OIL SENSOR SYSTEM
20180281708 ยท 2018-10-04
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60R16/0234
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01K2205/00
PHYSICS
G08B21/182
PHYSICS
International classification
B60R16/023
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01F23/24
PHYSICS
Abstract
A device to detect engine oil level and temperature. The device comprises: a thermistor; an unregulated, or voltage-only regulated, power supply configured to provide a non-continuous high current to the thermistor for a predetermined time in order to induce self-heating of the thermistor. An ADC (Analog-Digital Converter) configured to read a voltage across the thermistor before and after the heating of the thermistor. A processor is configured to calculate a change in temperature of the thermistor on the basis of a change in voltage measured by the ADC, and, thereby, deduce an engine oil level and temperature.
Claims
1. An engine oil and temperature detection controller comprising: a voltage-only regulated power supply configured to provide a non-continuous high current to a thermistor for a predetermined time to induce self-heating of the thermistor; an Analogue to Digital converter (ADC) configured to measure voltage across the thermistor before and after heating the thermistor; and a processor configured to, in response to a change in temperature of the thermistor calculated from a change in voltage, deduce an oil level and a temperature.
2. The engine oil and temperature detection device of claim 1 further comprising a storage device configured to store a range of operating parameters for the oil.
3. The engine oil and temperature detection device of claim 2 further comprising an alarm system configured to trigger an alarm when the oil level and/or temperature are outside of the range of the operating parameters.
4. The engine oil and temperature detection device of claim 1 further comprising a voltage divider configured to separate the thermistor from the ADC.
5. The engine oil and temperature detection device of claim 1 further comprising a control switch to provide a fixed burst of energy to the thermistor for a predetermined period of non-continuous operation.
6. The engine oil and temperature detection device of claim 5, wherein the control switch is a p-channel metal-oxide semiconductor (PMOS).
7. The engine oil and temperature detection device of claim 5 further comprising a resistor connected in series with the control switch to limit current through the control switch to protect the control switch from a short to ground fault.
8. The engine oil and temperature detection device of claim 1, wherein the processor is further configured to provide a reference voltage to regulate the power supply.
9. A vehicle comprising: an unregulated power supply configured to provide a non-continuous, high current to a thermistor for a predetermined time to induce self-heating of the thermistor; an Analogue to Digital converter (ADC) configured to measure voltage across the thermistor before and after heating the thermistor; a processor configured to, in response to a change in temperature of the thermistor calculated from a change in voltage, deduce an oil level and temperature; a storage device configured to store a range of operating parameters for the oil; and an alarm configured to trigger when the oil level and temperature are outside the range.
10. The vehicle of claim 9 further comprising a voltage divider configured to separate the thermistor from the ADC.
11. The vehicle of claim 9 further comprising a control switch to provide a fixed burst of energy to the thermistor for a predetermined period of non-continuous operation.
12. The vehicle of claim 11, wherein the control switch is a p-channel metal-oxide semiconductor (PMOS).
13. The vehicle of claim 12 further comprising a resistor connected in series with the control switch to limit current through the control switch to protect the control switch from a short to ground fault.
14. The vehicle of claim 9, wherein the processor is further configured to store a reference voltage to regulate the power supply.
15. An engine oil control system comprising: a controller configured to deduce an oil level and temperature, in response to a temperature change of a thermistor during a period of self-heating induced by an unregulated power supply that provides a non-continuous, high current for a predetermined period of time, calculated from a voltage change measured, via an Analogue to Digital converter (ADC), across the thermistor before and after the predetermined period.
16. The engine oil control system of claim 15 further comprising a voltage divider configured to separate the thermistor from the ADC.
17. The engine oil control system of claim 15 further comprising a switch to provide a fixed burst of energy to the thermistor for a predetermined period of non-continuous operation.
18. The engine oil control system of claim 17, wherein the switch is a p-channel metal-oxide semiconductor (PMOS).
19. The engine oil control system of claim 18 further comprising a resistor connected in series with the switch to limit current through the switch to protect the switch from a short to ground fault.
20. The engine oil control system of claim 15, wherein the controller is further configured to store a reference voltage to regulate the power supply.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0025] As required, detailed embodiments of the present disclosure are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the disclosure 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 disclosure.
[0026] Like reference numerals have been used throughout the figures where common elements exist in different embodiments.
[0027] There are various common features, present in all embodiments. A device 10 is initiated using a switch 12 and comprises a thermistor 20, a power supply 30, an Analogue to Digital (ADC) converter 40 and voltage divider 44, 45, a processor (MCU) 50. The processor, or microcontroller 50 and the ADC 40 may be packaged together as indicated by the enclosing dashed line. These are 5V devices.
[0028] The thermistor 20 is a temperature-dependent resistance, which is positioned in a location that should, under normal operating conditions, be submerged in oil. The thermistor 20 has an exponential resistance function with temperature. As a result, within an automotive application, where temperatures may range from a cold start 40 C. to an engine operating temperature in the region of 150 C., the resistance may range from 800 k at 40 C. to 530 at 150 C.
[0029] The power supply 30 is a battery that is of known, but uncontrolled voltage, V.sub.BAT, which may typically be a 12V supply. The use of a battery without current stabilization provides a considerable simplification on systems typically deployed. This power supply does not constitute a regulated current source as it lacks the required stabilization. The voltage is known, but is not necessarily constant.
[0030] The device 10 is activated using a switch 12 which, when activated, enables the power supply 30 to provide a short burst of power comprising a predetermined quantum of energy. The switch 12 is a PMOS in the illustrated embodiments. However, it will be understood that any suitable control switch could be substituted. When the device 10 is activated, current from the battery 30, V.sub.BAT is provided to the thermistor 20 through either resistor R1 or R2, and the ADC 40 reads the voltage across the thermistor 20. The resistance of the thermistor 20 is dependent on the temperature and therefore a measurement effectively provides a reading of the temperature of the thermistor 20.
[0031] The ADC 40 converts an analogue response of the thermistor 20 to provide a digital output indicative of a change in resistance of the thermistor 20 as a result of the self-heating induced by the provision of power from the power supply 30.
[0032] The processor or microcontroller unit (MCU) 50 then translates a digital response from the ADC 40 into oil temperature and level information. The MCU 50 also includes a memory, which store predetermined acceptable ranges for the oil level and temperature. If the MCU 50 determines that the oil temperature or oil level is outside the predetermined acceptable range, the MCU 50 provides this determination to an alert system. The alert system may provide an audible alarm to notify a driver or the alert may take the form of a visual warning, which may be displayed on a dashboard, on an infotainment system.
[0033] The ADC 40 is able to measure an unregulated voltage using a voltage divider comprising a resistor R4, 44 and R5, 45. In the illustrated embodiments R4, 44 is 16 k and R5, 45 is 4 k thereby providing a 4:1 ratio between resistors R4, 44 and R5, 45. This exact ratio is not required. Instead, the resistors R4, 44 and R5, 45 should permit the unregulated supply voltage to be reduced to a voltage level compatible with an ADC range that would commonly be 0-5V. Commonly this would be ratios in a region of 4:1. A provision of the voltage divider enables voltage of the power source 30 to be measured. The ability to measure voltage of the power source 30 obviates a need for voltage to be fixed and known as it can be measured dynamically.
[0034] In the embodiments illustrated in
[0035] In the embodiments illustrated in
[0036] When only one resistor, selected from between R1, 41 and R2, 42, is present, a resistance of that resistor R1, 41, R2, 42 is selected to ensure that voltage across the thermistor 20 remains within the 0-5V operational envelope of the ADC 40 and MCU 50 for all reasonable temperature values of the oil.
[0037] As illustrated in the embodiments shown in
[0038] An example of a heating duration could be as follows: If 10 mJ is to be delivered to the thermistor 20, which is at 1 C. and therefore 100 k, when the switch 12 is closed to activate the device 10, V.sub.BAT of 12V flows, providing a current of 120 A and a power of 1.44 mW. This therefore requires 7 s of heating to provide the 10 mJ.
[0039] If the thermistor 20 is at 100 C. and therefore 2.08 k, a current of 4.65 mA and a power of 45 mW is provided. The heating time is therefore 0.22 s.
[0040] The embodiment illustrated in
[0041] The embodiment illustrated in
[0042] The embodiment illustrated in
[0043] The embodiment illustrated in
[0044] The embodiment illustrated in
[0045] The embodiment illustrated in
[0046] The embodiment illustrated in
[0047] It will further be appreciated by those skilled in the art that although the disclosure has been described by way of example with reference to several embodiments it is not limited to the disclosed embodiments and that alternative embodiments could be constructed without departing from the scope of the disclosure as defined in the appended claims.
[0048] While exemplary embodiments are described above, it is not intended that these embodiments describe all possible forms of the disclosure. 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 disclosure. Additionally, the features of various implementing embodiments may be combined to form further embodiments of the disclosure.