Printer Friendly
The Free Library
6,683,608 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Electronics under the hood.


"We think there is a strong value proposition around putting intelligence in electronics as opposed to hardware," says Mike Crane, Siemens VDO VDO (Vereinigte DEUTA (Deutsche Tachometerwerke GmbH) OTA (OTA Apparate GmbH)) is a manufacturer of information and cockpit systems, navigation, telematics, communication and audio systems and control and fuel systems.  North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 Director of Powertrain Gasoline Systems (www.usa.siemensvdo.com). The importance of electronics under the hood under the hood - [hot-rodder talk] 1. The underlying implementation of a product (hardware, software, or idea). Implies that the implementation is not intuitively obvious from the appearance, but the speaker is about to enable the listener to grok it.  is something that is being driven by a number of factors, both market-driven and regulatory. Whether it is the seemingly ever-increasing price of fuel, the attention being paid to alternatives such as ethanol, hybrid technologies Hybrid Technologies (NYBT) is offering all-electric versions of the 2008 Smart ForTwo. See their corporate website for more information. External links , or environmental regulations, what Crane says is happening is a shift in fundamental engine architectures in order to accommodate them. Joe Fadool, Siemens vice president, Powertrain Electronics and Drivetrain Systems, adds, "It's less expensive to control functions better, and more tightly, using electronics and software rather than adding after-treatment systems or mechanical control systems." In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, it is about controlling things via electronic advances.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Consider, for example, the potential proliferation of diesel engines for passenger cars. Fadool sees the need for electronic control systems to help manage the emissions from those engines. Consider the growth of boosting--superchargers or turbochargers. "It's no longer a turbocharger tur·bo·charg·er  
n.
See turbosupercharger.



turbo·charged adj.
 with a bypass valve or a waste gate," says Crane, "it's a variable-nozzle or a variable-geometry turbocharger. You have to map the turbocharger and control that map." Valve disablement systems in order to shut off cylinders to minimize fuel use? Again, something that needs to be managed electronically.

Hybrids, of course, put plenty of electronics under the hood. "Clearly, hybrids require not only additional control," says Fadool, "but power electronics--high temperature, high-power electronics--to control the electric motors." Suddenly there are inverters involved in the motor-generator setup. And there are potential demands to control 80-kW motors for hybrid vehicles This is a list of hybrid vehicles in chronological order of production: Early designs
  • 1899 Dr Ferdinand Porsche, then a young engineer at Jacob Lohner & Co, built the first Hybrid Car.
. While he admits that it is still pretty much a niche market A niche market also known as a target market is a focused, targetable portion (subset) of a market sector.

By definition, then, a business that focuses on a niche market is addressing a need for a product or service that is not being addressed by mainstream providers.
 today, he says that they're estimating as many as a million units being sold by 2012. (He notes, "One advantage that Siemens has is that we do inverters and high-power motors for industrial applications." This know-how is being transitioned to the automotive side of the business.)

One thing that Fadool says they're working on is to actually use software in place of physical sensors on engines. He explains that they're developing mathematical functions that can be used to infer what is going on and to respond accordingly. That is, they're taking information that is being provided by sensors on the engine, then figuring out whether based on parameters (e.g., air flow, throttle position, spark advance) it is possible to determine what the appropriate response would be. Another example is instead of having a physical sensor on electromagnetic valve actuators, signals from the electromagnetic field electromagnetic field

Property of space caused by the motion of an electric charge. A stationary charge produces an electric field in the surrounding space. If the charge is moving, a magnetic field is also produced. A changing magnetic field also produces an electric field.
 generated could be used by software to "sense" the position of the valve without a physical sensor.

This is not to say that there will necessarily be the elimination of sensors and actuators. In fact, Crane says that there will undoubtedly be the use of "smart actuators." Rather than having the ECU deal with functions, the electronics will be right on the actuator so that control can be local. Consequently, this opens up space in the ECU to deal with complex functions. Fadool points out that while it is true that there is a lot of computing power in a given vehicle that spends comparatively long periods of time idle or underutilized, "Under the hood, that's not necessarily the case because the engine is a real-time, embedded system." Things are being controlled at the micro- or millisecond One thousandth of a second. See space/time and ohnosecond.

(unit) millisecond - (ms) One thousandth of a second, one thousand microseconds. A long time for a modern computer.
 level. So the 32-bit processors in the ECUs are hard at it.

By Gary S. Vasilash, Editor-In-Chief
COPYRIGHT 2006 Gardner Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Vasilash, Gary S.
Publication:Automotive Design & Production
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2006
Words:591
Previous Article:Plastics: the return of body panels? A problem with plastics and steel structures is a difference in the coefficient of expansion. Some material...
Next Article:PDF goes 3D: forget mailing paper documents. Forget emailing two-dimensional GIF, JPEG, and TIFF graphic images with explanatory notes in some word...
Topics:



Related Articles
Amoco Performance Products. (signs distribution agreement with M.A. Hanna Co.) (Brief Article)
BMC Molding Goes Vertical & Tiebarless.
ENGLISH TOWN TIRES OF LEGEND : SHERIFF OF NOTTINGHAM DEFENDS ROBIN HOOD.(BUSINESS)
Mazda's coneheads. .(Brief Article)
It's in the cards.(M1A2 SEP Tank, M104 Wolverine ...)
The council has also announced that E. Michael Thoben, CEO of Interlink Electronics.(Business Groups)(retirements)(Brief Article)
L-3 Comm. awarded 5-year $179m task order from the U.S. Army.(L-3 Communications Holdings Inc.)
Kitchen hood performance in food service operations.(FEATURES)
Blazing a perfectly engineered trail.(SPECIAL REPORT: ENGINEERING)(Cambrian College's nationally accredited engineering programs)
Coating enhances in-mold labeling.(KEEPING UP WITH: Auxiliaries)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles