P0057
DTC P0037 Oxygen Sensor Heater Control Circuit Low (Bank 1 Sensor 2)DTC P0038 Oxygen Sensor Heater Control Circuit High (Bank 1 Sensor 2)
DTC P0057 Oxygen Sensor Heater Control Circuit Low (Bank 2 Sensor 2)
DTC P0058 Oxygen Sensor Heater Control Circuit High (Bank 2 Sensor 2)
DESCRIPTION
DTC Detection Condition:
The heated oxygen sensor (HO2S) is used to monitor oxygen in the exhaust gas. For optimum catalyst operation, the air fuel mixture (air-fuel ratio) must be maintained near the ideal "stoichiometric" ratio. The HO2S output voltage changes suddenly in the vicinity of the stoichiometric ratio. The ECM adjusts the fuel injection time so that the air-fuel ratio is nearly stoichiometric.
The HO2S generates a voltage between 0.1 and 0.9 volts in response to oxygen in the exhaust gas. If the oxygen in the exhaust gas increases, the air-fuel ratio becomes "Lean". The ECM interprets Lean when the HO2S voltage is below 0.45 volts. If the oxygen in the exhaust gas decreases, the air-fuel ratio becomes "Rich". The ECM interprets Rich when the HO2S voltage is above 0.45 volts.
HINT: The ECM provides a pulse width modulated control circuit to adjust current through the heater. The heated oxygen sensor heater circuit uses a relay on the +B side of the circuit.
HINT:
- Bank 1 is the bank that includes cylinder No.1.
- Bank 2 is the bank that does not include cylinder No.1.
- Sensor 1 is the closest sensor to the engine assembly.
- Sensor 2 is the farthest sensor from the engine assembly.
MONITOR DESCRIPTION
Monitor Strategy:
Typical Enabling Conditions (Part 1):
Typical Enabling Conditions (Part 2):
Typical Malfunction Thresholds:
Component Operating Range:
The sensing portion of the heated oxygen sensor has a zirconia element that is used to detect oxygen concentration in the exhaust. If the zirconia element is at the proper temperature and the difference in the oxygen concentration between the inside and outside surfaces of the sensor is large, the zirconia element will generate voltage signals. In order to increase the oxygen concentration detecting capacity in the zirconia element, the ECM supplements the heat from the exhaust with heat from a heating element inside the sensor. When the current in the sensor is out of the standard operating range, the ECM interprets this as a fault in the heated oxygen sensor and sets a DTC.
Example: The ECM will set a high current DTC if the current in the sensor is more than 2 A when the heater is OFF. Similarly, the ECM will set a low current DTC if the current is less than 0.3 A when the heater is ON.
MONITOR RESULT
Refer to "CHECKING MONITOR STATUS" for detailed information. Mode 6 Data
The test value and test limit information are described as shown in the given table. Check the monitor result and test values after performing the monitor drive pattern.
- TID (Test Identification Data) is assigned to each emissions-related component.
- TLT (Test Limit Type):
If TLT is 0, the component is malfunctioning when the test value is higher than the test limit.
If TLT is 1, the component is malfunctioning when the test value is lower than the test limit.
- CID (Component Identification Data) is assigned to each test value.
- Unit Conversion is used to calculate the test value indicated on generic OBD II scan tools.
Wiring Diagram:
Step 1-3:
Step 4:
INSPECTION PROCEDURE
HINT:
- If DTCs related to different systems that have terminal E2 as the ground terminal are output simultaneously, terminal E2 may have an open circuit.
- Read freeze frame data using the intelligent tester or the OBD II scan tool. The ECM records vehicle and driving condition information as freeze frame data the moment a DTC is stored. When troubleshooting, freeze frame data can help determine if the vehicle was running or stopped, if the engine was warmed up or not, if the air-fuel ratio was lean or rich, and other data from the time the malfunction occurred.