Apparatus and method for testing using a dynamometer
阅读说明:本技术 使用测功器进行测试的设备和方法 (Apparatus and method for testing using a dynamometer ) 是由 托马斯·赫尔 利奥·阿方斯·杰勒德·布雷顿 亚历克斯·马森 于 2018-12-27 设计创作,主要内容包括:一种测试方法,包括从由对于第一车辆操作性地设置的测功器产生的测试规范扭矩输出中得出道路坡度信息或风载荷信息,以及根据速度规范控制与第一车辆或第二车辆相关联的加速器踏板、加速器踏板信号、燃料喷射器、歧管压力、马达控制器或油门阀,以使被编程有道路坡度信息或风载荷信息并且对于第一车辆或第二车辆操作性地设置的测功器或另一个测功器向第一车辆或第二车辆施加反映道路坡度信息或风载荷信息的载荷。(A testing method includes deriving road grade information or wind load information from a test specification torque output produced by a dynamometer operatively disposed for a first vehicle, and controlling an accelerator pedal, an accelerator pedal signal, a fuel injector, a manifold pressure, a motor controller, or a throttle valve associated with the first vehicle or a second vehicle in accordance with a speed specification such that a dynamometer operatively disposed for the first vehicle or the second vehicle or another dynamometer programmed with the road grade information or wind load information applies a load reflecting the road grade information or wind load information to the first vehicle or the second vehicle.)
1. A method of testing, comprising:
deriving road grade information from a test specification torque output produced by a dynamometer operatively disposed for a first vehicle; and
controlling an accelerator pedal, an accelerator pedal signal, a fuel injector, a manifold pressure, a motor controller, or a throttle valve associated with the first or second vehicle in accordance with a speed specification such that the dynamometer programmed with the road grade information and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or another dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the road grade information.
2. The testing method of claim 1, further comprising measuring emissions of the first vehicle or second vehicle during the controlling.
3. The testing method of claim 1, further comprising changing a calibration of the first or second vehicle after the controlling and controlling again the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve according to the speed specification such that the dynamometer programmed with the road grade information and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or the other dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the road grade information.
4. The test method of claim 3, further comprising measuring emissions of the first or second vehicle during the controlling again.
5. The testing method of claim 1, further comprising changing ambient conditions of the first or second vehicle after the controlling and controlling again the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve in accordance with the speed specification such that the dynamometer programmed with the road grade information and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or the other dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the road grade information.
6. The testing method of claim 1, further comprising, after the controlling, changing a component of an emissions control system of the first or second vehicle and controlling again the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve in accordance with the speed specification such that the dynamometer programmed with the road grade information and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or the other dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the road grade information.
7. The testing method of claim 1, further comprising deriving wind load information from the test specification torque output, and further controlling the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve in accordance with the speed specification to cause the dynamometer programmed with the wind load information or the other dynamometer to apply a load to the first or second vehicle that reflects the wind load information.
8. A method of testing, comprising:
deriving wind load information from a test specification torque output produced by a dynamometer operatively disposed for a first vehicle; and
controlling an accelerator pedal, an accelerator pedal signal, a fuel injector, a manifold pressure, a motor controller, or a throttle valve associated with the first or second vehicle in accordance with a speed specification such that the dynamometer programmed with the wind load information and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or another dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the wind load information.
9. The testing method of claim 8, further comprising measuring emissions of the first or second vehicle during the controlling.
10. The testing method of claim 8, further comprising changing a calibration of the first or second vehicle after the controlling and controlling again the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve according to the speed specification such that the dynamometer programmed with the wind load information and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or the other dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the wind load information.
11. The test method of claim 10, further comprising measuring emissions of the first or second vehicle during the re-controlling.
12. The testing method of claim 8, further comprising changing ambient conditions of the first or second vehicle after the controlling and controlling again the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve in accordance with the speed specification such that the dynamometer programmed with the wind load information and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or the other dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the wind load information.
13. The testing method of claim 8, further comprising changing components of an emissions control system of the first or second vehicle after the controlling and controlling again the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve in accordance with the speed specification such that the dynamometer programmed with the wind load information and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or the other dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the wind load information.
14. A method of testing, comprising:
deriving a dynamometer road load control parameter for a first vehicle from a test specification torque output produced by a dynamometer operatively disposed for the first vehicle or a second vehicle; and
controlling an accelerator pedal, an accelerator pedal signal, a fuel injector, a manifold pressure, a motor controller, or a throttle valve associated with the first or second vehicle in accordance with a speed specification such that the dynamometer road load control parameter is programmed and the dynamometer or another dynamometer operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the dynamometer road load control parameter.
15. The testing method of claim 14, further comprising measuring emissions of the first or second vehicle during the controlling.
16. The testing method of claim 14, further comprising changing a calibration of the first or second vehicle after the controlling and controlling again the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve in accordance with the speed specification such that the dynamometer road load control parameter programmed with the dynamometer road load control parameter and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or the other dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the dynamometer road load control parameter.
17. The test method of claim 16, further comprising measuring emissions of the first or second vehicle during the controlling again.
18. The testing method of claim 14, further comprising changing ambient conditions of the first or second vehicle after the controlling and controlling again the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve in accordance with the speed specification such that the dynamometer programmed with the dynamometer road load control parameter and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or the other dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the dynamometer road load control parameter.
19. The testing method of claim 14, further comprising, after the controlling, changing components of an emissions control system of the first or second vehicle and controlling again the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve in accordance with the speed specification such that the dynamometer programmed with the dynamometer road load control parameter and operatively disposed for the first or second vehicle or the other dynamometer applies a load to the first or second vehicle reflecting the dynamometer road load control parameter.
20. The testing method of claim 14, further comprising deriving wind load information from the test specification torque output, and controlling the accelerator pedal, accelerator pedal signal, fuel injector, manifold pressure, motor controller, or throttle valve further in accordance with the speed specification to cause the dynamometer programmed with the wind load information or the other dynamometer to apply a load to the first or second vehicle that reflects the wind load information.
Background
The present disclosure belongs to the technical field of measurement and analysis of motor vehicle exhaust emissions and measurement of vehicle energy efficiency. More specifically, it pertains to the field of predicting exhaust emissions of vehicles having an Internal Combustion Engine (ICE), including emissions of Hybrid Electric Vehicles (HEV), and predicting energy efficiency of all powertrain type vehicles operating in the real world based on simulating real world conditions during laboratory testing.
Modern automobiles with ICE may operate reliably under almost any combination of environmental, road grade, and driving conditions found on earth. Such vehicles are common around the world and can operate regularly and reliably at ambient temperatures ranging from well below 0 degrees celsius to over 40 degrees celsius, from arid desert conditions to wet rainforests and in high speed operation of congested slow urban traffic to german highways.
Many countries that own a large number of automobiles have exhaust emission standards, i.e., the "tailpipe" standards that automobile manufacturers must comply with. Experience has shown that testing vehicles under a wide variety of real-world environmental, road, and driving conditions known to affect emissions and fuel economy of vehicles in the real world is difficult and expensive. Also, it is known that at lower ambient temperatures, the energy efficiency of an HEV and the range of a single-charge BEV may decrease.
Laboratory-based tailpipe emissions testing has historically been performed over a limited range of environmental conditions, vehicle speed patterns, and driving conditions. As the number of vehicles has increased dramatically worldwide in recent years, and as vehicles are increasingly computer controlled, there is a need for governments and automobile manufacturers to better understand vehicle emissions under a wider range of operating conditions so that National Ambient Air Quality (NAAQ) standards can continue to be met in current ambient air "reach zones" and ultimately can be met in current "reach zones". Vehicle manufacturers must also be able to evaluate the impact of vehicle emissions control and powertrain calibration variations over a wider range of environmental and operating conditions.
New vehicle exhaust emission regulations are driven in part by measured levels of NAAQ for certain standard pollutants known to directly or indirectly affect human health and for controlling greenhouse gas emissions. NAAQ levels vary widely throughout the world, depending on mobile emissions sources and fixed pollution sources. Population density, atmospheric conditions, vehicle emissions performance, age and composition of local fleet vehicles, stationary air pollution sources, and geographic characteristics are all factors that affect NAAQ. For example, air quality in southern california may be particularly poor due to high population density, coupled with well-known atmospheric temperature reversals due to geographic features and atmospheric conditions.
Cars and trucks with ICEs are one of the causes of general pollution from "mobile sources", most notably from "tailpipe emissions". BEVs are one of the causes of "fixed sources" (i.e., emissions from power plants) of pollution. Tailpipe emissions and energy efficiency of any particular vehicle operating in the real world are dependent upon a number of factors, including various environmental conditions, road grade, driver behavior, traffic conditions, and the effectiveness of vehicle emissions control in relation to these factors.
Since BEVs draw energy from the grid, they may become a significant factor in the overall pollution from "fixed sources" in the future if the production volume of BEVs gets larger and larger. Therefore, it is also important to understand the energy efficiency of BEVs in real-world driving.
The new emission standards promulgated for controlling standard pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions from vehicles with ICE have traditionally been associated with laboratory-based testing regimes and related methods, as laboratory-based testing can be highly repetitive and until recently (i.e., since commercialization of Portable Emission Measurement Systems (PEMS)) mass-based real-world (i.e., drive-in) testing cannot be conducted.
