ELECTRIC FOUR-WHEEL DRIVE SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR CONTROLLING A MOTOR VEHICLE

20230166607 ยท 2023-06-01

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

An electric four-wheel drive (E-4WD) system and control method for a motor vehicle includes four wheel motors. Each wheel motor is an electric motor configured to drive one respective wheel corresponding to the wheel motor. Each wheel motor includes a stator implemented on a suspension structure of the respective wheel and a rotor implemented on a semi-axle connected to the respective wheel to rotate together with the respective wheel relative to the stator. The wheel motors are configured to drive the wheels independently of each other.

Claims

1. An electric four-wheel drive (E-4WD) system for a motor vehicle, the E-4WD system comprising: wheel motors, each wheel motor of four of the wheel motors being configured as an electric motor to drive one respective wheel associated therewith, wherein each wheel motor includes a stator implemented on a suspension structure of the respective wheel and a rotor implemented on a semi-axle connected to the respective wheel to rotate together with the respective wheel relative to the stator, and wherein the wheel motors are configured to drive the respective wheels independently of each other.

2. The E-4WD system according to claim 1, wherein the wheel motors are powered by at least one supercapacitor.

3. The E-4WD system according to claim 2, wherein the at least one supercapacitor is configured to be recharged by regenerative braking.

4. The E-4WD system according to claim 1, wherein the wheel motors are configured as radial flux permanent magnet motors, and wherein one or several rotor magnets of each respective rotor are mounted on and/or are integrated in the respective semi-axle.

5. The E-4WD system according to claim 4, wherein the rotor magnets of each rotor are configured as circumferential shell elements arranged around an axial direction of the respective semi-axle.

6. The E-4WD system according to claim 1, further comprising a motor control configured to activate and control the wheel motors selectively to provide dynamic torque management of the respective wheels on demand during a driving situation.

7. The E-4WD system according to claim 6, wherein the dynamic torque management includes active torque vectoring.

8. The E-4WD system according to claim 6, wherein the motor control (11) is configured to provide the dynamic torque management depending on at least one of a driver steering angle request, a current yaw angle, or a current vehicle speed.

9. The E-4WD system according to claim 6, wherein the motor control is configured to provide additional electric torque to the respective wheels during acceleration phases depending on a driver acceleration request.

10. The E-4WD system according to claim 9, wherein the motor control is configured to provide the additional electric torque when the driver acceleration request surpasses an acceleration threshold and when a state of charge of the at least one supercapacitor powering the wheel motors surpasses a charge threshold.

11. The E-4WD system according to claim 6, wherein the motor control is configured to drive the respective wheels solely on basis of the wheel motors when a current vehicle speed is below a speed threshold and when a state of charge of the at least one supercapacitor powering the wheel motors surpasses a charge threshold.

12. A motor vehicle comprising the E-4WD system according to claim 1.

13. A method for controlling wheels of a motor vehicle having four of the wheels and four wheel motors, each wheel motor being configured as an electric motor for driving one respective wheel of the wheels, wherein each wheel motor includes a stator implemented on a suspension structure of the respective wheel and a rotor implemented on a semi-axle connected to the respective wheel to rotate together with the respective wheel relative to the stator, wherein the method includes the wheel motors driving the respective wheels independently of each other.

14. The method according to claim 13, comprising activating and controlling the wheel motors selectively with the motor control to provide dynamic torque management of the wheels on demand during a driving situation.

15. The method according to claim 14, wherein the dynamic torque management includes active torque vectoring.

16. The method according to claim 14, wherein the dynamic torque management is provided depending on at least one of a driver steering angle request, a current yaw angle, and a current vehicle speed.

17. The method according to claim 13, wherein additional electric torque is provided to the wheels during acceleration phases depending on a driver acceleration request.

18. The method according to claim 17, wherein the additional electric torque is provided when the driver acceleration request surpasses an acceleration threshold and when a state of charge of at least one supercapacitor powering the wheel motors surpasses a charge threshold.

19. The method according to claim 13, wherein the wheels are driven solely on basis of the wheel motors when a current vehicle speed is below a speed threshold and when a state of charge of at least one supercapacitor powering the wheel motors surpasses a charge threshold.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0034] The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the present disclosure and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate the embodiments of the present disclosure and together with the description serve to explain the principles of the disclosure. Other embodiments of the present disclosure and many of the intended advantages of the present disclosure should be readily appreciated as they become better understood by reference to the following detailed description. The elements of the drawings are not necessarily to scale relative to each other. In the figures, like reference numerals denote like or functionally like components, unless indicated otherwise.

