to the coolant pump.
5. The thermal management system of claim 4, wherein the first body of the first valve assembly further includes a second outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the oil heater, and a third outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold downstream from the coolant pump.
6. The thermal management system of claim 1, wherein the second set of fluid conduits includes three discrete lines configured to individually connect the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold to the coolant pump.
7. The thermal management system of claim 1, wherein the third set of fluid conduits includes three discrete fluid lines configured to individually connect the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold to respective inlet ports of the second valve assembly, and three discrete fluid lines configured to individually connect the electronic heat exchanger, the coolant pump, and the oil heater to respective outlet ports of the second valve assembly.
8. The thermal management system of claim 1, wherein the vehicle powertrain further includes an exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) cooler, and wherein the third set of fluid conduits is further configured to fluidly connect the EGR cooler to the second valve assembly.
9. The thermal management system of claim 1, wherein the vehicle powertrain further includes a turbocharger device, and wherein the second set of fluid conduits is further configured to fluidly connect the coolant pump to the turbocharger device.
10. The thermal management system of claim 1, further comprising a cabin heater core operable to warm a passenger cabin of a motor vehicle, wherein the cabin heater core is interposed between and fluidly connected to the second valve assembly and the coolant pump via a respective branch of the third set of fluid conduits.
11. The thermal management system of claim 1, characterized by a lack of a third valve assembly interposed between and operable to control coolant flow between the engine block, the cylinder head, the exhaust manifold and the second valve assembly.
12. The thermal management system of claim 1, further comprising an electronic controller communicatively connected to and configured to regulate selective operation of the first and second valve assemblies.
13. A thermal management system for a vehicle powertrain, the vehicle powertrain including an oil heater and an engine assembly with an engine block, a cylinder head, and an exhaust manifold, the thermal management system comprising: an electronic heat exchanger configured to actively transfer heat from a coolant fluid to an ambient fluid; a coolant pump configured to circulate the coolant fluid emitted from the electronic heat exchanger; a first set of fluid conduits fluidly connecting the coolant pump and the electronic heat exchanger; a second set of fluid conduits configured to fluidly connect the coolant pump to the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold; a third set of fluid conduits configured to fluidly connect the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold to the electronic heat exchanger, the coolant pump, and the oil heater; a first valve assembly interposed within the first set of fluid conduits and operable to regulate coolant fluid flow between the coolant pump and the electronic heat exchanger, the first valve assembly including a first body with a first inlet port fluidly connected to the electronic heat exchanger, a first outlet port fluidly connected to the coolant pump, a second outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the oil heater, and a third outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold; and a second valve assembly interposed within the third set of fluid conduits and operable to regulate coolant fluid flow, individually and jointly, between the engine block, the cylinder head, the exhaust manifold, the electronic heat exchanger, the coolant pump, and the oil heater.
14. The thermal management system of claim 13, wherein the second valve assembly includes a second body with a first inlet port configured to fluidly connect to the exhaust manifold, a second inlet port configured to fluidly connect to the cylinder head, and a third inlet port configured to fluidly connect to the engine block.
15. The thermal management system of claim 14, wherein the second body of the second valve assembly further includes a first outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the oil heater, a third outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the coolant pump, and a fourth outlet port configured to fluidly connect to the electronic heat exchanger.
16. The thermal management system of claim 13, wherein the second set of fluid conduits includes three discrete lines configured to individually connect the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold to the coolant pump.
17. The thermal management system of claim 13, wherein the vehicle powertrain further includes an exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) cooler, and wherein the third set of fluid conduits is further configured to fluidly connect the EGR cooler to the second valve assembly.
18. The thermal management system of claim 13, wherein the third set of fluid conduits includes three discrete fluid lines configured to individually connect the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold to respective inlet ports of the second valve assembly, and three discrete fluid lines configured to individually connect the electronic heat exchanger, the coolant pump, and the oil heater to respective outlet ports of the second valve assembly.
19. The thermal management system of claim 13, further comprising a cabin heater core operable to warm a passenger cabin of a motor vehicle, wherein the cabin heater core is interposed between and fluidly connected to the second valve assembly and the coolant pump via a respective branch of the third set of fluid conduits.
