Abstract

A control architecture for air to fuel ratio (AFR) control of gasoline engines designed to work with switching and/or wide range oxygen sensors, with the goal of minimizing calibration effort while meeting performance requirements, is described. A high bandwidth, dithered inner-loop reference tracking controller with pre-catalyst oxygen sensor feedback coupled with a low bandwidth setpoint tracking outer-loop with post catalyst oxygen sensor feedback, is used to control engine exhaust and O2 storage in the three-way catalyst (TWC), respectively. A total synthesis inspired design ensures that significant non-linearity in the system is handled through a coordinated and corrective action and expected response blocks in the open-loop, without burdening the closed loop controller. Calibration is achieved offline, through closed loop optimization using genetic algorithms, while simultaneously meeting performance and stability criteria with significantly reduced need for in-vehicle tuning. Experimental results show comparable emissions performance with the stock OEM AFR controller under warmed up conditions over a standard drive cycle.

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