Turbocharger device
10006348 ยท 2018-06-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02D41/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B37/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B39/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B2039/168
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/0007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T10/40
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
F02B2037/125
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B37/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/1446
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02T10/12
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
International classification
F02D23/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B37/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B37/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02D41/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A turbocharger device includes: a turbocharger (3); and a turbo controller (35) configured to control a waste-gate valve (31) or a variable-displacement mechanism of an exhaust-gas amount supplied to the turbine to control a boost pressure of the turbocharger, the turbo controller (35) including a control calculation part (44) and a sensor signal input part (45) provided separately and independently from an engine controller (33) and being mounted to a compressor housing at a side of the compressor (23b) of the turbocharger (3).
Claims
1. A turbocharger device, comprising: a turbocharger including a turbine rotated by exhaust gas from an engine and a compressor driven to rotate by the turbine to supercharge intake air to the engine; and a turbo controller configured to control at least one of a waste-gate valve and a variable-displacement mechanism of an exhaust-gas amount supplied to the turbine to control a boost pressure of the turbocharger, wherein the turbo controller includes a control calculation part and a sensor signal input part provided separately and independently from an engine controller for controlling operation of the engine and is mounted on a compressor housing at a side of the compressor of the turbocharger, wherein the turbo controller further comprises an operational history recording part configured to record operational history information of the turbocharger, and a lifetime estimation unit configured to estimate a lifetime of the turbocharger based on the operational history information including at least one of a rotation speed of a rotation shaft of the turbocharger, a boost pressure of the compressor, and a temperature of exhaust gas flowing into the turbine, inputted from the sensor signal input part and recorded by the operational history recording part.
2. The turbocharger according to claim 1, wherein the lifetime estimation unit comprises: a cumulative-time calculation part configured to calculate a cumulative time of each rotation speed based on an average rotation speed or a maximum rotation speed of the rotation shaft of the turbocharger in a periodic interval, and a lifetime determination part configured to determine the lifetime by comparing the cumulative time with a preset reference cumulative time.
3. The turbocharger device according to claim 1, wherein the lifetime estimation unit comprises: a surge-margin calculation part configured to calculate a surge margin based on the boost pressure of the compressor, the surge margin representing a margin of the boost pressure with respect to occurrence of surging of the compressor; and a lifetime determination part configured to determine the lifetime by comparing the surge margin with a preset reference surge margin.
4. The turbocharger device according to claim 1, wherein the lifetime estimation unit comprises: a rotation-speed margin calculation part configured to calculate a rotation-speed margin based on the rotation speed of the rotation shaft of the turbocharger, the rotation-speed margin representing a margin with respect to a tolerance rotation speed at which over rotation occurs; and a lifetime determination part configured to determine the lifetime by comparing the rotation-speed margin with a preset reference rotation-speed margin.
5. The turbocharger device according to claim 1, wherein the lifetime estimation unit comprises: an exhaust-temperature margin calculation part configured to calculate an exhaust-temperature margin based on the temperature of the exhaust gas flowing into the turbine, the exhaust-temperature margin representing a margin with respect to a tolerance exhaust temperature at which over heating occurs; and a lifetime determination part configured to determine the lifetime by comparing the exhaust-temperature margin with a preset reference exhaust-temperature margin.
6. The turbocharger according to claim 1, wherein the lifetime estimation unit comprises a lifetime determination part configured to determine the lifetime based on a rotation speed which has a rotation-speed extreme value in a rotation-speed fluctuation of the turbocharger and an occurrence number of the rotation-speed extreme value.
7. The turbocharger according to claim 6, wherein the lifetime estimation unit comprises a rotation-speed extreme-value determination part configured to determine the rotation-speed extreme value, a stress calculation part configured to calculate a stress amplitude from the rotation speed of the rotation-speed extreme value, a repetition-number calculation part configured to calculate a repetition number based on an S-N chart of fatigue strength of blades of an impeller of the compressor or the turbine from the stress amplitude, a damage-factor calculation part configured to calculate a damage factor from the rotation speed of the rotation-speed extreme value, and a damage-factor accumulation part configured to accumulate the damage factor as many time as the repetition number to calculate a damage-factor cumulative value, and wherein the lifetime determination part is configured to determine the lifetime by comparing the damage-factor cumulative value calculated by the damage-factor accumulation part with a preset damage-factor reference cumulative value.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(16) Embodiments of the present invention will now be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. It is intended, however, that unless particularly specified, dimensions, materials, shapes, relative positions and the like of components described in the embodiments shall be interpreted as illustrative only and not limitative of the scope of the present invention.