While known laboratory testing methods are very accurate and repeatable for emissions measurements under actual testing conditions, real-world driving may subject vehicles to a wide variety of conditions that traditional laboratory testing protocols would not subject. There are many reasons for this, including the difficulty in simulating the full range of real-world temperature and barometric conditions in a laboratory, the impact of real-world driver behavior under actual traffic conditions, etc.
To address the limitations of laboratory-only testing regimes for ICE vehicles, PEMS devices and methods have been developed for accurate real-world testing of exhaust mass emissions and fuel economy from moving vehicles while the vehicles are driving in the real world. This has become increasingly important to understand vehicle emissions, greenhouse gas emissions, and vehicle fuel economy that affect NAAQ.
PEMS has become a widely used commercial product for regulatory agencies and automotive manufacturers over the past 20 years. For example, from 2017 onwards, PEMS-based real-world testing has become the test method required by the european union vehicle certification process. However, laboratory testing remains a valuable tool for vehicle manufacturers during vehicle development and for regulatory agencies, as test protocols produce test results that are very repeatable. For example, after introducing a change in the size of the vehicle or powertrain, the effect of such a change on tailpipe emissions can be accurately determined by repeated testing.
Disclosure of Invention
Here, certain embodiments may relate to accurate and repeatable exhaust gas quality emission testing of ICE vehicles and energy efficiency measurements for all vehicle types — representing (where applicable) real-world energy efficiency and tailpipe emissions measurements for any vehicle model, on any route, and under ambient conditions in any set of studies. More particularly, certain embodiments relate to an apparatus and method for measuring emissions and energy efficiency performance of a vehicle under a wide variety of real-world driving conditions by conducting tests primarily in a laboratory. For example, a vehicle testing method may include: operating the vehicle and a dynamometer, the dynamometer configured to provide road loads to the vehicle in accordance with a real-world vehicle throttle specification (schedule) and a real-world speed specification, respectively, the real-world vehicle throttle specification and the real-world speed specification defining a real-world driving cycle driven by the on-road vehicle; capturing output torque data from the dynamometer resulting from the above operation; operating the vehicle and the dynamometer in accordance with the output torque data and the real-world speed specification, respectively, to reproduce the road load experienced by the vehicle in the real-world driving cycle; and operating the vehicle according to real world shift specifications that further define a real world driving cycle. Real-world emission data corresponding to real-world ambient conditions and road loads experienced by a vehicle in a real-world driving cycle may be captured. Real-world energy efficiency data corresponding to real-world ambient environmental conditions and road loads experienced by a vehicle during a real-world driving cycle may be captured. Simulated real-world emissions data may be captured in combination with the reproduced road load experienced by the vehicle, and the reproduced road load may be verified by comparing the simulated real-world emissions data to the real-world emissions data. Real-world energy efficiency data may be captured in combination with the reproduced road load experienced by the vehicle, and the reproduced road load may be verified by comparing the simulated real-world energy efficiency data to the real-world energy efficiency data. The vehicle testing method may also include operating the vehicle under simulated ambient conditions and capturing emissions data, or operating the vehicle under simulated ambient conditions and capturing energy efficiency data.
A vehicle test laboratory is equipped with a conventional chassis dynamometer or a separate axle dynamometer for each vehicle drive wheel, as well as a set of supplemental test instruments for testing the ICE vehicle (where applicable) and for exposing the test vehicle to a set of environmental conditions under study (e.g., ambient temperature, pressure, and humidity) while the vehicle is being tested.
Prior to laboratory testing, the vehicle to be tested is driven on any one or more routes in a real-world study under any environmental and traffic conditions that are required. For example, high traffic lanes in NAAQ "unreached areas" may be of particular interest to researchers and regulatory agencies. Cold weather fuel economy performance may be of particular concern to manufacturers of vehicle models that are more widely used by customers in cold climates.
PEMS may optionally be installed on an ICE equipped vehicle to measure and record mass emissions in grams/mile or grams/brake horsepower-hour during one or more real world drives, depending on the vehicle's engine emissions certification requirements. In addition to the optional emissions data, ambient weather conditions and other test parameters required to characterize vehicle operation are recorded, including vehicle speed, accelerator pedal or throttle position, and brake pedal position or state (i.e., on/off) throughout the test. For a manual transmission vehicle, gear selection and clutch pedal position must also be recorded.
After the real-world test is performed on one or more desired routes, the vehicle is then taken to a specially equipped laboratory and placed on the chassis dynamometer, or alternatively connected to the axle dynamometer (one dynamometer for each drive wheel), while the laboratory's mass emission sampling instrument (for ICE vehicles) measures mass emissions and provides the desired environmental conditions under study during vehicle operation using a set of supplemental test instruments, i.e., environmental conditions that may or may not be the same as those actually encountered in real-world testing.
