Congress Programme

Technical Sessions

F2008-12-098

Motor Model for IPM and its Application in HILS for HV System Development

Dr. Zibo Kang, Toyota Technical Development Corporation, Japan
Mr. Yukihiro Hayashi, Toyota Technical Development Corporation, Japan

Since Toyota Prius appeared in 2000, hybrid vehicles have been proven to be a very

efficient approach for environment protection and fuel consumption. Compared with

conventional vehicles with only engine, hybrid vehicles, consisting of conventional

engines and electrical motors in power-train, are complex. Therefore, much more

parameters have to be customized, and more time is necessary to make the system

optimized. In order to satisfy the paradox of reducing the development period while

ensuring system performance, model based design (MBD) method plays a very important

role. One of the important approaches for MBD is HILS (Hardware in the Loop

Simulation), which is used to verify and/or debug the control logic efficiently by

simulation without using a real motor or engine. Since HILS works in real time, the

model implemented in HILS should not only be precise, but also be processed very

quickly in order for the HILS to work efficiently.

Conventionally, a so called dq coordinate model is usually used in motor simulation.

Coordinate transformation between 3-phase and dq-phase, however, is necessary in the

simulation using this dq motor model. This transformation not only cause simulation

error due to its nonlinearity, but also need long time to be processed due to its

complicated calculation.

This paper demonstrates the development of a new 3-phase motor model of interior

permanent magnet (IPM) motors widely used in hybrid vehicles, and its application in

HILS for hybrid system development. First, a 3-phase model was developed, by which

the 3-phase current can be calculated directly from the 3-phase voltage without

using the coordinate transformation.

To use this 3-phase model for simulation, calculation of the inverse matrix of the

motor inductance matrix is required, and the inverse matrix calculation is

complicated in general. Hence, a very efficient and simple calculation algorithm is

also developed to make the inverse matrix calculation be calculated precisely and

quickly.

Then this model was implemented in 2 kinds of HILS simulator called RT-LAB and

MotorBox. The RT-LAB based simulator succeeded to bring motor simulation in to

practical motor HILS, made it possible to debug and test motor ECU completely

virtually. The motor HILS performance was further improved by the MotorBox based

simulator, which is an important component of the standard HV-HILS in Toyota.

The motor HILS have been applied to the development of motor ECU, for example,

hybrid vehicle fail-safe control logic development and verification. Application

results show that, this HILS is a very efficient system both to speed up the control

logic development and to raise ECU quality further as one of the model-based

development environments.

Session: Powertrain