First Embodiment
(17)
(18) Further, the engine 3 includes an exhaust turbocharger (turbocharger) 23, the turbocharger 23 including a turbine 23a rotated by exhaust gas from the engine 3 and a compressor 23b driven to rotate by the turbine 23a to supercharge intake air to the engine 3. Air flows into the compressor 23b via an air cleaner 25.
(19) An exhaust channel 27 connecting the engine 3 and the turbine 23a of the turbocharger 23 branches midway to form a branch channel 29. A waste-gate valve 31 is disposed in the branch channel 29, and the branch channel 29 bypasses the turbine 23a to be in communication with a downstream exhaust channel.
(20) As illustrated in
(21) Further, the turbocharger 23 is configured such that the boost pressure of the turbocharger 23 is controlled by controlling the operation of an actuator 31a for opening and closing the waste-gate valve 31 in response to signals from a turbo controller (turbo ECU) 35.
(22) As illustrated in
(23) Further, as illustrated in
(24) As described above, the turbo ECU 35 includes the control calculation part 44 and the sensor signal input part 45 provided separately and independently from the engine ECU 33, as well as the operational history recording part 47 which records operational-history information of the turbocharger 23, and is mounted to the compressor housing at the side of the compressor 23b of the turbocharger 23. Thus, the control calculation part 44 and the sensor signal input part 45 are less likely to be affected by heat of exhaust gas, and there is less influence from heat.
(25) Further, when the turbocharger 23 is to be replaced, it is possible to recover the turbo ECU 35 easily at the same time. Accordingly, it is possible to facilitate acquisition of the operational history information, and analyze the operational information to easily determine the cause of malfunction or the like and reflect the determination result in future development.
(26)
(27) Further, information on the state amount, such as the engine rotation speed and the fuel injection amount, and a target-boost-pressure control signal are transmitted from the engine ECU 33 to the turbo ECU 35 through a communication line at a predetermined communication cycle. From the turbo ECU 35, an alarm signal or the like of a result determining that the lifetime has expired is transmitted back to the engine ECU 33 as a result of the lifetime estimation described below.
(28) The control calculation part 44 of the turbo ECU 35 controls an actuator of the turbocharger 23, for example, the actuator 31a for opening and closing the waste-gate valve 31, so as to achieve a target boost pressure on the basis of the target-boost-pressure control signal from the engine ECU 33 and various sensor signals from the turbocharger 23.
(29)
(30) Next, with reference to
(31) Firstly, in step S1 of
(32) Then, in step S2, at the time of t2, the operational history recording part 47 records operational history data, such as the rotation speed, the exhaust temperature, and the boost pressure, between t1 and t2. Similarly, data between t2 and t3 is recorded at t3, and data between t3 and t4 is recorded at t4.
(33) Then, in step S3, lifetime is calculated on the basis of the operational history data recorded in each period between the regular intervals, and in step S4, the calculated lifetime is compared with a lifetime reference value. If the calculated lifetime is greater than the lifetime reference value, it is determined that the lifetime has expired, and in step S5, an alarm is outputted to the engine ECU 33.
(34) The range A, from steps S3 to S5, of the flowchart in
(35) A cumulative-time calculation part 50 is provided, which calculates a cumulative time as a cumulative value of the time between the regular intervals of sampling. The cumulative time is as illustrated in
(36) Next, in step S22, with a cumulative time at which the lifetime expires having been calculated for each rotation speed in advance as a reference cumulative time by a test or simulation calculation, it is determined whether the lifetime has expired by comparing the reference cumulative time with an actual cumulative time corresponding to each rotation speed calculated by the cumulative time calculation part. For instance, a stress amplitude may be calculated from each rotation speed and a damage factor derived using an S-N chart may be accumulated, thereby determining that the lifetime has expired if the damage factor exceeds 1. An alarm may be issued if a criteria, which is a product of the damage factor and a safety rate, is exceeded.