For the first laboratory test, the entire set of real-world test conditions (including driver interaction and environmental conditions) was reproduced on the chassis dynamometer in the following manner: the dynamometer speed is controlled to reproduce the on-road vehicle speed while simultaneously controlling accelerator pedal movement or throttle position and braking action to reproduce on-road driving and vehicle response. Mass emissions or energy efficiency and dynamometer output (feedback) torque signals are recorded throughout the test, depending on the powertrain type, in a conventional manner.
If PEMS emission data or energy consumption is optionally collected during real world driving, it can be directly compared to laboratory emission or energy consumption data collected during laboratory testing under the same conditions to ensure that they are equal within an acceptable range. This optional "validation" process serves to prove a high degree of confidence that both laboratory measurements and real-world measurements are correct and reproducible.
In addition to optional verification, the initial dynamometer test also provides an overall torque output history representative of the measured vehicle's real-world wheel torque, which is a good approximation of the wheel torque found for the same vehicle under a wide variety of environmental conditions when the same vehicle is operated by the same driver under the same traffic conditions. This real world torque history obtained in the laboratory is then used for "torque matching" in subsequent dynamometer tests performed under different simulated ambient test conditions. Thus, the "torque matching" principle can accurately and precisely simulate real-world driving under any of the surrounding conditions under study for the same vehicle, speed history, driver influence, and traffic pattern.
"torque matching" can also accurately and precisely simulate real-world driving after other powertrain modifications (e.g., powertrain calibration changes or catalytic converter precious metal loading) and measure the impact of such modifications on vehicle emissions or energy efficiency performance for any modifications that do not significantly affect vehicle road loads.
It will be appreciated that direct measurement of the on-road torque and subsequent "torque matching" in the laboratory is optional, but requires significantly more work to prepare the vehicle for testing. For example, a dedicated "torque wheel" that provides an output torque signal may be mounted on the vehicle in place of the ordinary wheel.
After the first laboratory test, ambient conditions, powertrain calibration, emissions control changes, or other powertrain modifications may then be made, and the test resumed by controlling the accelerator pedal and brake pedal to reproduce or "match" the recorded dynamometer torque signals obtained during the dynamometer "validation" test or the torque signals obtained from the on-road torque measurements.
Additional tests employing "torque matching" may be performed under as many different environmental conditions and powertrain variations as desired to adequately characterize the emissions characteristics or energy efficiency of the test vehicle under as many environmental conditions and powertrain configurations as desired.
The "torque matching" and validation methods described above enable a chassis or powertrain dynamometer to control the speed of the vehicle or engine while providing loads on the vehicle powertrain, including part of the loads caused by road grade profiles of real world driving. Further, torque matching on the chassis dynamometer may be used to determine a road slope profile for a first vehicle, which may be used for subsequent laboratory simulations of the same real-world route to test the same vehicle or any second vehicle by controlling dynamometer loading in a conventional manner as a function of vehicle speed, vehicle acceleration, and road slope. A method known as "freewheeling" is commonly used to determine an appropriate dependence on vehicle speed. Other methods are also contemplated herein, including the use of wind tunnels.
To unambiguously determine the road grade of the driving route profile, an initial dynamometer test of the first vehicle is conducted to provide a torque output history that reproduces the real-world total wheel torque of the vehicle as described above. The zero grade (level road) constant speed wheel torque of the first vehicle and the torque required to accelerate the mass of the vehicle are then calculated in the usual manner (i.e. as a function of vehicle speed) based on the well known vehicle coasting procedure and based on the acceleration of the mass of the vehicle.
The difference between the real world total wheel torque measured by the dynamometer and the sum of the zero grade constant speed wheel torque and the torque required to overcome vehicle inertia is calculated for the entire real world route to be simulated in the laboratory. The difference is the resulting additional load on the first vehicle due to the influence of the road grade of the real-world route. The basic principles of trigonometry are then applied to determine a corresponding road slope profile that causes additional load on the first vehicle.
The resulting road slope profile for real-world driving is independent of the vehicle. It is useful to determine this profile for any vehicle and then use the profile for subsequent laboratory dynamometer testing of the same vehicle or any other vehicle to simulate an original real-world drive or a portion of an original real-world drive by programming dynamometer loads as a function of vehicle ground speed, vehicle air speed, vehicle acceleration, and/or road grade, as modern dynamometers typically have this capability.
Drawings
FIG. 1 illustrates various vehicles, driving conditions, and traffic conditions that affect the emissions and/or energy efficiency of the vehicle.
Figure 2 shows a vehicle tested in the real world in order to obtain a set of measurements sufficient to reproduce the test in a test laboratory and optionally collect actual road emissions and/or energy efficiency data.
FIG. 3 shows how dynamometer torque is obtained for subsequent laboratory testing purposes and how optional "validation" tests are performed using an environmental chamber.
