Title: The Basics of Fuel Control
1The Basics of Fuel Control
Presented by
Paul Baltusis Powertrain
Control System Engineering Diagnostic
Systems Department OBD-II Technical
Specialist Revised October 6,
2001
2Overview
- The purpose of the air/fuel ratio control system
is to achieve an ideal air/fuel mixture within
the combustion chamber. - The goal is to produce maximum power while
minimizing emissions and maximizing fuel economy. - To accomplish this goal, the Powertrain Control
Module relies on a network of inputs (sensors)
and outputs (actuator) to accurately control the
air/ fuel mixture.
3Basic Fuel Injection System
4Air/Fuel Ratio
- The air/ fuel ratio is the ratio of air to fuel,
by mass. - 14.7 1 ( stoichiometric) is the ideal air/ fuel
ratio for gasoline, but during normal engine
operating conditions, this air/ fuel ratio varies
between 12 1 (rich) to 18 1 (lean). - The air/ fuel ratio can affect power, fuel
economy, and emissions.
5Air/Fuel Ratio Factors
- The engine fuel system is designed to break the
liquid fuel into a vapor of fine fuel particles
and mix them with air. - There are many factors involved in the air/ fuel
mixing process. - Atomization
- Vaporization
- Swirl
- Condensation
- Absorption
6Fuel Delivery
- The amount of fuel to be delivered by the
injector is determined by the fuel control
system. Fuel mass depends on - How much air is entering the engine, or air mass,
- How much fuel is needed to achieve the desired
air/fuel ratio, or fuel mass - and the injector pulse width required to deliver
the correct amount of fuel to the proper cylinder.
7Basic Fuel Equation
- Fuel Mass Air Mass
- Desired A/F Ratio
-
- or
- Air Mass
- Desired Equivalence Ratio (EQ_RAT) 14.64
8Basic Fuel Equation
- Because most PCMs use O2 sensors for feedback,
the fuel equation includes short and long term
fuel trim modifiers - FUELMASS AIRMASS SHRTFT LONGFT
- EQUIV_RATIO 14.64
- Now lets see how this equation works!
9Measuring Air Mass
- There are three methods generally used to measure
air mass - Mass Air Flow (MAF) sensor mass air flow system
- Manifold Absolute Pressure (MAP) sensor speed
density system - Vane Air Flow (VAF) sensor not used very much
(we wont discuss this system)
10Mass Air Systems
- The Mass Air Flow (MAF) sensor is a hot wire-
sensing element placed directly in the air path
to the intake manifold, before the IAC and
throttle plates. - As air passes through the MAF sensor and over the
hot wire, the wire cools, changing its resistance
which in-turn changes the current in the wire.
The sensor electronics uses this characteristic
to determine air mass.
11Mass Air System Characteristics
- MAF measures actual air mass - does not need
correction for altitude. - MAF does not measure EGR flow - EGR mass
calculation is not needed for fuel control. - BARO must be inferred, usually at high throttle
openings or is derived from a MAP/BARO sensor. - Unmetered air (vacuum/induction leak) causes a
lean error.
12Speed Density Systems
- A speed density system is more complicated than
the mass air system. Air mass is determined based
on MAP and a PCM calculation. - A number of factors are incorporated into the
speed-density equation engine displacement, air
density, Manifold Absolute Pressure (MAP), RPM,
volumetric efficiency, Engine Coolant Temperature
(ECT), and Intake Air Temperature (IAT).
13Speed Density Equation
- In addition, Exhaust Gas Recirculation mass
and/or Purge Flow mass must be independently
calculated and subtracted from air mass. Typical
formulae are - Air mass (Ford) K(constant) MAP RPM
- Vol. Eff. ECT correction IAT correction
EGR mass - Air mass (GM) Displ Cyl/2 MAP RPM
Vol. Eff. / IAT R Purge mass EGR mass
14Speed Density System Characteristics
- Speed density measures air volume - needs density
corrections for altitude, temperature. - S/D needs to know engine volumetric efficiency.
- S/D needs to know EGR mass to subtract the proper
amount of fuel (EGR is inert and does not burn). - BARO is measure directly from the MAP sensor.
- Unmetered air (vacuum/induction leak) has no
affect on fuel control.
15Desired Air Fuel Ratio
- After the PCM computes air mass, it needs to
determine the desired air/fuel ratio (equivalence
ratio) to determine fuel mass. - It then uses the fuel mass to determine the
appropriate injector pulse width. The pulse
width is the length of time the PCM turns the
injector on, and is measured in milliseconds. The
actual pulse width depends on the injector flow
rate.
16Desired Air Fuel Ratio
- Although stoichiometric (EQ_RAT 1.0) is
considered the ideal air/fuel ratio for gasoline
(14.641), there are many operating conditions
where a stoichiometric ratio is not desired.
When operating conditions require an air/fuel
ratio other than stoichiometric, or the oxygen
sensors are not at operating temperature, the
fuel system is commanded to open-loop mode.
17Open Loop Fuel Control
- When the engine is operating open-loop, the PCM
commands a rich or lean air/fuel ratio, and uses
air mass to calculate the appropriate injector
pulse width. It does not use feedback from the
oxygen sensor. - The PCM generally commands open-loop operation
during the following conditions - Cold engine start-up,
- high load / wide open throttle
- catalyst over-temperature protection.
18Open Loop Fuel Control
- During cold engine start-up, the oxygen sensor
does not produce an accurate signal because it
has not reached operating temperature. The PCM
waits until the O2 sensor is warmed up before
attempting to go into closed-loop operation. - Most vehicles use a O2 sensor with a heater to
allow faster warm-up.
