MONITORING THE FUNCTIONAL CAPABILITY OF ELECTRICAL BRAKE RESISTORS IN A VEHICLE
20240383337 ยท 2024-11-21
Inventors
- Lennart KILIAN (Gauting, DE)
- J?rgen Quindt (R?thenbach an der Pegnitz, DE)
- Frank Budzinski (Herzogenaurach, DE)
Cpc classification
B60L7/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L3/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B60L3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A vehicle, particularly a rail vehicle, includes at least one brake resistor assembly having electrical brake resistors which can receive electrical braking energy and convert the electrical braking energy into waste heat during braking operation of the vehicle. The brake resistors are divided into a first subgroup and a second subgroup, the first sub-group and the second sub-group are electrically connected in parallel, and an evaluating device monitors functional capability of the brake resistors on the basis of a measured variable indicating a differential current between a first subgroup current flowing through the first subgroup and a second subgroup current flowing through the second subgroup. A method for monitoring electrical braking resistors of a vehicle is also provided.
Claims
1-15. (canceled)
16. A vehicle or rail vehicle, comprising: at least one brake resistor assembly having electrical brake resistors for receiving electrical braking energy during a braking operation of the vehicle and for converting the electrical braking energy into waste heat; said brake resistors being divided into a first subgroup and a second subgroup; said first and second subgroups being electrically interconnected in parallel; and an evaluating facility monitoring a functional capability of said brake resistors based on a measured value indicating a differential current between a first subgroup current flowing through said first subgroup and a second subgroup current flowing through said second subgroup.
17. The vehicle according to claim 16, which further comprises: a summation current transformer through which the first and second subgroup currents are conducted with inverse current flow direction relative to one another; said summation current transformer generating the measured value indicating the differential current between the first and second subgroup currents and outputting the measured value to said evaluating facility.
18. The vehicle according to claim 16, wherein said first and second subgroups have resistance values of equal size.
19. The vehicle according to claim 18, wherein said brake resistors in said respective subgroups are connected in parallel, and said brake resistors have resistance values of equal size.
20. The vehicle according to claim 16, wherein said evaluating facility generates a deviation signal upon the measured value indicating that the differential current exceeds a predetermined base threshold value according to amount.
21. The vehicle according to claim 16, wherein: said evaluating facility monitors a progression of the differential current over time and in an event of differential current jumps detects a respective jump direction of the differential current jumps and generates a first counter reading and a second counter reading; the first counter reading indicates a number of jumps in one of two possible variation directions and thus a number of failed brake resistors in one of said first and second subgroups; and the second counter reading indicates a number of jumps in another of the two possible variation directions and thus a number of failed brake resistors in another of said first and second subgroups.
22. The vehicle according to claim 16, wherein said first and second subgroups have resistance values, said brake resistors have resistance values, the resistance value of said first subgroup is smaller by an additional resistance value than the resistance value of said second subgroup, and the additional resistance value is greater than the resistance value of each individual brake resistor of said first subgroup.
23. The vehicle according to claim 22, wherein said first subgroup has an additional resistor having the additional resistance value and being connected in parallel to said brake resistors of said first subgroup, and the additional resistance value of said additional resistor is between 1.5 times and 2.5 times a greatest resistance values of said brake resistors of said first subgroup.
24. The vehicle according to claim 23, wherein said first and second subgroups have an equal number of said brake resistors connected in parallel having resistance values of equal size, and said first subgroup additionally has said additional resistor.
25. The vehicle according to claim 22, wherein said first and second subgroups have an equal number of said brake resistors connected in parallel, and resistance values of said brake resistors of said first and second subgroups are of equal size except for one resistor in one of said subgroups.
26. The vehicle according to claim 22, wherein said evaluating facility generates a failure signal upon the measured value indicating that the differential current is zero during a braking operation of the vehicle.
27. The vehicle according to claim 23, wherein: said evaluating facility generates a deviation signal upon the measured value indicating a differential current deviating from a predetermined desired differential current value or deviating from the predetermined desired differential current value by more than a predetermined extent, according to amount, during a braking operation of the vehicle; the desired differential current value corresponds to a current flow that would have to be caused by the additional resistance value or would have to flow through said additional resistor upon both said first and second subgroups being free of failure during the braking operation.