FIG. 4 illustrates a test structure for simulating real world driving using a chassis dynamometer within an environmental chamber and collecting simulated real world emissions data from a vehicle.
FIG. 5 illustrates how dynamometer torque is obtained for subsequent laboratory testing purposes and how an optional "validation" test is performed using an environmental condition simulator instead of an environmental chamber.
FIG. 6 shows a test structure for simulating real world driving using an environmental condition simulator and collecting simulated real world emissions data from a vehicle.
FIG. 7 illustrates how dynamometer torque is obtained for subsequent laboratory testing purposes and how optional "validation" tests are performed using the axle dynamometer.
FIG. 8 shows a test structure for simulating real world driving using an axle mounted dynamometer and collecting simulated real world emissions data from the vehicle.
Fig. 9 is a flowchart showing an example of an overall process or test method.
Fig. 10 shows an air speed measurement system suitable for accurately measuring the air speed of a vehicle while traveling on a road.
FIG. 11 shows an overall process of a laboratory dynamometer simulation that obtains road grade information from a real-world road test and uses the road grade information for subsequent real-world driving.
Detailed Description
Various embodiments of the present disclosure are described herein. However, the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary, and other embodiments may take various and alternative forms not explicitly shown or described. The figures are not necessarily to scale; some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention. It will be appreciated by persons skilled in the art that various features shown and described with reference to any one figure may be combined with features shown in one or more other figures to form embodiments that are not explicitly shown or described. The combination of features shown provides a representative implementation of a typical application. However, various combinations and modifications of the features consistent with the teachings of the present disclosure may be desired for particular applications or implementations.
The use of PEMS has clearly shown that current laboratory-based testing protocols often fail to accurately characterize the emission performance or energy efficiency (fuel economy) of vehicles operating in the real world and over a wide range of relevant factors listed above, due to the high cost and extensive work required to conduct representative laboratory tests. Similar test limitations exist for BEVs, limiting the overall understanding of the energy efficiency of those vehicles operating in the real world at lower ambient temperatures and real world driving conditions.
In some examples, contemplated are devices and methods for collecting accurate real-world emissions and energy efficiency test data of any vehicle in an accurate and repeatable manner under a wide variety of environmental conditions that are not typically reproducible in a laboratory environment. The following description shows how a test laboratory may be used to accurately simulate real-world conditions for any vehicle and any combination of desired environmental conditions. In this manner, regulatory agencies can ensure compliance with emissions and energy efficiency standards, and automotive manufacturers can accurately determine the impact of vehicle powertrains or powertrain calibration changes to efficiently achieve emissions compliance and maximize fuel economy for their customers.
The test method described above may employ other vehicle operating parameters as an alternative to using throttle position and/or using a torque control dynamometer in real world driving. For example, fuel flow rate, fuel injector pulse width, and powertrain computer calculations used to calculate powertrain torque during vehicle operation are similar to throttle position or torque for subsequent vehicle or dynamometer control under the same real or simulated environmental conditions of laboratory testing.
Specific embodiments are discussed below. But the test method may be substantially the same regardless of the equipment used. It is to be understood that these specific embodiments are for purposes of illustration only and have broader applicability than this or any other single embodiment. All such embodiments are contemplated herein.
FIG. 1 illustrates many of the factors that affect tailpipe emissions of a vehicle with an ICE and the energy efficiency and operating range of all vehicles in the real world. These factors are related to vehicle design, the interaction of the vehicle with its environment (ambient temperature, pressure, humidity, road grade, traffic conditions), the driving style (speed, acceleration rate, braking habits), and the use of driver selectable options.
Figure 2 shows an arbitrary vehicle 1 being tested in the real world. For the ICE powertrain, in the case of ICE vehicle 1,
More specifically, the primary purpose of the real world road testing assembly is twofold. First, to optionally obtain emissions and/or energy efficiency data for later use in laboratory simulations that verify the same real-world environmental conditions. Second, to obtain data sufficient to accurately determine the torque applied to the driven wheel throughout a real-world test without the use or installation of a dedicated "torque wheel" 58 or other torque measuring device. Of course, "torque wheel" measurements may alternatively be used.
By determining (or directly measuring) real-world test torque specifications, the same torque specification may be applied to the driven wheels while the modified or unmodified vehicle is connected to the chassis dynamometer under the same or optionally different environmental conditions subsequently simulated in a test laboratory.
Researchers have chosen real-world test routes for their purposes. For example, it may be a high traffic light passenger car commuting corridor during peak hours, or may be a long duration route comprising many sub-routes (each being a high capacity commuting corridor), or may be any other route of interest to regulatory authorities or car manufacturers. Alternatively, the test route may be one that is more suitable for heavy vehicles employing heavy engines that are traditionally tested on engine dynamometers for regulatory purposes.
