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Technical Paper

A New Gen ‘Super-Efficient Condenser’ for Mobile Air Conditioning Application

2023-09-14
2023-28-0043
In the modern era of automotive industry, occupant comfort inside the cabin is a basic need and no more a luxury feature. With increase in number of vehicles, the expectations from customers are also changing. One of the major expectations from real world customers is quick cabin cooling thru all seasons, particularly when the vehicle is hot soaked and being used in summer conditions. Occupant thermal comfort inside the vehicle cabin is provisioned by a mobile air conditioning (MAC) system, which operates on a vapor compression-based cycle using a refrigerant. The main components of a direct expansion (DX) based MAC system are, a compressor, condenser, evaporator, and expansion valve. Conditioned air is circulated inside the cabin using a blower, duct system and air vents. The AC condenser is the most critical component in AC circuit as it rejects heat, thereby providing for a cooling effect inside the cabin.
Technical Paper

Improvement of AC System for Bus with Tropical/Hot Ambient Application

2023-09-14
2023-28-0016
AC system provides the human comfort inside the cabin of a vehicle but at the expense of consumption of energy from the vehicle. On a global perspective for the bus segment, there is an increased demand for cooling in tropical countries. Optimization needs to be done in existing AC systems w.r.t packaging, cost & performance constraints. Major elements contributing to heat ingress are engine hood, front firewall, windshield & side glasses and bus body parts. Due to these reasons inadequate passenger comfort and poor cool down performance of the vehicle is observed. This paper refers to the reduction of heat ingress through different DOE (Design of Experiment) in the area of design & validation for duct & vent layout, insulation, glass & paint technology, evaporator blowers. The new duct design has been evaluated using a CFD tool by varying various parameters to generate desired output. The integrated use of the modifications was found significant improvement at vehicle level.
Technical Paper

Aero Drag Improvement Study on Large Commercial Vehicles Using CFD Lead Approach

2021-09-22
2021-26-0424
Nowadays, E- commerce and logistics business model is booming in India with road transport as a major mode of delivery system using containers. As competition in such business are on rise, different ways of improving profit margins are being continuously evolved. One such scenario is to look at reducing transportation cost while reducing fuel consumption. Traditionally, aero dynamics of commercial vehicles have never been in focus during their product development although literature shows major part of total fuel energy is consumed in overcoming aerodynamic drag at and above 60 kmph in case of large commercial vehicle. Hence improving vehicle exterior aerodynamic performance gives opportunity to reduce fuel consumption and thereby business profitability. Also byproduct of this improvement is reduced emissions and meeting regulatory requirements.
Technical Paper

Systematic Approach for Optimizing Tailgate Stoppers and Its Location to Prevent Squeak and Rattle

2021-09-22
2021-26-0285
Tailgate stoppers play vital role in exerting preload on the Tailgate latch mechanism and also restrict the relative motion of the Tailgate against vehicle Body in White (BIW). These stoppers act as over-slam dampeners and reduce the transmissibility of vibrations thereby reduce the risk of Squeaks & Rattles (S&R) noises. S&R noises from Tailgate are most annoying to the rear passengers in the vehicle and are recurring in nature. Preventing these issues during design is a challenging task. S&R risk simulations enable us to conduct virtual Design of Experiments (DOEs) and arrive at optimal solutions. This approach helps in reducing the cost of the design changes that are required in the physical prototype at the later stages of product development and save time. The risk evaluation in the simulations is based on the relative displacement at the interfaces of two components.
Technical Paper

Optimizing an Automotive HVAC System for Enhancement of Acoustic Comfort

2021-09-15
2021-28-0147
The Indian automotive industry is going through a rapid transformation phase. Regulatory emission norms such as, migration from BSIV to BSVI engine, increased adoption of μ-hybrid, full electric and autonomous cars are examples of such rapid transformation. The upgradation of internal combustion engines for compliance with new regulatory norms (e.g., from BSIV to BSVI) has caused a significant change in the automotive acoustic performance. As the powertrain system are being upgraded and getting quieter, the on-board Heating, Ventilation and Air-Conditioning system (HVAC) system emerges as one of the prominent noise sources which strongly influences overall refinement levels inside the cabin. This in turns is affecting overall feeling of passenger’s comfort. The HVAC system of an automobile is a compact and yet a complex system designed to provide thermal comfort inside the car cabin.
Technical Paper

Challenges and Approaches of Electric Vehicles Powertrain Mount System Optimization for NVH, Buzz Squeak Rattle and Durability