20. A thermal management system for a vehicle powertrain, the vehicle powertrain including an oil heater and an engine assembly with an engine block, a cylinder head, and an exhaust manifold, the thermal management system comprising: an electronic heat exchanger configured to actively transfer heat from a coolant fluid to an ambient fluid; a coolant pump configured to circulate the coolant fluid emitted from the electronic heat exchanger; a first set of fluid conduits fluidly connecting the coolant pump and the electronic heat exchanger; a second set of fluid conduits configured to fluidly connect the coolant pump to the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold; a third set of fluid conduits configured to fluidly connect the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold to the electronic heat exchanger, the coolant pump, and the oil heater; a first valve assembly interposed within the first set of fluid conduits and operable to regulate coolant fluid flow between the coolant pump and the electronic heat exchanger; and a second valve assembly interposed within the third set of fluid conduits and operable to regulate coolant fluid flow, individually and jointly, between the engine block, the cylinder head, the exhaust manifold, the electronic heat exchanger, the coolant pump, and the oil heater, wherein the third set of fluid conduits includes three discrete fluid lines configured to individually connect the engine block, the cylinder head, and the exhaust manifold to respective inlet ports of the second valve assembly, and three discrete fluid lines configured to individually connect the electronic heat exchanger, the coolant pump, and the oil heater to respective outlet ports of the second valve assembly.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4) The present disclosure is amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, and some representative embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail herein. It should be understood, however, that the novel aspects of this disclosure are not limited to the particular forms illustrated in the appended drawings. Rather, the disclosure is to cover all modifications, equivalents, combinations, subcombinations, permutations, groupings, and alternatives falling within the scope of this disclosure as defined by the appended claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5) This disclosure is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms. There are shown in the drawings and will herein be described in detail representative embodiments of the disclosure with the understanding that these illustrated examples are to be considered an exemplification of the disclosed principles and do not limit the broad aspects of the disclosure to the representative embodiments. To that extent, elements and limitations that are disclosed, for example, in the Abstract, Summary, and Detailed Description sections, but not explicitly set forth in the claims, should not be incorporated into the claims, singly or collectively, by implication, inference or otherwise. For purposes of the present detailed description, unless specifically disclaimed: the singular includes the plural and vice versa; the words and and or shall be both conjunctive and disjunctive; the word all means any and all; the word any means any and all; and the words including and comprising and having and synonyms thereof mean including without limitation. Moreover, words of approximation, such as about, almost, substantially, approximately, and the like, may be used herein in the sense of at, near, or nearly at, or within 3-5% of, or within acceptable manufacturing tolerances, or any logical combination thereof, for example.
(6) Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numbers refer to like features throughout the several views, there is shown in
(7) There is shown in
(8) An air intake system transmits intake air to the cylinders 15 through an intake manifold 29, which directs and distributes air into the combustion chambers 17, e.g., via intake runners of the cylinder head 25. The engine's air intake system has airflow ductwork and various electronic devices for monitoring and controlling the flow of intake air. The air intake devices may include, as a non-limiting example, a mass airflow sensor 32 for monitoring mass airflow (MAF) 33 and intake air temperature (IAT) 35. A throttle valve 34 controls airflow to the ICE assembly 12 in response to a control signal (ETC) 120 from a programmable engine control unit (ECU) 5. A pressure sensor 36 operatively coupled to the intake manifold 29 monitors, for instance, manifold absolute pressure (MAP) 37 and, if desired, barometric pressure. An optional external flow passage recirculates metered quantities of exhaust gas from engine exhaust to the intake manifold 29, e.g., via a control valve in the nature of an exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) valve 38. The programmable ECU 5 controls mass flow of exhaust gas to the intake manifold 29 by regulating the opening and closing of the EGR valve 38 via EGR command 139. In
(9) Airflow from the intake manifold 29 into each combustion chamber 17 is controlled by one or more dedicated engine intake valves 20. Evacuation of exhaust gases and other combustion byproducts from the combustion chamber 17 to an exhaust aftertreatment system 55 via an exhaust manifold 39 is controlled by one or more dedicated engine exhaust valves 18. In accord with at least some of the disclosed embodiments, exhaust aftertreatment system 55 includes an EGR system and/or a selective catalytic reduction (SCR) system. The engine valves 18, 20 are illustrated herein as spring-biased poppet valves; however, other known types of engine valves may be employed. The ICE assembly 12 valve train system is equipped to control and adjust the opening and closing of the intake and exhaust valves 20, 18. According to one example, the activation of the intake and exhaust valves 20, 18 may be respectively modulated by controlling intake and exhaust variable cam phasing/variable lift control (VCP/VLC) devices 22 and 24. These two VCP/VLC devices 22, 24 are configured to control and operate an intake camshaft 21 and an exhaust camshaft 23, respectively. Rotation of these intake and exhaust camshafts 21 and 23 are linked and/or indexed to rotation of the crankshaft 11, thus linking openings and closings of the intake and exhaust valves 20, 18 to positions of the crankshaft 11 and the pistons 16.
(10) The intake VCP/VLC device 22 may be fabricated with a mechanism operative to switch and control valve lift of the intake valve(s) 20 in response to a valve lift control signal (iVLC) 125, and variably adjust and control phasing of the intake camshaft 21 for each cylinder 15 in response to a variable cam phasing control signal (iVCP) 126. In the same vein, the exhaust VCP/VLC device 24 may include a mechanism operative to variably switch and control valve lift of the exhaust valve(s) 18 in response to a valve lift control signal (eVLC) 123, and variably adjust and control phasing of the exhaust camshaft 23 for each cylinder 15 in response to a control signal (eVCP) 124. The VCP/VLC devices 22, 24 may be actuated using any one of electro-hydraulic, hydraulic, electro-mechanic, and electric control force, in response to respective control signals eVLC 123, eVCP 124, iVLC 125, and iVCP 126, for example.