28. The vehicle according to claim 22, wherein: said evaluating facility monitors a progression of the differential current over time and in an event of differential current jumps, detects a respective direction of differential current jumps and generates a first counter reading and a second counter reading; the first counter reading indicates a number of jumps in one of two possible variation directions and thus a number of failed brake resistors in one of said first and second subgroups; and the second counter reading indicates a number of jumps in another of the two possible variation directions and thus a number of failed brake resistors in another of said first and second subgroups.
29. A method for monitoring electrical braking resistors of a vehicle, the electrical braking resistors configured to receive electrical braking energy and convert the electrical braking energy into waste heat during braking operation of the vehicle, the method comprising: dividing the brake resistors into first and second subgroups electrically connected in parallel; and monitoring a functional capability of the brake resistors based on a measured value indicating a differential current between a first subgroup current flowing through the first subgroup and a second subgroup current flowing through the second subgroup.
30. A method for monitoring electrical braking resistors of a vehicle, the electrical braking resistors configured to receive electrical braking energy and convert the electrical braking energy into waste heat during braking operation of the vehicle, the method comprising: dividing the brake resistors into first and second subgroups electrically connected in parallel; monitoring a functional capability of the brake resistors based on a measured value indicating a differential current between a first subgroup current flowing through the first subgroup and a second subgroup current flowing through the second subgroup; and carrying out the method in the vehicle according to claim 16.
Description
[0029] The invention is further explained below with the aid of exemplary embodiments. In the drawings in an exemplary manner.
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036] In the figures, for the sake of clarity for identical or comparable components the same reference characters are always used.
[0037]
[0038] In the case of the exemplary embodiment in accordance with
[0039] If the high-speed rail vehicle 10 during a journey along the arrow direction P, in other words during a journey from the right-hand side to the left-hand side in
[0040] In the case of the embodiment variant in accordance with
[0041] It is also possible that air flows through the brake resistors of the brake resistor assembly 30 in order to improve a dissipation of heat. For example, as is disclosed in the unexamined German patent application DE 10 2015 203 689 A1 mentioned in the introduction an airflow is guided through an opening in the vehicle outer shell into the vehicle interior by pivoting out the brake resistor assembly so as to cool or to dissipate heat from the brake resistor assembly.
[0042] The brake resistors of the brake resistor assembly 30 are preferably passively cooled tube heating elements.
[0043]
[0044] The brake resistor assembly 30 in accordance with
[0045] The brake resistors R1-Rn are connected in parallel in their respective subgroup UG1 or UG2. The two subgroups UG1 and UG2 are likewise connected in parallel relative to one another between the connectors A1 and A2 of the brake resistor assembly 30.
[0046] A first subgroup current Ig1 flowing through the first subgroup UG1 and a second subgroup current Ig2 flowing through the second subgroup UG2 are conducted with current flow directions that are inverse with respect to one another through a summation current transformer 40 that generates a measured value M that indicates the differential current Id=Ig1?Ig2 between the two subgroup currents Ig1 and Ig2 and outputs this measured value to a downstream evaluating facility 50.
[0047] The evaluating facility 50 monitors the functional capability of the brake resistors R1-Rn on the basis of the measured value M.
[0048] In the case of the exemplary embodiment in accordance with
[0049] The parity of the resistance values Rg1 and Rg2 of both subgroups UG1 and UG2 can be achieved in a simple manner and with a minimal number of different components if all the brake resistors R1-Rn of the two subgroups UG1 and UG2 (taking into consideration usual component tolerances or at least nominally) are of equal size and the subgroups UG1 and UG2 in each case have the same number of brake resistors R1-Rn, the following thus applies:
wherein n is an even number.
[0050] If it is furthermore assumed that when bringing the brake resistor assembly 30 into operation at the point in time t=0 this brake resistor assembly is operating without fault and all the brake resistors R1-Rn have a part current flowing through them, the differential current Id is thus equal to zero because the two subgroup currents Ig1 and Ig2 are of equal size:
[0051] If one of the brake resistors R1-Rn now fails in one of the subgroups UG1 and UG2 and current no longer flows through it, this will have an effect on the differential current Id.
[0052]
[0053] It is apparent that on account of the failure of two of the brake resistors Ri+1 to Rn in the second subgroup UG2 the differential current Id initially increases in the positive direction because proportionally more current will flow through the first subgroup UG1 than through the second. Two chronologically offset differential current jumps S occur, the jump direction of which indicates that the fault has occurred in the second subgroup UG2.