Referring to fig. 2, the vehicle 1 is driven on the road 2 in a normal driving manner or in a manner consistent with a specific test target. For example, the driver's proactive nature may be a test condition that tests the robustness of the emission control system. Also, for real world testing, driver selectable options consistent with the objectives of the study, including but not limited to air conditioning and "sport" versus "economy" driving modes, were selected as needed. Driver selections are recorded for subsequent reproduction in laboratory testing.
For the entire duration of the real world test, the
There are many other ways of recording vehicle speed, each with its own advantages and disadvantages. For example, it is a convenient way to use the vehicle's own gear speed sensor for modern vehicles, accessible through the car's CAN bus. Other methods may be employed if the researcher does not obtain it, or does not obtain it at a frequency of about 50-100Hz or higher, or wishes to make speed measurements without the need to connect to the vehicle's CAN bus (e.g., for older vehicles).
GPS is typically used on PEMS, but the velocity may not be updated at a high enough frequency, and small velocity changes at high update rates may be subject to measurement uncertainty.
Road radar systems that can be mounted on test vehicles are another option for obtaining vehicle speeds with high update rates, but like GPS, small speed variations can be masked by errors introduced by vertical motion of the vehicle. If the angle of incidence with respect to the road is vehicle dependent, the system may have to be calibrated.
Another method of determining vehicle speed at high frequencies is to employ a remote optical sensor, more specifically a retro-reflective sensor in which both the transmitter and receiver are located in the same housing and the light beam is reflected from a reflective surface applied to the moving part. In this case, the reflective paint or sticker is applied to one of the tires of the vehicle and the sensor is clamped to a control arm of the suspension of the vehicle 1, the position of which control arm relative to the tire is fixed. The output frequency from the speed sensing device is equal to the rotational frequency of the tire and proportional to the speed of the vehicle, the proportionality constant being readily determined in a known manner.
The on-board "weather station" provides a
For the ICE vehicle 1, real world tailpipe emissions and fuel economy (via carbon balancing techniques) data 19 for road testing may optionally be collected using PEMS 4, or alternative fuel consumption data may be obtained using other means, such as a fuel flow meter (not shown). For the BEV vehicle 1, electrical power consumption is optionally recorded throughout real world driving using electrical means (not shown) commonly used in the art.
Fig. 3 shows a first embodiment of a laboratory test apparatus, wherein a vehicle 1 previously tested in the real world as shown in fig. 2 is subsequently tested in a laboratory equipped with an
The
A
The vehicle 1 is placed on the
A large variable speed fan 15 may be used to simulate airflow under and around the vehicle 1, or a small variable speed fan may be used to provide cooling to one or more radiators of the vehicle 1. For cold start tests, particularly for vehicles 1 using
The 100Hz
The
The recorded
The output
The standard laboratory
If PEMS data 19 or energy consumption data is optionally recorded during a real world drive (FIG. 2), it may be desirable for the first laboratory test to also be used as the "validation" test shown in FIG. 3. For verification purposes, laboratory measured emissions and energy efficiency data may be compared to similar results optionally obtained during actual real-world testing to demonstrate the degree of validity of the test and method relative to a set of acceptance criteria.
Referring to FIG. 4, subsequent dynamometer testing may then be conducted in order to assess or prove emissions and/or energy efficiency of the same vehicle operating on the same route, under the same traffic conditions, etc., but under different environmental or ambient conditions. Alternatively, the subsequent test may be to assess vehicle 1 or a change in the design of the vehicle's emission control system, a change in powertrain calibration, or any change in the vehicle 1 that does not significantly affect the road load of the vehicle 1.
To perform such additional tests under conditions different from real world tests,
With this new testing method, as many laboratory tests as are needed can be achieved using a single road test performed over a very limited range of temperature, pressure and humidity values to characterize the emission and/or energy efficiency performance of the same vehicle 1 under a wide variety of ambient conditions and vehicle design variations. Since the test is performed in a laboratory, it can be performed in a very reproducible manner. Also, the impact of changes that do not significantly affect the road load of the vehicle on emissions control or powertrain calibration can be evaluated by conducting repeated tests before and after such changes are made.
Repeated tests under different desired atmospheric test conditions were conducted as above to understand emissions and/or energy efficiency of the vehicle 1 under a wide variety of environmental conditions.
In addition, if a "validation" test is not required, the only instrumentation required for a real-world test is a data logger and a device for measuring various pedal positions or pedal forces applied by the driver.
