Vehicular thermal management system including selective heat transfer medium circulation
US-9561704-B2 · Feb 7, 2017 · US
US10570872B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10570872-B2 |
| Application number | US-201815895853-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Feb 13, 2018 |
| Priority date | Feb 13, 2018 |
| Publication date | Feb 25, 2020 |
| Grant date | Feb 25, 2020 |
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Official abstract text for this publication.
Methods and systems are provided for improving the operating range of an electric vehicle having an engine wherein waste heat generated during motor operation is transferred to pre-heat the engine. Engine starting is predicted based on the electrical torque demand of the vehicle relative to the actual and predicted electrical energy consumption of the electric vehicle. Prior to starting the engine to charge a battery of the motor, various engine components are pre-heated in an order that improves vehicle range while also optimizing fuel economy.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A method for a vehicle, comprising: while propelling the vehicle via a vehicle drive motor, transferring, via a heat exchange mechanism, waste heat from the vehicle drive motor and associated power electronics to pre-heat an internal combustion engine, and adjusting a starting timing of the transferring based on a predicted start of the engine, the starting adjusted to complete pre-heating of the engine before the predicted engine start. 2. The method of claim 1 , wherein transferring waste heat from the vehicle drive motor and the associated power electronics includes transferring waste heat from a traction motor, and an inverter, the method further comprising transferring heat from an alternator and a battery to the engine, the method further comprising transferring waste heat from one or more additional waste heat sources including a transmission, a vehicle air conditioning system, and a vehicle cabin to the engine. 3. The method of claim 1 , wherein the starting timing is further adjusted based on a magnitude of a predicted amount of available waste heat, the transferring started earlier relative to the predicted start of the engine as the magnitude of the predicted amount of available waste heat decreases. 4. The method of claim 3 , further comprising estimating the magnitude of the predicted amount of available waste heat based on each of a duration of operation of the motor, average motor output, and ambient temperature. 5. The method of claim 1 , wherein the predicted start of the engine is predicted based on an occurrence of peak torque exceeding an electrical torque capacity of the motor during a current drive cycle. 6. The method of claim 5 , wherein the electrical torque capacity of the motor during the current drive cycle is estimated based on a state of charge of a battery coupled to the motor, and wherein the peak torque is estimated based on a plurality of parameters associated with a route of travel on the current drive cycle, the plurality of parameters including a road grade, weather and traffic conditions along the route of travel, average vehicle speed, and driver history. 7. The method of claim 1 , wherein the engine is a range extender engine indirectly coupled to wheels of the vehicle via a battery of the vehicle drive motor. 8. The method of claim 1 , wherein the heat exchange mechanism includes a plurality of heat exchangers correspondingly coupled to each of the vehicle drive motor, the associated power electronics, and the engine, the heat exchange mechanism further including one or more of a circulating coolant and a phase change material. 9. A method, comprising: while propelling a hybrid vehicle via an electric motor on a drive cycle, transferring, via a heat exchange mechanism, waste heat generated on-board the vehicle to pre-heat an engine before the engine is started on the drive cycle, and adjusting a starting timing of the transferring based on an estimated amount of waste heat generated on-board the vehicle relative to an estimated amount of heat required to pre-heat the engine to a target temperature based on a predicted engine start time. 10. The method of claim 9 , wherein the engine is started responsive to a state of charge of a battery coupled to the electric motor falling below a threshold, and wherein the engine is coupled to wheels of the vehicle via the battery to the battery via an alternator, and where the alternator is coupled to the electric motor, which in turn is coupled to wheels of the vehicle. 11. The method of claim 10 , wherein the waste heat includes waste heat generated by the electric motor, associated power electronics including an inverter, the battery, the alternator, a vehicle air conditioning system, and a cabin console. 12. The method of claim 10 , further comprising, predicting the engine start time based on an occurrence of peak torque demand exceeding electrical torque output of the motor on the drive cycle, the occurrence of peak torque demand predicted based on parameters associated with a route of travel on the drive cycle, the electrical torque output of the motor estimated based on the battery state of charge. 13. The method of claim 9 , wherein transferring the waste heat via the heat exchange mechanism includes transferring via one or more of circulating coolant and a phase change material. 14. The method of claim 13 , wherein the heat exchange mechanism includes a first heat exchanger coupled to the electric motor, a second heat exchanger coupled to the engine, each of the first and second heat exchanger circulating the coolant, and a third heat exchanger coupled to each of the first and second heat exchanger, the third heat exchanger additionally coupled to a phase change material reservoir. 15. The method of claim 14 , wherein waste heat from motor operation is transferred from the motor to the phase change material via the first and the third heat exchangers when a temperature of the phase change material is below a threshold, and wherein the waste heat is transferred from the phase change material to the engine via the second and the third heat exchangers when the temperature of the phase change material is above the threshold. 16. A system for a hybrid vehicle, comprising: an electric motor, powered via a battery; an engine coupled to the battery; a heat exchange system including a valve; and a controller with computer readable instructions stored on non-transitory memory for: propelling the vehicle via the electric motor; and adjusting a position of the valve to transfer waste heat from the electric motor to pre-heat the engine; and starting the engine, after the pre-heating, responsive to a state of charge of the battery falling below a threshold; predicting the starting timing of the engine based on average motor output, rate of change of battery state of charge, and route of travel parameters; and beginning the transferring of waste heat to pre-heat the engine to a target temperature before the engine start, a timing of the beginning based on the predicted starting time of the engine. 17. The system of claim 16 , wherein the controller includes further instructions for: estimating a magnitude of the waste heat based on each of a duration of operation of the motor, the average motor output, and ambient temperature, wherein the beginning timing of the transferring is adjusted based on the estimated magnitude of the waste heat.
using model predictive control [MPC] strategies, i.e. control methods based on models predicting performance {(utilising navigation and traffic information in the control strategy B60W20/12)} · CPC title
Control systems specially adapted for hybrid vehicles {(hybrid vehicle design, B60K6/00; electric vehicles B60L)} · CPC title
for vehicles having a combustion engine and electric drive means, e.g. hybrid electric vehicles · CPC title
drive range estimation, e.g. of estimation of available travel distance · CPC title
Aiding engine start by thermal means, e.g. using lighted wicks · CPC title
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