(37) Then, in step S23, an alarm is outputted if it is determined that the lifetime has expired. As described above, it is possible to determine the lifetime readily by comparing the cumulative time with respect to the rotation speed with the preset reference cumulative time.
(38) Further, by informing the expiration of the lifetime, replacement of the turbocharger is prompted. Thus, the cost can be reduced as compared to a high-spec turbocharger which is not designed to be replaceable.
Second Embodiment
(39) Next, with reference to
(40) First, in step S31, the lifetime estimation unit 53 of the second embodiment calculates a surge margin on the basis of the average boost pressure or the maximum boost pressure in the period between the regular intervals. A turbocharger deteriorates in performance with the operating time, and an actual allowance (surge margin) of a supply-air pressure with respect to a surge pressure at which surging occurs determined on the basis of the performance characteristics of an unused compressor decreases as compared to that in an unused state.
(41) Thus, the surge margin is calculated and the lifetime is determined using the value of the surge margin as an index. Specifically, the surge margin is calculated as a difference between the surge pressure and the actual boost pressure with respect to the actual boost pressure.
(42) Next, in step S32, the calculated surge margin is compared to a preset reference surge margin, and it is determined whether the difference is not greater than a tolerance. If the difference is not greater than the tolerance, it is determined that deterioration has progressed. Then, in step S33, the same determination is performed again, and it is determined whether the surge margin is not greater than a reference surge margin in two successive periods of regular intervals. If the same determination is obtained successively, the process proceeds to step S40, and an alarm is outputted.
(43) Further, similar determination is performed on a rotation-speed margin in steps S34 to S36. First, in step S34, the rotation-speed margin is calculated on the basis of the average rotation speed or the maximum rotation speed in the period between regular intervals.
(44) Similarly to the above surge margin, the turbocharger deteriorates in performance with the operating time, and in particular, the characteristic performance of the waste-gate valve and the variable nozzle mechanism, in the case of a variable-displacement type turbocharger, may decrease, thus resulting in insufficient control on the amount of exhaust gas flowing into the turbine and over rotation. Thus, the rotation-speed margin, which is a margin of the actual rotation speed with respect to a tolerance over rotation, is calculated and the lifetime is determined using the value of the rotation margin as an index.
(45) Specifically, the rotation-speed margin is calculated as a difference between the tolerance rotation speed and the actual rotation speed with respect to the actual rotation speed.
(46) Next, in step S35, the calculated rotation-speed margin is compared to a preset reference surge margin, and it is determined whether the difference is not greater than a tolerance. If the difference is not greater than the tolerance, it is determined that deterioration has progressed. Then, in step S36, the same determination is performed again, and it is determined whether the rotation-speed margin is not greater than a reference rotation-speed margin in two successive periods at regular intervals. If the same determination is obtained successively, the process proceeds to step S40, and an alarm is outputted.
(47) Further, similar determination is performed on an exhaust-temperature margin in steps S37 to S39. First, in step S37, an exhaust-temperature margin is calculated on the basis of the average exhaust temperature or the maximum exhaust temperature in the period between regular intervals.
(48) Similarly to the above surge margin and the rotation-speed margin, the turbocharger deteriorates in performance with the operating time, and in particular, the characteristic performance of the waste-gate valve and the variable nozzle mechanism, in the case of a variable-displacement type turbocharger, may decrease, thereby resulting in insufficient control on the amount of exhaust gas flowing into the turbine to bring about over rotation, which may lead to an abnormal increase in the exhaust temperature. Thus, the exhaust-temperature margin, which is a margin of the actual exhaust temperature with respect to a tolerance exhaust temperature, is calculated and the lifetime is determined using the value of the exhaust-temperature margin as an index.
