Hybrid-vehicle variable-voltage traction motor drive
10236803 ยท 2019-03-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02P6/08
ELECTRICITY
Y02T10/72
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
B60L15/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L15/025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T10/64
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
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
B60L15/007
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L50/61
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L50/16
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
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
B60L3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L15/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02P6/08
ELECTRICITY
B60L15/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L15/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method is provided for controlling a traction motor for an electrified vehicle, wherein the motor is driven by a pulse-width modulated inverter. A drive command from a driver of the vehicle is converted into a demanded torque. A substantially fixed DC link voltage is maintained from a DC power source. An input voltage for supplying to the inverter is calculated that causes the motor to deliver the demanded torque at a transition point between a constant-torque region and a field-weakening region of torque production. The voltage from the DC link is converted to the determined input voltage at an input to the inverter. By lowering the voltage applied to the inverter, switching losses and harmonic losses are reduced.
Claims
1. A method of controlling a traction motor for an electrified vehicle, comprising the steps of: boosting a battery voltage to a fixed DC voltage with a boost converter; reducing the fixed DC voltage to a variable link voltage with a buck converter; driving an inverter receiving the variable link voltage with a variable duty cycle regulated to generate a desired torque from the motor; and adjusting the variable link voltage to regulate the duty cycle so that torque production tracks a transition point between a constant-torque region and a field-weakening region.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the vehicle includes a driver demand control, the method further comprising the steps of: monitoring the driver demand control to determine the desired torque; calculating a current flow in the motor that produces the desired torque; and calculating the variable link voltage as a minimum voltage that produces the calculated current.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein the minimum voltage is calculated in response to the calculated current and a rotational speed of the motor.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the step of adjusting the variable link voltage is comprised of: comparing the variable duty cycle to a target duty cycle; and adjusting the variable link voltage to reduce an error between the variable duty cycle and the target duty cycle.
5. A hybrid electric vehicle comprising: a generator; a traction motor; a DC power source; a DC link capacitor; a first inverter coupled between the generator and the DC link capacitor; a first DC-to-DC converter coupled between the DC power source and the DC link capacitor, wherein a substantially constant DC link voltage is provided across the DC link capacitor; a second DC-to-DC converter having an input coupled to the DC link capacitor for generating a variable DC voltage; a second inverter coupled between the second DC-to-DC converter and the traction motor, wherein the second inverter is switched with a pulse-width modulated (PWM) duty cycle that generates a target motor current corresponding to a desired motor torque; and a DC-DC controller adjusting the second DC-to-DC converter to generate the variable voltage at substantially a minimum value that allows the second inverter to generate the target motor current without field weakening in the motor.
6. The vehicle of claim 5 wherein the DC-DC controller comprises a proportional-integral controller comparing the variable voltage to the minimum value and reducing any error detected by the comparison by modifying a pulse-width modulated duty cycle of the second DC-to-DC converter.
7. The vehicle of claim 5 wherein the minimum value is determined by the DC-DC controller in response to a calculated current flow in the motor that produces the desired torque at a rotational speed of the motor.
8. The vehicle of claim 7 wherein the minimum value equals:
9. The vehicle of claim 5 wherein the minimum value is determined by the DC-DC controller by comparing the variable duty cycle to a target duty cycle, and adjusting the minimum value to reduce an error between the variable duty cycle and the target duty cycle.
10. The vehicle of claim 5 wherein the DC power source is comprised of a battery and a generator driven by an internal combustion engine.
11. The vehicle of claim 5 wherein the second DC-to-DC converter is comprised of a buck converter.
12. A hybrid electric vehicle comprising: a traction motor; an inverter driving the motor with a variable duty cycle to generate a target current producing a desired torque; a DC link receiving a DC voltage from a boost converter; and a DC buck converter converting the DC voltage to a variable DC voltage used by the inverter, the variable DC voltage having a minimum value that generates the target current without field weakening in the motor.
13. The vehicle of claim 12 wherein the inverter is switched with a pulse-width modulated (PWM) duty cycle that generates the target motor current corresponding to the desired torque, and wherein the vehicle further comprises: a controller adjusting the DC converter to generate the variable DC voltage at the minimum value that allows the inverter to generate the target motor current.