[0054] The evaluating facility 50 detects these differential current jumps S and generates a first counter reading Z1 and a second counter reading Z2.
[0055] The first counter reading Z1 indicates the number of the differential current jumps S in the positive variation direction and thus the number of failed brake resistors in the second subgroup UG2.
[0056] The second counter reading Z2 indicates the number of differential current jumps S in the negative variation direction and thus the number of failed brake resistors in the first subgroup UG1.
[0057] Until the point in time t1 (see
[0058] At the point in time t1, one of the brake resistors Ri+1 to Rn in the second subgroup UG2 fails which causes a differential current jump S in the positive variation direction and the first counter reading Z1 to be set from zero to one. The differential current Id is now greater than zero and amounts by way of example to Id0.
[0059] At the point in time t2, a further of the brake resistors Ri+1 to Rn in the second subgroup UG2 fails which again causes a differential current jump S in the positive variation direction and the first counter reading Z1 to be increased from one to two. The differential current Id has now doubled and amounts by way of example to 2*Id0.
[0060] At the point in time t3, in the exemplary embodiment in accordance with
[0061] At the point in time t4, a second of the brake resistors R1-Ri in the first subgroup UG1 fails which causes a further differential current jump S in the negative variation direction and the second counter reading Z2 to be set from one to two. The differential current Id again reduces in this case according to amount because the differential current jump S in the negative variation direction compensates for one of the previous differential current jumps S in the positive variation direction.
[0062] The differential current Id now amounts again to zero. At this point in time t4, the differential current Id thus no longer shows a fault since it corresponds to the differential current Id(t=0) in the error-free starting state.
[0063] At the point in time t5, in the exemplary embodiment in accordance with
[0064] In summary, the evaluating facility 50 monitors the differential current Id or the corresponding measured value M with regard to its progression over time and counts failure events so that the information as to how many of the brake resistors R1-Rn in each of the two subgroups UG1 and UG2 have failed in the meantime is always available.
[0065]
[0066] The brake resistor assembly 30 in accordance with
[0067] In relation to the summation current transformer 40 and the evaluating facility 50, the statements made in relation to
[0068] In the exemplary embodiment in accordance with
Rg1?Rg2
[0069] The disparity in the resistance values RG1 and RG2 of the two subgroups UG1 and UG2 can be achieved in a simple manner and with a minimal number of different components if all the brake resistors R1-Rn of the two subgroups UG1 and UG2 (taking into consideration usual component tolerances or at least nominally) are of equal size and in the case of the first subgroup UG1 an additional resistor Rz is connected in parallel.
[0070] If it is assumed that when the brake resistor assembly 30 is brought into operation overall these operate in an error-free manner and all the brake resistors R1-Rn have a part current flowing through them, then the differential current Idin contrast with the exemplary embodiment in accordance with
[0071] The differential current Id in the error-free starting state renders possible a further error monitoring of the entire brake resistor assembly 30. If a current flow through the brake resistor assembly 30 is completely interrupted, in other words the entire brake resistor assembly 30 fails, then differential current Id will drop to zero. In this case, the evaluating facility 50 generates a failure signal AFS that indicates this total failure.
[0072] If in one of the subgroups UG1 and UG2 one of the brake resistors R1-Rn now fails and current no longer flows through it, this will have an effect on the differential current Id as this is explained above in relation to
LIST OF REFERENCE CHARACTERS
[0073] 10 Rail vehicle [0074] 11 Vehicle shell [0075] 20 Braking facility [0076] 21 Generator [0077] 30 Brake resistor assembly [0078] 40 Summation current transformer [0079] 50 Evaluating facility [0080] A Section [0081] A1 Connector [0082] A2 Connector [0083] AFS Failure signal [0084] d Spacing [0085] F Airstream [0086] i Natural number [0087] I Braking current [0088] Id Differential current [0089] Ig1 Subgroup current [0090] Ig2 Subgroup current [0091] M Measured value [0092] n Natural number [0093] P Arrow direction [0094] R Brake resistor [0095] Rg1 Resistance value [0096] Rg2 Resistance value [0097] Rz Additional resistor [0098] S Differential current jumps [0099] t Time [0100] t1-t5 Point in time [0101] UG1 Subgroup [0102] UG2 Subgroup [0103] X Vehicle longitudinal direction [0104] Z1 Counter reading [0105] Z2 Counter reading