[0035] FIG. 1 schematically shows a cross sectional view of an electric four-wheel drive (E-4WD) system according to an embodiment of the disclosure.

[0036] FIG. 2 is a detailed perspective view of the E-4WD system from FIG. 1.

[0037] FIG. 3 schematically depicts a motor vehicle equipped with the system from FIG. 1.

[0038] FIG. 4 schematically shows a method for controlling the wheels of the motor vehicle of FIG. 3 with the system of FIG. 1.

[0039] FIGS. 5 and 6 show two driving situations with the vehicle of FIG. 3.

[0040] Although specific embodiments are illustrated and described herein, it should be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that a variety of alternate and/or equivalent implementations may be substituted for the specific embodiments shown and described herein without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. Generally, this application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the specific embodiments discussed herein.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS

[0041] FIG. 1 schematically shows a cross sectional view of an electric four-wheel drive (E-4WD) system 10 according to an embodiment of the disclosure. A motor vehicle 100 equipped with the E-4WD system 10 is shown in FIG. 3.

[0042] As can be understood with reference to FIG. 3, the E-4WD system 10 is provided in addition to a main vehicle engine 13, e.g. a internal combustion engine (ICE), to provide direct and independent actuation of each wheel 2 for dynamic and on-demand traction control of the motor vehicle 100, e.g. under dynamic and/or demanding driving situations.

[0043] To this end, the E-4WD system 10 comprises four wheel motors 1, one for each wheel 2 of the vehicle 100. Each wheel motor 1 is configured to drive one respectively associated wheel 2, i.e., one respective wheel 2 associated with each corresponding wheel motor 1, independently of the other wheels 2. Each wheel motor 1 includes a stator 3 implemented on a suspension structure 4 of the respective wheel 2 and a rotor 5 implemented on a semi-axle 6 connected to the respective wheel 2 to rotate together with the respective wheel 2 relative to the stator 3. The main vehicle engine 13 may be connected to the wheels 2 in the usual vein, i.e., a conventional manner, via a gear box 15. Front and back differentials may couple front and back semi-axles 6 with each other and with the vehicle engine 13. The electric wheel motors 1, or more specifically, the rotors 5 of each such motor 1, are integrated with the semi-axles 6 in a space- and weight-saving manner, which does not require any complicated assembly of additional components.

[0044] FIG. 2 shows a detailed view of the motor arrangement on one of the semi-axles 6. In this embodiment, the wheel motor 1 is configured as a radial flux permanent magnet motor having several rotor magnets 8 mounted on the respective semi-axle 6. In the shown embodiment, six rotor magnets 8 are configured as circumferential shell elements arranged around an axial direction 9 of the respective semi-axle 6 (see FIG. 2). These magnet shells may be assembled and bounded directly on a surface of the semi-axle 6. It should be understood however, that suitable magnets may also be embedded in the semi-axle 6, e.g. as internal magnets (in contrast to magnets placed on or above the surface).

[0045] Each wheel motor 1 is powered by one or several supercapacitors 7 installed in the motor vehicle 100 that are able to provide quick power to the wheel motors 1 on-demand. The supercapacitors 7 are configured to be recharged by regenerative braking of the motor vehicle 100. This combination of electric wheel motors 1 and supercapacitors 7 makes the solution ideally suited for dynamic driving applications like race, track, or rally driving. In such driving application, the wheel motors 1 provide ideal traction during acceleration phases with fully powered supercapacitors 7, which may afterwards be recharged during braking phases very quickly via regenerative braking.

[0046] In order to provide a corresponding dynamic torque management that orchestrates the wheel motors 1 together with the vehicle engine 13, a motor control 11 is provided. The motor control 11 activates and controls the wheel motors 1 selectively to provide dynamic torque management of the wheels 2 on demand during a driving situation. Torque may be provided by the wheel motors 1 either in addition to the main propulsion delivered by the vehicle engine 13 or, under certain circumstances, also alternatively to it, as is explained below with reference to FIG. 4, which shows a corresponding control method M.

[0047] FIG. 4 depicts three different modes that can be set by the motor control 11. On the one hand, the motor control 11 is configured to provide the dynamic torque management in order to generate active torque vectoring 23 of the wheels 2 depending on a driver steering angle request, a current yaw angle, and/or a current vehicle speed. Dynamic torque management may be used to correct a path of the vehicle 100 under dynamic and/or demanding driving conditions. For example, active torque vectoring 23 may be triggered in a case that the driver steering angle request, the current yaw angle, and the current vehicle speed all surpass predefined threshold values.