2021-08-31
2021-01-1085
In electric vehicles, the powertrain mounting system design has challenges different from conventional internal combustion engine (ICE) powertrains. Due to the absence of source noise, the customer predominantly experiences the buzz, squeak and rattle (BSR) noise. The 6 degrees of freedom (DOF) modal frequency target is less stringent than a three-cylinder or four-cylinder ICE powertrain. The durability loads in EV also differ due to less powertrain weight. In this paper, a study has been carried out about balancing all three main performance parameters of modal decoupling, BSR and durability through powertrain mount design optimization. The article shows that a carryover ICE powertrain mount has typical issues in Electric Vehicle (EV). A case study has discussed in detail how to manage those issues. Finally, it is concluded that a particular focus is required during an early stage of mount design to address these challenges for an EV.
Technical Paper

A Comparative Study of Cradle and Sub Frame Type Powertrain Mounting System on Electric Vehicle

2021-08-31
2021-01-1022
The growing demand of fuel and cost saving on vehicle, today’s vehicle manufacturer are working on various weight reduction initiative in EV. Lighter weight vehicle have bigger challenges to meet NVH requirement. There are two types of EV called modified and adopted EV’s are commonly in use. The sub frame type of EV system comes under the category of modified EV. In this paper, a mounting system is studied and compared for a cradle type EV as well as sub frame or saddle type EV. MATLAB based optimization tools are used for parameter optimization. The focus is put on the optimization of mounting system location and stiffness for energy optimization, CoG and TRA-EA optimization. The best engine mounting system is compared and adopted based on simulation. 12 DOF studied to address high frequency resonance issues for a sub frame type EV. Finally robustness of the system is checked based on various simulation and optimization.
Journal Article

Optimization of Exhaust Muffler Design Variables for Transmission Loss Using Coupling of modeFRONTIER and GT-POWER

2021-08-31
2021-01-1042
Exhaust Noise attenuation is one of the important functions of exhaust muffler. Transmission Loss (TL) is a measure of noise attenuation used in designing exhaust mufflers for NVH. TL is a logarithmic difference between inlet and outlet pressures for unit velocity input at inlet of the muffler and anechoic termination at outlet of the muffler as boundary conditions. TL amplitude and its frequency tuning depends on a combination of various muffler design parameters like volume, length, muffler cross section, pipe cross sections, pipe perforations, number of chambers, baffle perforations, etc. Achieving the desired TL performance with no valleys over a wide frequency range is very challenging. Manual design iterations with large numbers of permutations and combinations of design variables are difficult and time-consuming. It also needs a highly experienced professional to balance TL performance, design variables and design constraints.
Technical Paper

Development of Mount for Electric Powertrains - A Multi Degree of Freedom Optimization Approach

2020-04-14
2020-01-0417
The recent vehicle development demands for electric powertrain as against conventional fuels engines. The electric powertrain offers advantages in terms of cleaner and quieter operations. In electric vehicle, the conventional engine is replaced by electric motor operated on batteries. Here, the conventional engine refers to those powered by diesel, petrol, CNG and some hybrid vehicles using fuel as primary source for power generation. Thus, the system design approach for mount also changes. At present, various approaches are being followed to mount electric powertrain like conventional pendulum type, with or without cradle, Common or different motor and electric box mountings etc. The electric powertrain differs from conventional powertrain in terms of weights, mass moment of inertia, torque, NVH requirements like Key in Key off, idling, low frequency vibrations etc. Thus conventional mount will not necessarily meet NVH requirements for Electric powertrains.
Technical Paper

Air Intake System Optimization for Passenger Car Engine

2019-01-09
2019-26-0044
The customer expectations in the passenger car market are predominantly in the areas of engine/vehicle performance along with NVH refinement. In addition, continuously evolving regulatory emission and crash norms with system cost considerations bring out multiple challenges on to design engineers. One of the vehicle systems that has its footprints on all of the above requirements is the engine air intake system. In this paper, using multidisciplinary approach we discuss the impact of air intake system design of a 3-cylinder gasoline engine on different attributes of customer requirements. The primary function of the air intake system is to provide filtered air to the engine. However, this paper explains how requirements like engine performance, NVH refinement, regulatory and styling, durability, servicing and system cost are affected by intake system design parameters.
Technical Paper

Methodology for Exhaust System Design Optimization for Light Weight Passenger Vehicles

2019-01-09
2019-26-0269
While designing the exhaust system of passenger car on one hand there is stringent emission regulations, packaging constraints, high NVH performance requirement. On the other hand with lightweight vehicle design there is tremendous pressure on weight reduction of exhaust system while keep the same NVH performance levels. Exhaust system consist of muffler, bellows, pipes and hangers. For muffler design both acoustic (transmission loss, pass-by noise, tail pipe noise etc.) and non-acoustic (backpressure) parameters needs to be considered. In the current paper, methodology for muffler design optimization using 1D acoustic simulation software is presented. The baseline exhaust design consist of two mufflers; main muffler and post muffler. Simulation methodology is developed to optimize main muffler design in order to eliminate post muffler requirement while achieving the same performance of baseline exhaust design.
Journal Article

