Architecture & Design of Common Hybrid Torque Controls within a Powertrain Domain Controller

2023-01-0549

04/11/2023

Features
Event
WCX SAE World Congress Experience
Authors Abstract
Content
The proliferation and increased complexity of electrified powertrains presents a challenge to the associated controls development. This paper outlines the strategy of common supervisory and domain torque management for such powertrains. The strategy covers the multitude of powertrain architectures that exist in the market today while maintaining the fundamental pillars of physics-based torque controls, state-of-the-art optimization methodologies, and common-core hybrid system constraints.
The electrified powertrain torque controls that Stellantis LLC. uses include key constituents such as optimization of powertrain state that relate to optimum engine speed and transmission gear, optimization of engine and motor torques, engine start-stop management, and hybrid shift execution which manages powertrain state transitions by interacting with various external transmission systems. The common backbone of these constituents are the dynamic/kinematic equations of the powertrain. Centralizing these dynamic and kinematic equations within the control structure allows for the downstream control constituents mentioned above to remain common for all electrified powertrain architectures. An added benefit of this strategy is the streamlining of calibration methodology and effort.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2023-01-0549
Pages
12
Citation
Patel, N., Sha, H., Madireddy, K., and Tuller, Z., "Architecture & Design of Common Hybrid Torque Controls within a Powertrain Domain Controller," SAE Technical Paper 2023-01-0549, 2023, https://doi.org/10.4271/2023-01-0549.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 11, 2023
Product Code
2023-01-0549
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English