(49) Specifically, the exhaust-temperature margin is calculated as a difference between the tolerance exhaust temperature and the actual exhaust-temperature with respect to the actual exhaust temperature.
(50) Next, in step S38, the calculated exhaust-temperature margin is compared to a preset reference exhaust-temperature margin, and it is determined whether the difference is not greater than a tolerance. If the difference is not greater than the tolerance, it is determined that deterioration has progressed. Then, in step S39, the same determination is performed again, and it is determined whether the exhaust-temperature margin is not greater than a reference exhaust-temperature margin in two successive periods at regular intervals. If the same determination is obtained successively, the process proceeds to step S40, and an alarm is outputted.
(51) As described above, if at least one of the surge margin, the rotation-speed margin, or the exhaust-temperature margin becomes not greater than a tolerance successively, it is determined that the turbocharger 23 has reached the end of its lifetime. Thus, it is possible to determine the deteriorated state and also the lifetime accurately. The above three margin determinations may be performed in combination, in case of which the accuracy of the lifetime determination can be improved even further.
(52) As illustrated in
Third Embodiment
(53) Next, with reference to
(54) In the third embodiment, the determination of the lifetime estimation unit 54 is not based on the boost pressure, the rotation speed, the exhaust temperature, or the like in a period between regular intervals, unlike the first and second embodiments, but on information on occurrence number of an extreme value of the rotation-speed fluctuation of the turbocharger 23 and the corresponding rotation speed, the information being recorded throughout the entire operating period.
(55) As illustrated in
(56) In the flowchart of
(57) Next, in step S43, the stress amplitude is calculated from the rotation speed N. At this time, the stress amplitude is calculated using a relationship of N.sub.i.sup.2N.sub.i+1.sup.2. In a more complicated operation mode, the Rain-flow method may be used, for instance, to calculate the stress amplitude .
(58) In step S44, a S-N chart on the fatigue strength is used to calculate the repetition number n from the S-N chart. The steps S43, 44 are illustrated in
(59) Further, the stress amplitude is calculated by the stress calculation part 56, and the repetition number is calculated by the repetition-number calculation part 57 on the basis of the S-N chart.
(60) Next, the damage factor is calculated in step S45, and accumulated in step S46. The damage factor is defined by an expression of Df.sub.i=1/N.sub.i, and the damage factor cumulative Df is calculated by an expression of Df=Df.sub.i+Df.sub.i+1+Df.sub.i+2+ . . . Df.sub.n.
(61) Next, in step S47, the damage-factor cumulative value and the preset damage-factor reference cumulative value (1safety rate) are compared to each other to determine the lifetime. Specifically, a comparison expression of Df<(1safety rate) is used in determination. Further, the lifetime is determined on the basis of this relational expression.
(62) In step S47, if the damage-factor cumulative value is less than a damage-factor reference cumulative value, the process returns to step S42 and repeats from calculation of the extreme value. If the damage factor-cumulative value is not less than the damage-factor reference cumulative value, the process proceeds to step S48 and an alarm is outputted.
(63) As described above, in the third embodiment, the lifetime estimation unit 54 specifically includes the rotation-speed extreme value determination part 55, the stress-calculation part 56, the repetition-number calculation part 57, the damage-factor calculation part 58, the damage-factor accumulation part 59, and the lifetime determination part 60 to estimate a lifetime on the basis of a rotation speed which has rotation-speed extreme values in the rotation fluctuation and the occurrence number of the rotation extreme values. As a result, it is possible to determine the lifetime accurately on the basis of the fatigue strength of the blades of the impeller of the compressor 23b or the turbine 23a of the turbocharger 23.
(64) In step S44, to calculate the repetition number n using the S-N chart related to the fatigue strength, two S-N charts may be provided, one for the blade material of the compressor 23b and another for the blade material of the turbine 23a, and the lifetime may be predicted using both of the two S-N charts, and the lifetime estimation may be performed on both of the compressor 23b and the turbine 23a. In this case, the lifetime is predicted for both of the compressor 23b and the turbine 23a, which makes it possible to improve the accuracy even further. Moreover, if the weaker one is known from the design in advance, only the weaker one may be monitored for the determination. In this case, accurate determination can be performed efficiently.