[0048] Examples for such driving situations are shown in FIGS. 5 and 6. FIG. 5 depicts a case for active electric torque vectoring 23. In this case, a corrective torque 30 is applied only on the front wheels 2 of the vehicle 100 in order to achieve a corrective yaw moment 29 that keeps the vehicle 100 from breaking out to the inside of the curve. FIG. 6 on the other hand shows the opposite case where only the rear wheels 2 are controlled with an additional torque 30 in order to keep the vehicle 100 from skidding outwards from the optimal track. Hence, the additional wheel motors 2 may be employed for dynamic traction control in order to compensate understeering or oversteering of a vehicle 100. To this end, the motor control 11 may run a dedicated control strategy to coordinate the engine 13 operations together with the wheel motors 2 and to simultaneously optimize usage of the supercapacitors 7 that are characterized by high density power but low energy capability.

[0049] In addition, the motor control 11 may provide dedicated driving modes that may be triggered automatically and/or may be set by an operator on request. Two such examples are shown in FIG. 4, a sport mode 21 and a low speed/creep mode 22.

[0050] In the case of the sport mode 21, the motor control 11 provides additional electric torque to the wheels 2 via the wheel motors 1 during acceleration phases depending on a driver acceleration request. The additional electric torque may be provided only if/when the driver acceleration request surpasses an acceleration threshold and if/when a state of charge of a respective supercapacitor 7 powering the wheel motors 1 surpasses a charge threshold. Hence, the vehicle 100 runs during sport mode 21 either with engine-only drive 24 or, if the abovementioned thresholds are passed (accelerator pedal pressed down and at least one supercapacitor sufficiently charged), with hybrid drive mode 25 where both the engine 13 and one or several of the wheel motors 1 are active in order to increase torque 19 (see the curve on the lower left of FIG. 4).

[0051] In the case of the low speed/creep mode 22, the motor control 11 may drive the wheels 2 solely on the basis of the wheel motors 1, e.g. in a case that a current vehicle speed is below a speed threshold and if/when a state of charge of a respective supercapacitor 7 powering the wheel motors 1 surpasses a charge threshold. Hence during creep mode 22, the vehicle 100 may either be operated in an engine only mode 24 or an electric only drive mode 26. The low speed mode 22 may be set for electric starting and/or creeping, e.g. during parking maneuvers, or other low load and/or low speed operations, as long as the supercapacitors are charged sufficiently (see the graph on the lower right of FIG. 4).

[0052] Summarizing the above, the present E-4WD system 10 thus is able to provide additional power to the wheels 2 on demand for short times, in particular during frequent acceleration and regenerative braking phases, and/or for torque vectoring. The present solution is thus different from conventional battery hybrid solutions where an electrical assistance acts continuously and during the overall driving operation of the vehicle. As a result, performance is improved over traditional 4WD solutions, such as for track driving and other highly dynamic applications. With the present solution, the size of the electric motors can be kept small in terms of power supply, which also implies a reduction in weight. The system 10 may not only be used for dynamic driving situations but also for driving assistance features, e.g. parking, creeping, and the like.

[0053] In the foregoing detailed description, various features are grouped together in one or more examples with the purpose of streamlining the disclosure. Further, the above description is intended to be illustrative, and not restrictive. It is intended to cover all alternatives, modifications, and equivalents of the different features and embodiments. Many other examples should become apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art upon reviewing the above specification. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to explain the principles of the disclosure and its practical applications to thereby enable others having ordinary skill in the art to utilize the disclosure and the various embodiments with various modifications as suited to the particular use contemplated.

TABLE-US-00001 Reference List 1 wheel motor 2 wheel 3 stator 4 suspension structure 5 rotor 6 semi-axle 7 supercapacitor 8 rotor magnet 9 axial direction 10 electric four-wheel drive (E-4WD) system 11 motor control 12 shock absorber 13 vehicle engine 14 inverter 15 differential 16 gear box 17 electric line 18 road 19 engine torque 20 engine speed 21 sport mode 22 low speed/creep mode 23 active torque vectoring 24 engine drive 25 hybrid drive 26 electric drive 27 current path 28 controlled path 29 yaw moment 30 torque correction 100 motor vehicle M method