DUAL USAGE OF INDUCTOR CORE IN POWER SUPPLIES
20180201300 · 2018-07-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B62D5/043
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B62D5/0403
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
An electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism may include an electric motor and a control unit. The electric motor may be configured to provide a steering assist force. The control unit may be configured to control a current to the electric motor. Further, the control unit may include two redundant power supply units. Each of the two redundant power supply units may be connected to a vehicle battery. Also, the two power supply units may each comprise a primary winding and a secondary winding as part of a flyback transformer with a shared iron core. The shared magnetic core may be E-shaped with a middle leg and two side legs. The primary winding and the secondary winding of one of the two redundant power supply units may be wound around a first of the two side legs.
Claims
1.-7. (canceled)
8. An electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism comprising: an electric motor that provides a steering assist force; and a control unit that controls a current to the electric motor, the control unit including two redundant power supply units, wherein each of the two redundant power supply units is connected to a vehicle battery, wherein each of the two redundant power supply units comprises a primary winding and a secondary winding as part of a flyback transformer with a shared magnetic core.
9. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 8 wherein the shared magnetic core is E-shaped with a middle leg and two side legs, wherein the primary winding and the secondary winding of one of the two redundant power supply units are wound around a first of the two side legs.
10. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 9 wherein the middle leg is T-shaped.
11. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 8 wherein the shared magnetic core includes two air gaps forming two independent closed flux lines for each of the two redundant power supply units.
12. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 11 wherein the shared magnetic core is E-shaped with a middle leg and two side legs, wherein the two air gaps are formed between two ends of the two side legs and the middle leg.
13. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 12 wherein the middle leg is T-shaped.
14. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 11 wherein the shared magnetic core is E-shaped with a middle leg and two side legs, wherein the primary winding and the secondary winding of one of the two redundant power supply units are wound around a first of the two side legs, wherein the two air gaps are formed between two ends of the two side legs and the middle leg.
15. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 14 wherein the middle leg is T-shaped.
16. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 14 wherein the electric motor is a permanently excited electric motor with at least three phase windings.
17. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 8 wherein the electric motor is a permanently excited electric motor with at least three phase windings.
18. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 8 wherein each of the two redundant power supply units comprises: a flyback controller; a flyback driver circuit; a first closed-loop controller; and a motor driver.
19. The electromechanical motor vehicle power steering mechanism of claim 18 wherein each of the two redundant power supply units further comprises a second closed-loop controller.
Description
[0013] An exemplary embodiment of the present invention is described below with aid of the drawings. In all figures the same reference signs denote the same components or functionally similar components.
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017] In
[0018] The control unit 9 is illustrated in detail in
[0019] At specific intervals set by the flyback controller 17, 117, the primary winding 19, 119 of the flyback transformer 16 is driven by the flyback driver circuit 18, 118 from the battery 15, 115. The primary inductance causes the current to build up in a ramp. When the DC supply of the primary winding 19, 119 is shut off, the current in the primary winding 19, 119 collapses leaving the energy stored in the magnetic core 24 of the flyback controller 17, 117 and the stored energy is transferred to the closed-loop controller 21, 210 via the secondary winding 20, 200 supplying the closed-loop controller 22, 220 with power. The flyback transformer 16 is preferably operated in discontinuous mode; the energy stored in the magnetic core 24, which is in the example a ferrite core but could also be an iron core, is completely emptied from the core 24 during the flyback period. The cycle is then repeated. The interval connecting the primary winding 19, 119 to the supply of direct current is determined from various measured signals e.g. input voltage, output voltage, primary current.
[0020] The redundant power supply units A, B share the ferrite core 24 of the flyback transformer 16. To make them independent, each part needs its own air gap, where the energy for the given part is stored. This way there is negligible influence and disturbance between the power supply units using the same core 24.
[0021]
[0022] In event of fault, determined by a flyback controller 17, 117, the respective flyback driver circuit 18, 118 is continuously deactivated. Power will continue to flow via the redundant functional and error-free flyback driver circuit 18, 118. The independence between the two power supply units A, B is given by the decoupled side legs 28 of the shared ferrite core 24, eliminating energy coupling between the two redundant power supply units A, B.
[0023] According to the invention, the energy density of a magnetic core is used for multiple parts of the circuitry. To make them independent, each part has its own air gap, where the energy for the given part is stored. This way there is negligible influence and disturbance between the circuits using the same core. The magnetic core is preferably shared by two power supply units each supplying energy to an own controller, which is controlling the motor drivers signals to the electric motor.
[0024] The power inductor in a power supply is both expensive and large. The most costly part is the ferrite material and one of the biggest parts is the ferrite core. By sharing the magnetic core between the redundant power supply units, cost and space can be saved.
[0025] The present invention is not dependent on the specific design of the steering mechanism or limited to the number of controllers and number of transformer windings.