A second embodiment for testing an ICE equipped vehicle is shown in fig. 5. Rather than using an environmental test chamber with greater capital investment, the emission test equipment manufacturer has recently provided an "environmental condition simulator" 57. This allows the use of a standard
The test using the
Again, the first laboratory test may be used as a verification test, or may be used to simply obtain a
Referring to fig. 6, repeated tests under different environmental and/or vehicle design test conditions are conducted as described above to help understand emissions and/or energy efficiency of the vehicle 1 under a wide variety of environmental and design conditions. The previously acquired
Fig. 7 shows yet another embodiment of the apparatus. It is similar to the embodiment shown in FIG. 5, except that
During the test, the rotational speed of the
Otherwise, the test is performed in the same manner as described above. After the real-world test shown in fig. 2 is performed, the vehicle is controlled using the
FIG. 8 shows how subsequent laboratory tests are done using the
The embodiments shown in fig. 7 and 8 may be most useful for conducting representative "real world" emissions and energy efficiency tests for vehicles and machines employing internal combustion engines or powertrain components that have been certified to meet engine or component emissions or efficiency standards rather than vehicle emissions or efficiency standards.
A test procedure for collecting a limited amount of real-world driving data and using that data to derive a real-world torque specification for subsequent simulation of real-world driving in a laboratory is described above and shown in fig. 9. Collecting PEMS or energy efficiency data during real-world driving allows real-world driving to also be used for test validation purposes.
By collecting data of a real-world vehicle 1 and using the data in conjunction with one of the above-described apparatus and methods, emissions and/or energy efficiency of the vehicle 1 (or a portion thereof) may be characterized under a wide variety of environmental conditions. The impact on the emissions performance or energy efficiency of the vehicle (or a portion thereof) due to vehicle design changes (changes that do not affect the vehicle road load) may also be evaluated by suggested dynamometers (e.g., chassis dynamometers, engine dynamometers, etc.) for any desired route or set of real-world traffic conditions.
The above-described method causes the dynamometer to implicitly reproduce the total number of real-world loads or torques on the vehicle powertrain from various causes including vehicle acceleration, aerodynamic drag, road surface to tire friction, powertrain losses, and road grade profile for real-world driving of the same vehicle.
Alternatively, as described above, the "torque matching" process may be used to estimate the road slope of real-world driving by the first vehicle, i.e. it may be used to unambiguously determine the road slope profile of the entire real-world driving route or a selected portion of the real-world driving route. Furthermore, by installing a wind speed measurement device prior to road driving and by collecting wind speed data during driving, a more accurate road grade estimate may be obtained and a more accurate dynamometer simulation of real-world loads may be performed. Once this is done, the dynamometer may be controlled in a conventional manner to accurately simulate loading due to road loads, time-dependent atmospheric wind forces, transient road grades, and inertial forces.
Fig. 10 shows a wind measuring system for detachable mounting on an exterior vehicle surface 107 of a vehicle body. When properly mounted on a vehicle, ultrasonic wind meter 101 is able to measure wind speed and direction as the vehicle moves through the atmosphere. Meter 101 is held in a displaced position away from vehicle surface 107, by support structure 104, where air movement is relatively unaffected by the presence of the moving vehicle, and is oriented using an articulated friction joint 103 for this purpose for adjusting the orientation of mounting platform 102. The pneumatic suction mounting platform 105 removably secures the system to the vehicle surface 107. Data/communication cable 106 carries electronic signals from wind meter 101 indicative of instantaneous wind speed and direction to a remote data acquisition system (not shown).
By first using a dynamometer to reproduce and record the total number of real-world forces acting on a vehicle (fig. 2) driven on a road, a subsequent simulation laboratory simulation of the same real-world driving route of the same vehicle or of any second vehicle whose standard road load factor is known or can be determined can then be carried out using the real-world road gradient profile and the actual wind speed experienced by the first vehicle 1 operating on the road.
Using the derived road grade control parameters in combination with appropriate road load simulation parameters commonly used in dynamometer load control to control
In order to unambiguously determine a real-world road slope profile from real-world driving of the first vehicle 1, as described above, an
The total tractive effort for the zero grade (level road) condition of the first vehicle 1 is then calculated over real world vehicle (ground)
The total traction applied by the
Where A, B and C are the zero grade road load coefficients typically determined using an inertia glide routine, v (t) is the ground speed of the vehicle and the speed of the vehicle through the ambient air (i.e., the ground wind speed is ignored), M is the mass that can be determined by measuring the vehicle weight, and g is a gravitational acceleration constant, such as 9.81M/s2α (t) is the angle of inclination of the road as a function of time, where
In the real world, however, the aerodynamic drag acting on the vehicle 1 also depends on the speed and direction of the wind above the ground and on the ambient air density, which is related to both the air pressure and the
wherein A, B and C are first passed through the above and measured bars at atmospheric temperature and pressureUnder (i.e. at a known air density ρ)0Lower) is determined by a normal coasting process, ρ (t) is the actual air density through which the vehicle is moving, determined by atmospheric temperature, pressure and humidity measurements, v (t) is determinedg(t) is the ground speed of the vehicle as a function of time measured by any means including, but not limited to, an on-board GPS receiver, a CAN bus signal of the vehicle, or an on-board diagnostic port data stream of the vehicle, va(t) is the air speed of the vehicle as a function of time measured using an on-board air speed measuring device.