14. The vehicle of claim 13 wherein the controller comprises a proportional-integral controller comparing the variable DC voltage to the minimum value and reducing any error detected by the comparison by modifying a pulse-width modulated duty cycle of the DC converter.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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(8)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(9) Referring now to
(10) Electric drive system 18 includes a variable voltage converter 20 for converting the battery voltage to a desired bus voltage. The bus voltage is controllably switched (i.e., commutated) by an inverter 21 to drive motor 13. An inverter 22 is coupled between generator 17 and converter 20 so that AC power from generator 17 during engine speed control is inverted to DC power, which is further converted by converter 20 to an appropriate voltage for recharging battery 12. In order to control the transistor switches of converter 20 and inverters 21 and 22, electric drive system 18 includes a motor-generator control unit (MGCU) 25.
(11)
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(13) In the conventional topology with a fixed DC link voltage, base speed is constant. The field weakening region 33 is important for providing a full range of desired speeds. Pulse width modulation occurring in constant torque region 32 also introduces switching losses which are generally higher than the minimum obtainable (except when operating close to the base speed) since DC-link voltages are held higher than needed for this range of speed.
(14) The present invention reduces switching losses by decoupling the main DC link voltage from the traction inverter and instead providing an additional conversion to create a variable DC link voltage exclusively for the traction converter. In particular, the voltage to be input to the traction inverter is varied in a manner wherein the torque production tracks a transition point 34 between constant torque region 32 and field weakening region 33 (i.e., the input voltage is controlled to be a transition voltage corresponding to the transition point). In other words, the variable DC link voltage results in a variable base speed, and the effective base speed shifts by an amount that places the operating point of the motor at transition point 34.
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(17) PWM switching of traction inverter 41 is performed in a conventional manner by a motor controller 56 based on a measured stator current from a sensor 55. Measured stator current I.sub.s may be used by a torque calculator 57 to calculate an instantaneous motor torque, the value of which is coupled to one input of a summer 58. A desired torque is obtained from torque demand unit 60, which may include a driver input device, such as an accelerator pedal, and an engine control unit. Thus, a particular acceleration or deceleration indicated by the driver's action is used to determine how much torque should be delivered to the vehicle wheels. The calculated torque demand is coupled to another input of summer 58, and any difference between calculated instantaneous torque and the torque command is used in a duty cycle block 61 to update the duty cycle and/or operating frequency being used for switching inverter 41. A commutator 62 drives the inverter switches using the calculated duty cycle as known in the art.
(18) An instantaneous motor speed is obtained using a motor position sensor 66 and velocity determination circuit 67. A resulting calculated motor speed is input to a controller 65. A calculation unit 68 in controller 65 receives the motor speed and a target motor current I*.sub.s. The target current may be obtained from motor controller 56, for example. Controller 65 uses the demanded torque (expressed as a current) in order to calculate a minimum value for the variable inverter-input voltage which would allow inverter 41 and motor 40 to generate the desired torque without entering the flux weakening region. More specifically, unit 68 calculates a DC voltage that causes the torque production to track the transition point between the constant torque region and the field weakening region. The calculation may preferably implement the following formula:
(19)
wherein R.sub.s is resistance of the stator windings, L.sub.q is the quadrature-axis inductance, .sub.af is armature flux linkage due to rotor magnets, and I.sub.s is stator current as derived from the desired torque equation. The formula captures the various elements that contribute to the voltage requirements for the motor to achieve the desired stator current, and thus the desired torque. The most significant element is the flux linkage of the rotor magnets with the stator windings and the motor speed, as represented by .sub.r.sub.af. Thus, with more stator windings, stronger rotor magnets, or higher speed, then the higher the voltage needs to be. The motor inductance interacts with changing current, resulting in the contribution shown as dI.sub.s/dt.sup.L.sub.q. The inductance also reacts with stator current and rotor speed (.sub.rL.sub.qI.sub.s). Another voltage component comes from stator resistance and stator current (R.sub.sI.sub.s). The resulting voltage V.sub.dc is the minimum voltage requirement to obtain the desired torque. A higher voltage would lead to a reduction in the PWM duty cycle in order to avoid producing too much torque.
(20) In order to adjust the voltage from second DC-to-DC converter 48 (i.e., the input voltage for the traction inverter) to match the calculated minimum value, a comparator 70 compares the actual voltage across inverter 41 with the desired value as obtained from calculation unit 68. Comparator 70 provides the difference as an error signal to a feedforward/proportional-integral controller 71. The feedforward portion of controller 71 receives the main DC link voltage from the bus 43. Controller 71 uses known techniques to update a duty cycle for the switching of transistors 51 and 52 in order to adjust the DC voltage across link capacitor 50 to track calculated minimum V.sub.dc from calculation unit 68.
(21) The corresponding method is shown in
(22)
(23) A corresponding method is shown in