(11) With continuing reference to the representative configuration of
(12) The ICE assembly 12 is equipped with various sensing devices for monitoring engine operation, including a crank sensor 42 having an output indicative of, e.g., crankshaft crank angle, torque and/or speed (RPM) signal 43. A temperature sensor 44 is operable to monitor, for example, one or more engine-related temperatures (e.g., coolant fluid temperature, fuel temperature, exhaust temperature, etc.), and output a signal 45 indicative thereof. An in-cylinder combustion sensor 30 monitors combustion-related variables, such as in-cylinder combustion pressure, charge temperature, fuel mass, air-to-fuel ratio, etc., and output a signal 31 indicative thereof. An exhaust gas sensor 40 is configured to monitor an exhaust-gas related variables, e.g., actual air/fuel ratio (AFR), burned gas fraction, exhaust temperature, etc., and output a signal 41 indicative thereof.
(13) The combustion pressure and the crankshaft speed may be monitored by the ECU 5, for example, to determine combustion timing, i.e., timing of combustion pressure relative to the crank angle of the crankshaft 11 for each cylinder 15 for each working combustion cycle. It should be appreciated that combustion timing may be determined by other methods. Combustion pressure may be monitored by the ECU 5 to determine an indicated mean effective pressure (IMEP) for each cylinder 15 for each working combustion cycle. The ICE assembly 12 and ECU 5 cooperatively monitor and determine states of IMEP for each of the engine cylinders 15 during each cylinder firing event. Alternatively, other sensing devices, arrangements, and systems may be used to monitor states of other parameters within the scope of the disclosure, e.g., ion-sense ignition systems, EGR fractions, and non-intrusive cylinder pressure sensors.
(14) Control module, module, controller, control unit, electronic control unit, processor, and any permutations thereof may be defined to mean any one or various combinations of one or more of logic circuits, Application Specific Integrated Circuit(s) (ASIC), electronic circuit(s), central processing unit(s) (e.g., microprocessor(s)), and associated memory and storage (e.g., read only, programmable read only, random access, hard drive, tangible, etc.), whether resident, remote or a combination of both, executing one or more software or firmware programs or routines, combinational logic circuit(s), input/output circuit(s) and devices, appropriate signal conditioning and buffer circuitry, and other components to provide the described functionality. Software, firmware, programs, instructions, routines, code, algorithms and similar terms may be defined to mean any controller executable instruction sets including calibrations and look-up tables. The ECU may be designed with a set of control routines executed to provide the desired functions. Control routines are executed, such as by a central processing unit, and are operable to monitor inputs from sensing devices and other networked control modules, and execute control and diagnostic routines to control operation of devices and actuators. Routines may be executed at in real-time, continuously, systematically, sporadically and/or at regular intervals, for example, each 100 microseconds, 3.125, 6.25, 12.5, 25 and 100 milliseconds, etc., during ongoing engine and vehicle operation. Alternatively, routines may be executed in response to occurrence of an event.
(15) Turning next to
(16) Similar to the cylinder head 25 of
(17)
(18) ATM system 200 of
(19) With continuing reference to
(20) A second set of fluid conduits 260 fluidly connects the coolant pump 232 to constituent parts of the engine assembly 212, including individual segments for the engine block 220, cylinder head 222, exhaust manifold 224 and turbocharger 226. This set of conduits 260 includes a main line 265 and four discrete lines 261-264 whereby select portions of coolant fluid from the radiator 230 and pump 232 are transmitted to individual sections of the engine 212. Following
(21) The ATM system 200 is also equipped with a third set of fluid conduits, designated generally as 270 in
(22) A pair of coolant flow control valves 242, 244 are communicatively connected to the vehicle controller 205, and selectively positionable in response to control signals received from the controller 205 to direct coolant flow through the individual lines of the coolant flow loops. While it is envisioned that these valves can take on any relevant form of electronically controlled fluid valve apparatus, the representative ATM system 200 architecture portrayed in
(23) Continuing with the above example, second coolant flow control valve 244 of
(24) MRV assembly 242 of
(25) Referring next to
(26) Similar to ATM system 200, the ATM system 300 of
(27) Aspects of the present disclosure have been described in detail with reference to the illustrated embodiments; those skilled in the art will recognize, however, that many modifications may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. The present disclosure is not limited to the precise construction and compositions disclosed herein; any and all modifications, changes, and variations apparent from the foregoing descriptions are within the scope of the disclosure as defined by the appended claims. Moreover, the present concepts expressly include any and all combinations and subcombinations of the preceding elements and features.