Diagnosing an air filter with an electric boosting device
US-10100790-B1 · Oct 16, 2018 · US
US10513997B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10513997-B2 |
| Application number | US-201715840370-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Dec 13, 2017 |
| Priority date | Dec 13, 2017 |
| Publication date | Dec 24, 2019 |
| Grant date | Dec 24, 2019 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
Methods and systems are provided for diagnostics of an intake air filter during vehicle-off conditions. In one example, the engine may be reverse rotated, unfueled, and air flow via the exhaust manifold and the intake manifold are estimated and compared to a baseline air flow. A blocked intake air flow may be indicated based on the comparison between air flow via the exhaust manifold and the intake manifold and the baseline air flow upon opening a secondary flow path to atmosphere.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. An engine method, comprising: during unfueled cranking of an engine while the engine is spun in reverse, indicating a blocked intake air filter based on air flow through an exhaust system relative to air flow through an intake system and further based on a change in the air flow through the exhaust system upon opening a secondary path to atmosphere. 2. The method of claim 1 , wherein indicating a blocked intake air filter based on air flow through the exhaust system relative to air flow through the intake system includes: comparing air flow through the exhaust system and air flow through the intake system to each other and to a baseline air flow; in response to the air flow through the exhaust system being substantially equal to the air flow through the intake system and each of the air flow through the exhaust system and the air flow through the intake system being lower than the baseline air flow, indicating an air flow blockage; and indicating that the air flow blockage is the blocked intake air filter based on the change in the air flow through the exhaust system upon opening the secondary path to atmosphere. 3. The method of claim 2 , wherein air flow through the exhaust system is estimated via a differential pressure (dP) sensor coupled across a particulate filter housed in an exhaust passage and air flow through the intake system is estimated via a manifold air flow (MAF) sensor coupled to an intake manifold. 4. The method of claim 3 , further comprising, indicating a leak in at least one of the intake system and the exhaust system responsive to the air flow through the exhaust system being substantially different from the air flow through the intake system, wherein the leak is upstream of the dP sensor. 5. The method of claim 3 , wherein the unfueled cranking of the engine while the engine is spun in reverse is carried out at a predetermined set of conditions, the predetermined set of conditions including an engine speed, a duration of engine cranking, intake throttle position, electric booster speed, and exhaust tuning valve position. 6. The method of claim 5 , wherein the baseline air flow is estimated via the MAF sensor upon installation of the air filter by cranking the engine unfueled in the reverse direction at the predetermined set of conditions. 7. The method of claim 2 , wherein indicating the air flow blockage is the blocked air filter based on the change in the air flow through the exhaust system upon opening the secondary path to atmosphere includes indicating the air flow blockage is the blocked air filter responsive to an increase in the air flow through the exhaust system upon opening each of a compressor purge valve (CPV) and a compressor vent valve (CVV) of an evaporative emissions control (EVAP) system. 8. The method of claim 7 , wherein the CPV is housed in a canister purge line of the EVAP system and the CVV is housed in a canister ventilation path of the EVAP system, the canister purge line coupling the intake system to a canister of the EVAP system and the canister ventilation path coupling the canister to atmosphere and wherein the canister purge line is coupled to the intake manifold downstream of the MAF sensor. 9. The method of claim 7 , further comprising, indicating that the air flow blockage is a blockage in the exhaust system responsive to the change in the air flow through the exhaust system upon opening the secondary path to atmosphere being less than a threshold change responsive to opening each of the CPV and the CVV. 10. The method of claim 1 , further comprising, while the engine is spun in reverse, operating an intake electric booster in a reverse direction to route ambient air from an engine exhaust passage to the engine intake manifold via one or more engine cylinders. 11. The method of claim 1 , wherein the engine is coupled in a vehicle and the reverse rotation of the engine is conducted via a motor powered by a battery under conditions where the vehicle is not occupied and the vehicle is not in motion. 12. The method of claim 1 , further comprising, in response to the detection of the blocked intake air filter, setting a diagnostics code, and adjusting an opening of an intake throttle to compensate for blockage in the intake air filter. 13. An engine method for an autonomous vehicle, comprising: during a first engine condition when the vehicle is operated without a human driver and when the vehicle is not being propelled by engine torque, reverse rotating an engine, unfueled, and recording a first baseline intake air flow and a second baseline exhaust air flow; during a second engine condition, when the vehicle is operated without a human driver and when the vehicle is not being propelled by engine torque, reverse rotating the engine, unfueled, and recording an updated intake air flow and an updated exhaust air flow; and diagnosing a presence or an absence of degradation of an intake air filter based on a correlation amongst each of the first baseline intake air flow, the second baseline exhaust air flow, the updated intake air flow, and the updated exhaust air flow. 14. The method of claim 13 , wherein the first engine condition includes an engine condition when a lower than first threshold duration has elapsed since installation of the intake air filter, and the second engine condition includes a used engine condition when the intake air filter has been in use for over a second threshold duration, the second threshold duration longer than the first threshold duration. 15. The method of 13 , wherein diagnosing the presence of degradation of the intake air filter is based on the updated intake air flow being substantially equal to the updated exhaust air flow, the updated intake air flow being lower than the first baseline intake air flow, and the updated exhaust air flow being lower than the first baseline exhaust air flow, and the presence of degradation of the intake air filter bring further based on an increase in the updated exhaust air flow upon opening an air flow path from downstream of the MAF sensor to atmosphere. 16. The method of claim 15 , wherein the air flow path from downstream of the MAF sensor to atmosphere is via a canister purge line, a canister, and a canister ventilation path of an evaporative emissions system, and wherein the air flow path is opened by actuating each of a canister purge valve coupled to the canister purge line to an open position and a canister vent valve coupled to the canister ventilation path to an open position. 17. The method of claim 13 , wherein diagnosing the absence of degradation of the intake air filter is based on the updated intake air flow being substantially equal to the updated exhaust air flow, the updated intake air flow being substantially equal to the first baseline intake air flow, and the updated exhaust air flow being substantially equal to the first baseline exhaust air flow. 18. A hybrid vehicle system, comprising: a vehicle; an engine; an electric machine coupled to a battery capable of rotating the engine; an intake passage including an intake air filter and a compressor; an exhaust passage including a particulate filter; a manifold air flow (MAF) sensor coupled to the intake passage; a differential pressure sensor coupled across the particulate filter; a canister purge line and a ventilation path coupling the intake passage to atmosphere via a canister, the canister purge line including a canister purge valve (CPV) and the ventilation path including a canister vent valve (CVV); and a controller with computer
for diagnosing the engine (diagnosis of purge control systems F02M25/0809) · CPC title
the parameter being determined by using a model of the engine intake or its components · CPC title
Engine speed · CPC title
by measuring intake air flow · CPC title
Intake manifold pressure · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.