19Open Loop Fuel Control
- During high load and WOT operation, maximum
engine power can be obtained by running about 5
rich. - If inferred catalyst temperature is too high
(sustained high rpm and load), running rich (or
sometimes lean) can be used to reduce catalyst
temperatures.
20Open Loop Fuel Control
- During open-loop operation, EQ_RAT values come
from lookup tables in the PCM. The specific
value selected is based primarily on RPM, load,
and engine coolant temperature. EQ_RAT values are
generally less than 1.0, resulting in a rich
air/fuel ratio. Although the O2 sensor is not
used for fuel control, it will reflect this rich
condition.
21Closed Loop Fuel Control
- Once the oxygen sensor has reached operating
temperature and open loop conditions are not
demanded, the PCM commands a stoichiometric
air/fuel ratio (EQ_RAT 1.0) and the engine
operates in closed loop. - In closed-loop operation, the PCM calculates air
mass and uses feedback from the oxygen sensor to
indicate if the mixture is rich or lean. The PCM
uses this information to adjust the commanded
injector pulse width until a stoichiometric
air/fuel ratio is achieved.
22Closed Loop Fuel Control
- A conventional O2 sensor (not a wide-range
sensor) can only indicate if the mixture is
richer or leaner than stoichiometric. During
closed loop operation, short term fuel trim
values are calculated by the PCM using oxygen
sensor inputs in order to maintain a
stoichiometric air/fuel ratio.
23O2 Sensor Transfer Function
24Closed Loop Fuel Control
- The PCM is constantly making adjustments to the
short term fuel trim, which causes the oxygen
sensor voltage to switch from rich to lean around
the stoichiometric point. As long as the short
term fuel trim is able to cause the oxygen sensor
voltage to switch, a stoichiometric air/fuel
ratio is maintained.
25Closed Loop Fuel Control
- Short term fuel trim values are displayed on a
scan tool as a percentage of fuel added or
subtracted. Typically, the SHRTFT value switches
above and below zero percent. Zero percent (0)
on the scan tool means there is no adjustment and
the PCM multiplies the air mass by 1. If the
percentage is positive, the PCM multiplies by a
value greater than 1, and if the percentage is
negative, the PCM multiples by a value less than
1.
26Closed Loop Fuel Control
- When initially entering closed loop fuel, SHRTFT
starts at zero percent and begins adding or
subtracting fuel in order to make the oxygen
sensor switch from its current state. If the
oxygen sensor signal sent to the PCM is greater
than 0.45 volts, the PCM considers the mixture
rich and SHRTFT shortens the injector pulse
width.
27Closed Loop Fuel Control
- When the cylinder fires using the new injector
pulse width, the exhaust contains more oxygen.
Now when the exhaust passes the oxygen sensor, it
causes the voltage to switch below 0.45 volts,
the PCM considers the mixture lean, and SHRTFT
lengthens the injector pulse width. This cycle
continues as long as the fuel system is in closed
loop operation.
28Example of Closed Loop Fuel Control
29Closed Loop Fuel Control
- As fuel, air, or engine components age or
otherwise change over the life of the vehicle,
the PCM learns to adapt fuel control. Corrections
are only learned during closed loop operation,
and are stored in the PCM as long term fuel trim
values (LONGFT). For some manufacturers, LONGFT
values are only learned when SHRTFT values cause
the oxygen sensor to switch.
30Closed Loop Fuel Control
- If the average SHRTFT value remains above or
below 0, the PCM learns a new LONGFT value,
which allows the SHRTFT value to return to an
average value near 0. There is normally a
different LONGFT value stored for various RPM and
load operating conditions. LONGFT is actually
stored as a table. The LONGFT value displayed
on the scan tool is the value being used for the
current operating condition.
31Example of Learning LONGFT
32Closed Loop Fuel Control
- LONGFT values are displayed on a scan tool as a
percentage of fuel added or subtracted. Zero
percent on the scan tool means there is no
adjustment and the PCM multiplies the air mass by
1. If the percentage is positive, the PCM
multiplies by a value greater than 1, and if the
percentage is negative, the PCM multiples by a
value less than 1. LONGFT values learned during
closed loop are used in both open and closed loop
modes.
33How does this help diagnostics?
- Vacuum leaks
- Speed density fuel control is unaffected, mass
air systems go lean at idle. Fuel trim can be
used to diagnose vacuum leaks on a mass air
system. - Idle speed goes up on a speed density system (a
leak is just like opening the throttle), idle
speed drops or the engine stalls on a mass air
system because the fuel system is lean.
34How does this help diagnostics?
- Plugged EGR passages
- Speed density systems without flow diagnostics
will run lean. The PCM is subtracting fuel for
EGR mass even if its not there. - For mass air systems, fuel control is not
affected by any EGR errors.
35How does this help diagnostics?
- Low Fuel Pressure
- Speed density and mass air systems act alike. Use
SHRTFT and LONGFT to see if there is a uniform
shift in LONGFT values, on both banks (where
applicable).
36How does this help diagnostics?
- Contaminated MAF sensor
- Use LONGFT to see is idle area is rich, higher
rpm/loads are lean. - Use BARO (where applicable) to see if it is
appropriate for the current altitude.
37How does this help diagnostics?
- Lack of O2 Sensor Switches
- Depends on whether a manufacturer needs O2 sensor
switches to learn LONGFT. - If O2 switches are needed, a large fueling error
will set an lack of O2 switches code, not a
fuel trim code. - If O2 switches are not needed, a large fueling
error will set a fuel trim code.
38Bottom Line
- A basic understand of fuel control systems is
essential for proper diagnostics. - Thank you for your attention.