Equation 2 may alternatively be written as
C is shown as a function of time, including the effect of varying air density. C (t) is equal to the constant C from the inertial glide program whenever the air density is equal to the density condition under which the air density was initially determined using the program, but as the vehicle operates in a dynamic environment exhibiting different atmospheric temperatures, pressures and humidities, some of which are due to altitude variations, corrections are additionally made over time to account for the variable effects of real world air density conditions over time.
Referring to FIG. 10, va(t) may be measured directly using a wind speed indicator (e.g., an ultrasonic wind meter 101 mounted on the surface 107 of the body of the vehicle 1 during the illustrated road test). For dynamometers that cannot be controlled using dynamic C coefficients or using separate ground speed and air speed values, F (t) can be represented in a convenient alternative form
Wherein the modified road slope parameter α' (t) represents a modified road slope, more specifically an actual road slope modified to take into account real world wind load effects whenever the magnitude of the vehicle and the wind speed are not equal. Of course, f (t) may also assume any other form desired by the test engineer and also take into account other mathematical processes for calculating the forces on the moving vehicle.
Alternatively, if the A, B, C coefficients, vehicle ground speed, vehicle mass, and road grade are all known values, then the vehicle air speed may be determined according to
The total traction-dynamometer torque exerted by the chassis-dynamometer rollers on the tires of the test vehicle or by the axle-
T(t)=F(t)*R
where R is the radius of the circular roller, alternatively, T-axis for the case of axle dynamometer.
Therefore, the tractive effort of the zero-grade chassis dynamometer applied to the vehicle under varying simulated wind conditions (i.e., F0(t) when α (t) is 0) may be calculated by the following equation:
The difference between the real-world total tractive effort, determined by the initial dynamometer
[F]-[F0]=[T]/R-[F0]=M*g*[sinα],
and is
Where [ α ] is the angle of inclination of the road in the real world traversed by the vehicle 1. Then, the road gradient [ G ] may be expressed and calculated by the following equation
[G]=[tanα]=〔sinα/cosα〕=〔sinα/(1-sin2α)^1/2*100%
The resulting road slope profile [ G ] representing the actual road slope of the route being traveled by the first vehicle in the real world, and the mass M of any vehicle, is then used in a subsequent laboratory dynamometer test of any vehicle to simulate an original real world driving (fig. 1) or part of a real world driving of that vehicle, by effectively programming the dynamometer load according to vehicle ground speed, vehicle air speed taking into account wind, correcting the coefficients for the effect of air density and taking into account road slope, using appropriate A, B and C coefficients determined by freewheeling or other methods as described above.
With the use of the above-described method,
In conducting any of the above-described laboratory tests, exhaust emissions, fuel economy, or energy efficiency may be measured in the laboratory in the manner described above. Measuring the exhaust emissions of a vehicle during simulated driving using the
The processes, methods, or algorithms disclosed herein may be delivered to, or implemented by, a processing device, controller, or computer, which may include any existing programmable or special purpose electronic control unit. Similarly, the processes, methods, or algorithms may be stored as data and instructions executable by a controller or computer in a variety of forms including, but not limited to, information permanently stored on non-writable storage media (e.g., read-only memory (ROM) devices) and information alterably stored on writable storage media (e.g., floppy disks, magnetic tapes, Compact Disks (CDs), Random Access Memory (RAM) devices, and other magnetic and optical media). A process, method, or algorithm may also be implemented in a software executable object. Alternatively, the processes, methods, or algorithms may be implemented in whole or in part using suitable hardware components or combinations of hardware, software, and firmware components, such as Application Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs), Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), state machines, controllers, or other hardware components or devices.
The words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation, and it is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure and claims.
As previously mentioned, features of the various embodiments may be combined to form other embodiments that may not be explicitly described or illustrated. While various embodiments have been described as providing advantages or being preferred over other embodiments or prior art implementations for one or more desired characteristics, those of ordinary skill in the art recognize that one or more features or characteristics may be compromised to achieve desired overall system attributes, which depend on the particular application and implementation. These attributes include, but are not limited to, cost, strength, durability, life cycle cost, marketability, appearance, packaging, size, serviceability, weight, manufacturability, ease of assembly, and the like. Accordingly, described implementations that are less desirable than other implementations or prior art implementations for one or more features are not beyond the scope of the present disclosure and may be desirable for particular applications.