FAULT SHUTDOWN CONTROL OF AN ELECTRIC MACHINE IN A VEHICLE OR OTHER DC-POWERED TORQUE SYSTEM
20170317615 · 2017-11-02
Assignee
Inventors
- Daniel J. Berry (Macomb Township, MI)
- Wei D. Wang (Troy, MI)
- Bon Ho Bae (Palo Alto, CA)
- Brian A. Welchko (Oakland, MI)
- Wesley G. Zanardelli (Rochester, MI)
- Melissa R. McNeely (Brighton, MI)
Cpc classification
Y02T10/64
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
B60L3/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02H7/09
ELECTRICITY
H02P29/024
ELECTRICITY
B60L3/0061
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A torque system includes a DC power device, a polyphase electric machine, a contactor pair, a power inverter module (PIM), and a controller. The PIM connects to the power device via the contactor pair and directly connects to the electric machine. The controller executes a method to control a fault response under a fault condition resulting in opening of the contactor pair and a polyphase short condition. The controller calculates a back EMF of the electric machine and transmits switching control signals to semiconductor switches of the PIM to transition from the polyphase short condition to a polyphase open condition only when the calculated back EMF is less than a calibrated value and a voltage rise on a DC side of the PIM is less than a calibrated voltage rise. A vehicle includes the DC power device, road wheels, electric machine, PIM, and controller.
Claims
1. A direct current (DC)-powered torque system comprising: a DC power supply; a polyphase electric machine having an output shaft operable for transmitting an output torque; a DC voltage bus; an alternating current (AC) voltage bus; a contactor pair; a power inverter module (PIM) having a plurality of semiconductor switches, wherein the PIM is selectively connected to the DC power supply via the contactor pair and the DC voltage bus, and is directly connected to the electric machine via the AC voltage bus; and a controller programmed to execute a control action with respect to the torque system in response to a predetermined fault condition, wherein the predetermined fault condition results in an opening of the contactor pair and a polyphase short condition, the control action including: calculating a back electromotive force of the electric machine; and transmitting switching control signals to the semiconductor switches to transition from the polyphase short condition to a polyphase open condition only when the calculated back electromotive force is less than a calibrated value and a voltage rise on a DC side of the PIM is less than a calibrated voltage rise.
2. The DC-powered torque system of claim 1, wherein the polyphase electric machine is a permanent magnet-type synchronous electric machine.
3. The DC-powered torque system of claim 1, further comprising a driven member or load connected to the output shaft.
4. The DC-powered torque system of claim 1, wherein each semiconductor switch of the plurality of semiconductor switches is an IGBT.
5. The torque system of claim 1, wherein the plurality of semiconductor switches includes three or more semiconductor switching elements each having a pair of the semiconductor switches.
6. The torque system of claim 1, further comprising a DC link capacitor in electrical parallel with the plurality of semiconductor switches and a voltage sensor configured to measure a DC link voltage across the DC link capacitor, wherein the controller is operable for receiving the measured voltage and calculating the back EMF using the received DC link voltage.
7. The torque system of claim 6, wherein the controller includes a memory that is programmed with a set of calibrated values including an inductance of the electric machine and a DC link capacitance of the DC link capacitor, and wherein the controller is operable for calculating the back EMF using the set of calibrated values.
8. A vehicle comprising: a direct current (DC) power supply; a set of road wheels; a three-phase electric machine having an output shaft operable for transmitting an output torque to the set of road wheels to thereby drive the road wheels and propel the vehicle; a contactor pair; a DC voltage bus; an alternating current (AC) voltage bus; a power inverter module (PIM) having a plurality of semiconductor switches, wherein the PIM is selectively connected to the DC power supply via the DC voltage bus and the contactor pair, and is directly connected to the electric machine via the AC voltage bus; and a controller programmed to execute a control action with respect to the torque system in response to a predetermined fault condition, wherein the predetermined fault condition results in an opening of the contactor pair and a three-phase short condition, the control action including: calculating a back electromotive force of the electric machine; and transmitting switching control signals to the semiconductor switches to transition from the three-phase short condition to a three-phase open condition only when the calculated back electromotive force is less than a calibrated value and a voltage rise on a DC side of the PIM is less than a calibrated voltage rise.
9. The vehicle of claim 8, wherein the three-phase electric machine is a permanent magnet-type synchronous electric machine.
10. The vehicle of claim 8, wherein each semiconductor switch of the plurality of semiconductor switches is an IGBT.
11. The vehicle of claim 8, wherein the plurality of semiconductor switches includes three or more semiconductor switching elements each having a pair of the semiconductor switches.
12. The vehicle of claim 8, further comprising a DC link capacitor in electrical parallel with the plurality of semiconductor switches and a voltage sensor configured to measure a DC link voltage across the DC link capacitor, wherein the controller is operable for receiving the measured voltage and calculating the back EMF using the received DC link voltage.
13. The vehicle of claim 8, wherein the controller includes a memory that is programmed with a set of calibrated values including an inductance of the electric machine and a DC link capacitance of the DC link capacitor, and wherein the controller is operable for calculating the back EMF using the set of calibrated values.
14. A method of controlling a direct current (DC)-powered torque system in response to a predetermined fault condition, wherein the torque system includes a DC power supply, a power inverter module (PIM) connected to the DC power supply via a contactor pair and a DC bus, and an electric machine connected to the PIM via an AC bus, and wherein the predetermined fault condition is a fault resulting in an opening of the contactor pair and a three-phase short condition, the method comprising: detecting the predetermined fault condition via a controller; calculating a back electromotive force of the electric machine; and transmitting switching control signals from the controller to a plurality of semiconductor switches of the PIM to thereby transition from the three-phase short condition to a three-phase open condition only when the calculated back electromotive force is less than a calibrated value and a voltage rise on a DC side of the PIM is less than a calibrated voltage rise.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the system includes a DC link capacitor in electrical parallel with the plurality of semiconductor switches and a voltage sensor configured to measure a DC link voltage across the DC link capacitor, wherein calculating a back electromotive force of the electric machine includes calculating the back EMF using the measured DC link voltage.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the controller includes a memory that is programmed with a set of calibrated values including an inductance of the electric machine and a DC link capacitance of the DC link capacitor, and wherein calculating the back EMF includes solving a function that includes the set of calibrated values.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the function is:
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0012] Referring to the drawings, wherein like reference numbers refer to like components throughout the several views, a direct current (DC)-powered torque system 10 is shown schematically in
[0013] The system 10 includes a DC power supply 16, shown here as an example battery pack (B) but which may be embodied as a fuel cell, that is selectively connected to a power inverter module (PIM) 18 on a DC side of the PIM 18 via a DC voltage bus 17 and a contactor pair 25, i.e., high-voltage mechanical switches operable for disconnecting the DC power supply 16 from the rest of the system 10 when set to an open state. The PIM 18 in turn is directly connected to a polyphase electric machine (ME) 14 via an alternating current (AC) voltage bus 19. The PIM 18 includes a plurality of semiconductor switches 21 whose open/closed states are controlled via switching control signals (arrow CC.sub.O) from a controller (C) 50, such as a motor control module of the type known in the art. Switching control of the PIM 18 converts a DC voltage output from the DC power supply 16 into an AC voltage output suitable for powering the electric machine 14 or multiple such machines. Semiconductor switching techniques such as pulse-width modulation (PWM) and associated IGBT, MOSFET, or thyristor semiconductor switch designs are well known in the art, and therefore a detailed description of switching techniques and the various possible embodiments of the underlying semiconductor structure is omitted for illustrative simplicity.
[0014] The electric machine 14 of
[0015] The controller 50 includes a processor P and a memory M. The memory M includes tangible, non-transitory memory, e.g., read only memory, whether optical, magnetic, flash, or otherwise. The controller 50 also includes sufficient amounts of random access memory, electrically-erasable programmable read only memory, and the like, as well as a high-speed clock, analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog circuitry, and input/output circuitry and devices, as well as appropriate signal conditioning and buffer circuitry. The memory (M) is programmed and the controller 50 is otherwise suitably configured in hardware to control the switching operation of the PIM 18.
[0016] In addition to any regular and ongoing switching control operations conducted during operation of the system 10 in which no faults are present, the controller 50 receives an input signal (arrow CO indicative of a predetermined fault condition as part of the method 100. The controller 50 is programmed to execute logic embodying the method 100, an example of which is shown in
[0017] The contactor pair 25 ordinarily opens automatically whenever the DC-powered torque system 10 is turned off, which has the effect of fully disconnecting the DC power supply 16 from the rest of the system 10. At rare times, however, the contactor pair 25 may open during high speed operation of the electric machine 14 in response to certain electrical faults, such as but not limited to a high-voltage fault, a stuck-open condition of the contactor pair 25, or any other event in which the contactor pair 25 is commanded or forced open during operation of the system 10. When this occurs at higher speeds of the electric machine 14, such as when driving the vehicle of
[0018] As the rotational speed of the electric machine 14 decreases, eventually a relatively large negative torque may be generated by the electric machine 14. This can cause noise, shudder, or oscillation to occur near zero speed, making a polyphase open condition a more ideal control result during low-speed operation. However, transitioning arbitrarily to the polyphase open condition has the risk of triggering an over-voltage fault due to inductive kickback of the electric machine 14. Therefore, by using the method 100 the controller 50 can ensure that such a transition occurs from the polyphase short condition to polyphase open condition at a predetermined moment in time. To command the transition, the controller 50 transmits the switching control signals (arrow CC.sub.O) to the semiconductor switches 21 of the PIM 18. This control action will now be described with further reference to
[0019]
[0020] The semiconductor switches 21 may include three or more semiconductor switching elements 28, i.e., switching pairs whether housed together or separately, each having a pair of the semiconductor switches 21, otherwise known as upper and lower switches in the art. In a typical three-phase system, each semiconductor element 28 is arranged on a respective phase leg, with phase voltages V.sub.a, V.sub.b, and V.sub.c indicating the electrical potential across each phase leg, and thus delivered to each of three different phase windings 14W of the electric machine 14 shown in
[0021] Referring to
[0022] The method 100 continues to step S102, where the controller 50 determined whether the contactor pair 25 of
[0023] Step S103 entails executing standard control actions, which may include taking speed-dependent actions to command a polyphase short or open condition. With the contactor pair 25 remaining closed, the DC power supply 16 of
[0024] Step S104 includes determining if circumstances warrant an immediate or more aggressive control action. For example, the controller 50 may detect, or receive as part of the input signals (arrow CO, a message indicative of, a threshold impact event or other high-priority fault condition requiring an immediate control action. In such a case, the method 100 proceeds to step S105. The method 100 proceeds to step S106 if an immediate control action is not required.
[0025] At step S106, the controller 50 continues with the present method 100 by determining if a speed of the electric machine 14 is less than a maximum allowable speed. While step S106 may entail measuring the speed of the electric machine 14, such as by estimating speed using an electrical frequency of the electric machine 14. The purpose of step S106 is to determine if the electric machine 14 has sufficiently slowed in preparation for the transition to a polyphase open condition. If the electric machine 14 remains at too high of a speed relative to a speed threshold, the method 100 proceeds to step S107. The method 100 otherwise proceeds to step S108.
[0026] Step S107 includes remaining in the polyphase short condition and repeating step S106.
[0027] At step S108, the controller 50 of
½LI.sup.2=½C.sub.L(V.sub.CF.sup.2−V.sub.CI.sup.2)
where L is the inductance of the electric machine 14, which is a known/calibrated value, and I is the measured phase current. C.sub.L is the calibrated DC link capacitance and V.sub.CF and V.sub.CI are the respective final and initial DC link voltages across the DC link capacitor 24. Controller-provided d-axis and q-axis current commands are provided to the electric machine 14, as is well known in the art of motor controls. Under three-phase short conditions, the electrical current is primarily the d-axis current, and therefore the equation noted above can be reduced to:
with all values measured or calibrated/stored in memory (M) of the controller 50.
[0028] Using the above equation, the controller 50 may solve for or predict the final DC link voltage V.sub.CF as follows:
This value is then temporarily stored in memory (M) as the method 100 proceeds to step S110.
[0029] At step S110, the controller 50 next compares the calculated back EMF, i.e., the final DC link voltage V.sub.CF, to a calibrated value or threshold, and compares a voltage rise on the DC side of the PIM 18 to a calibrated voltage rise. Step S107 is executed only if the calculated back EMF exceeds the calibrated threshold and the voltage rise on the DC side of the PIM 18 is less than the calibrated voltage rise. Step S112 is executed in the alternative.
[0030] Step S112 includes executing a control action with respect to the DC torque system 10 of
[0031] This disclosure may be embodied in many different forms. For purposes of the present detailed description, unless specifically disclaimed: the singular includes the plural and vice versa; the words “and” and “or” shall be both conjunctive and disjunctive; the word “all” means “any and all”; the word “any” means “any and all”; and the words “including” and “comprising” and “having” mean “including without limitation.” Moreover, words of approximation, such as “about,” “almost,” “substantially,” “approximately,” and the like, can be used herein in the sense of “at, near, or nearly at,” or “within 3-5% of,” or “within acceptable manufacturing tolerances,” or any logical combination thereof, for example.
[0032] While the best modes for carrying out the disclosure have been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this disclosure relates will recognize various alternate designs and embodiments within the scope of the appended claims.