Fourth Embodiment
(65) Next, with reference to
(66) As illustrated in
(67) Thus, similarly to the first embodiment, signals from various sensors are inputted into the sensor signal input part of the turbo ECU 35. The control calculation part 44 of the turbo ECU 35 controls an actuator 63a for opening and closing guide vanes of the variable nozzle mechanism 63 so as to achieve the target boost pressure on the basis of the target-boost-pressure control signal from the engine ECU 33 and various sensor signals from the variable-displacement type turbocharger 61.
(68) The variable nozzle mechanism 63 is disposed in the casing of the variable-displacement type turbocharger 61. Thus, in the present embodiment, it is not necessary to provide a bypass channel which is required in the first embodiment in which the waste-gate valve 31 is provided. As a result, it is possible to simplify the turbocharger device.
(69) For the rest, regarding to the process of lifetime determination, the first to third embodiments are applied and the present embodiment has the same functional effects as the first embodiment.
(70) Further, whereas the actuator 63a for opening and closing the variable nozzle mechanism 63 is controlled in the above description instead of controlling the actuator 31a of the waste-gate valve 31, it will be understood that the turbocharger device may include both of the waste-gate valve 31 and the variable-displacement type turbocharger 61 and perform both controls individually.
Fifth Embodiment
(71) Next, with reference to
(72) As illustrated in
(73) At the intake side, air from an air cleaner 25 flows through the first compressor 71b to be introduced into the second compressor 73b at the downstream side of the first compressor 71b and an inter cooler 19 is disposed on the downstream side of the second compressor 73b. At the exhaust side, the second (high-pressure stage) turbine 73a is driven by exhaust-gas energy from the engine 3, and the exhaust gas flows downstream to drive the first (low-pressure stage) turbine 71a.
(74) The first waste-gate valve 75a is disposed in the first bypass channel 75 bypassing the first turbine 71a, and the second waste-gate valve 77a is disposed in the second bypass channel 77 bypassing the second turbine 73a.
(75) In the present embodiment, the first turbocharger 71 and the second turbocharger 73 are disposed in series in two stages, unlike the single stage turbocharger 23 in the first embodiment. Thus, it is possible to increase the boost pressure quickly and to improve the applicability of the present embodiment.
(76) Signals of the pressure sensors 41, 81, the temperature sensors 43, 79, and the turbo rotation-speed sensors 39, 83, are inputted to the first turbocharger 71 and the second turbocharger 73 of the turbo ECU 35, respectively, and the lifetime determination is performed on the first turbocharger 71 and the second turbocharger 73. Regarding the process of lifetime determination, the first to third embodiments are applied and the present embodiment has the same functional effects as the first to third embodiments.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
(77) According to the present invention, it is possible to estimate a lifetime of a turbocharger accurately, and if the lifetime expires, the turbocharger can be replaced along with a turbo controller (turbo ECU) having recorded data of the operational history of the turbocharger, which makes it possible to facilitate acquisition of the operational history information of the turbocharger and reduce the initial costs of the turbocharger. Thus, the present invention can be suitably applied to a turbocharger of a vehicle, a ship, and a fixed engine.
DESCRIPTION OF REFERENCE NUMERAL
(78) 1 Turbocharger device 3 Engine 23 Turbocharger 23a Turbine 23b Compressor 31 Waste-gate valve 31a Actuator 33 Engine ECU (Engine controller) 35, 51 Turbo ECU (Turbo controller) 39, 83 Turbo rotation speed-sensor 41, 81 Pressure sensor 43, 79 Temperature sensor 44 Control calculation part 45 Sensor signal input part 47 Operational history recording part 49, 53, 54 Lifetime estimation unit 50 Cumulative-time calculation part 55 Rotation-speed extreme value determination part 56 Stress-calculation part 57 Repetition-number calculation part 58 Damage-factor calculation part 59 Damage-factor accumulation part 60, 90 Lifetime determination part 63 Variable nozzle mechanism 63a Actuator 71 First turbocharger 73 Second turbocharger