Right and left motor output control for vehicle
US-10179507-B2 · Jan 15, 2019 · US
US10829067B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10829067-B2 |
| Application number | US-201716072102-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Mar 14, 2017 |
| Priority date | Mar 25, 2016 |
| Publication date | Nov 10, 2020 |
| Grant date | Nov 10, 2020 |
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An electrical load management system for a vehicle power supply system having a high voltage network and a low voltage network coupled to each other by a DC-DC converter includes a controller for controlling one or more high voltage vehicle electrical systems connected to the high voltage network and one or more low voltage vehicle electrical systems connected to the low voltage network. The controller has at least one processor that receives command signals for the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems, and a memory device having instructions stored therein. The at least one processor is configured to determine a first electrical load on the high voltage network and a second electrical load on the low voltage network in dependence on the command signals and to control operation of the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems in dependence on the determined first and second electrical loads.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. An electrical load management system for a vehicle power supply system (PSS) having a high voltage network (NHV) and a low voltage network (NL V) coupled to each other by a DC-DC converter, wherein the electrical load management system comprises: a controller for controlling vehicle electrical systems (VS), the vehicle electrical systems (VS) comprising one or more high voltage vehicle electrical system (VSHV) connected to the high voltage network (NHV) and one or more low voltage vehicle electrical system (VSLV) connected to the low voltage network (NLV), the vehicle electrical systems (VS) having a predefined order of priority; the controller comprising at least one processor for receiving command signals for the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV); a memory device having instructions stored therein and coupled to the at least one processor; wherein the at least one processor is configured to: determine a first electrical load on the high voltage network (NHV) and a second electrical load on the low voltage network (NLV) in dependence on the command signals; cause activation of the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV) in the order of priority; and if the activation of a next vehicle electrical systems (VS) according to the order of priority would cause the first electrical load or the second electrical load to respectively exceed a capacity of the high voltage network (NHV) or the low voltage network (NL V), shift priority of operation to a vehicle electrical system (VS) which can receive power. 2. The electrical load management system as claimed in claim 1 , wherein each of the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV) has a predefined electrical load value; and the at least one processor is configured to determine the first and second electrical loads in dependence on the predefined electrical load values. 3. The electrical load management system as claimed in claim 2 , wherein the at least one processor is configured to receive the predefined electrical load value from a control module associated with the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSL V). 4. The electrical load management system as claimed in claim 2 , wherein the electrical load values of the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV) are power ratings. 5. The electrical load management system as claimed in claim 4 , wherein the capacity of the high voltage network comprises a first maximum power load and the capacity of the low voltage network comprises a second maximum power load; the at least one processor being configured to shift priority of operation to a vehicle electrical system (VS) which can receive power without causing the first and second electrical loads to exceed the first and second maximum power loads respectively. 6. The electrical load management system as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the at least one processor is configured to determine when the DC-DC converter is saturated; and cause de-activation or to inhibit activation of one or more low voltage vehicle electrical system (VSLV) when the DC-DC converter is saturated. 7. The electrical load management system as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV) are categorized as manageable and unmanageable, the at least one processor being configured to prioritize operation of the unmanageable high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV) over the manageable high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV). 8. The electrical load management system as claimed in claim 1 , wherein one of the low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSLV) is a low voltage battery, the at least one processor being configured to control charging of the low voltage battery. 9. The electrical load management system as claimed in claim 1 , wherein one of the high voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV) is a high voltage battery, the at least one processor being configured to control charging of the high voltage battery. 10. A vehicle comprising the electrical load management system as claimed in claim 1 . 11. A method of managing electrical load on a vehicle power supply system (PSS) having a high voltage network and a low voltage network coupled to each other by a DC-DC converter, the method comprising: controlling vehicle electrical systems (VS), the vehicle electrical systems (VS) comprising one or more high voltage vehicle electrical system (VSHV) connected to the high voltage network (NHV) and one or more low voltage vehicle electrical system (VSLV) connected to the low voltage network (NV), the vehicle electrical systems (VS) having a predefined order of priority; receiving command signals for the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV); determining a first electrical load on the said high voltage network (NHV) and a second electrical load on the said low voltage network (NLV) in dependence of the said command signals; and causing activation controlling operation of the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV) in dependence on the determined first and second electrical loads the order of priority; and if the activation of a next vehicle electrical systems (VS) according to the order of priority would cause the first electrical load or the second electrical load to respectively exceed a capacity of the high voltage network (NHV) or the low voltage network (NL V), shifting priority of operation to a vehicle electrical system (VS) which can receive power. 12. The method as claimed in claim 11 , further comprising determining the first and second electrical loads in dependence on electrical load values defined for each of the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV). 13. The method as claimed in claim 12 , wherein the electrical load values of the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV) are power ratings. 14. The method as claimed in claim 13 , further comprising shifting priority of operation to a vehicle electrical systems (VS) which can receive power without causing the first and second electrical loads to exceed first and second maximum power loads defined for the high and low voltage networks respectively. 15. The method as claimed in claim 11 , further comprising receiving the predefined electrical load values from a control module associated with each of the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV). 16. The method as claimed in claim 11 further comprising causing de-activation or inhibiting activation of one or more low voltage vehicle electrical system (VSLV) when the DC-DC converter is saturated. 17. The method as claimed in claim 11 , wherein the high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSL V) are categorized as manageable and unmanageable, the method comprising prioritizing operation of the unmanageable high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV) over the manageable high and low voltage vehicle electrical systems (VSHV, VSLV). 18. The method as claimed in claim 11 , wherein one of the low voltage vehicle electrical systems is a low voltage battery, the method comprising controlling charging of the low voltage battery. 19. The method as claimed in claim 11 , wherein one of the high voltage vehicle electrical systems is a high voltage battery, the method comprising controlling charging of the high voltage battery. 20. A non-transitory computer readable media comp
exchanging power with road vehicles · CPC title
for supply of electrical power to vehicle subsystems {or for (circuit arrangements for charging batteries H02J7/00)} · CPC title
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Energy efficient charging or discharging systems for batteries, ultracapacitors, supercapacitors or double-layer capacitors specially adapted for vehicles · CPC title
characterised by the use of electrical cells or batteries (for propulsion puposes B60K1/04; supplying batteries to, or removing batteries from, vehicles B60S5/06; testing of charge state G01R31/36) · CPC title
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