Gearshift Quality Sensitivity Analysis

2019-01-09
2019-26-0328
Gearshift quality is a perceived quality parameter. Hence, is getting much importance because of the increased awareness about comfortable and refined driving experience, especially in the case of passenger cars. When the topic of gearshift feeling is broached in manual transmission vehicles, synchronizer pack (shifter sleeve, engaging gear, strut, synchronizer and gear synchro ring assembly) have been the focus point for optimization. Synchronizer type (single, double or triple cone), lining material, datch chamfer angle of shifter sleeve/synchro ring of gear/synchronizer, all of these have been extensively studied in the past to improve the gearshift quality. With stringent timelines for vehicle development, OEMs prefer to use off-the-shelf powertrain systems developed by powertrain manufacturers. Due to this, avenues to refine gearshift feel gets reduced to a large extent and hence refinement becomes difficult.
Technical Paper

Transmission Breather Evaluation

2019-01-09
2019-26-0339
Breather assembly is mounted on transmission to maintain the pressure equilibrium inside transmission. Breather allows the transmission to breathe air when the air inside transmission expands or contracts due to heating and cooling of lubricating oil during vehicle running. Breather allows the hot air to escape and cool air to enter into the transmission to prevent overheating issue. Failure of breather assembly can lead to pressure buildup inside transmission and further leading to leakage from transmission oil seals. Oil leakage through the breather assembly is governed by parameters such as opening pressure, location and orientation of breather etc. The transmission undergoes different operating conditions of input speed, load, temperature, inclination etc. Also, breather assembly is designed and positioned in such a way that there is no leakage through breather due to oil splash inside the transmission.
Technical Paper

Improvement in Shift Quality in a Multi Speed Gearbox of an Electric Vehicle through Synchronizer Location Optimization

2017-03-28
2017-01-1596
Electrical and Series Hybrid Vehicles are generally provided with single speed reduction gearbox. To improve performance and drive range, a two-speed gearbox with coordinated control of traction motor and gearshift actuator is proposed. For a two-speed gearbox, gearshift without clutch would increase the shifting effort. Active Synchronization is introduced for a smoother gearshift even without clutch. The quality of gearshift is considered as a function of applied shift force and time taken. To enhance the quality of the gearshift further, the location of the synchronizer in the transmission system is optimized. To validate the improvement in the quality of the gearshift, a mathematical model of the two-speed gearbox incorporating proposed location of synchronizer assembly along with active synchronization is developed. The qualitative and quantitative analysis of the results achieved is presented.
Technical Paper

Simulation Based Development, Component Optimization and Integration for a Metropolitan Hybrid Electric Vehicle

2017-01-10
2017-26-0084
The authors of this technical paper conceptualize and illustrate a powertrain architecture for a hybrid electric vehicle coupled with a unique strategy to reduce a real life problem of driving in snail paced traffic. This architecture utilizes a relatively low powered hybrid electric prime mover that is generally used in mild hybrid vehicles, in an arrangement similar to a parallel hybrid system. Here, the electric machine is mounted on the input shaft of the gearbox and the clutch is actuated automatically through an Automated Manual Transmission (AMT) system. Therefore, it is possible to completely disengage the engine from the driveline and drive the vehicle independently through an appropriately sized electric prime mover. The high gear ratio between the drivetrain and the electric prime mover at lower gears can be leveraged to provide low velocity electric creep mode during which the vehicle can function as a pure Electric Vehicle (EV) while engine remains off.
Technical Paper

Transient 1D Mathematical Model for Drum Brake System to Predict the Temperature Variation with Realistic Boundary Conditions

2017-01-10
2017-26-0299
Brake system is the most important system in the vehicle considering the overall vehicle safety and speed control. Brake applications are repetitive during a city traffic and hilly terrain on downhill gradient. Frequent braking gives rise to an overheating of the brake drum and its components. Braking operations at high temperature gives rise to problems like reduced deceleration due to loss of brake pad friction characteristics, pad softening and sticking to drum, pad distortion and wear etc. All these factors collectively result in deterioration of the braking performance and reduction of brake pad durability with time. Till date most of the thermal analysis performed for brake drum heating are through physical testing using brake system prototypes and by means of CFD tools. These methods are time consuming and expensive. There is a need for an alternative method to reduce physical trials and prototype building and reduce dependency on CFD analysis.
Technical Paper

A Novel Technique to Establish Various Important Characteristic to Analyze Complete Hydraulic Power Steering System using Model Based Design Approach

2017-01-10
2017-26-0259
Steering system deliver a precise directional control to the vehicle chassis and ensure the safe driving at all maneuvers. Hydraulic power assisted system (HPAS) helps drivers to steer by boosting steering assistance of the steering wheel while retaining the road feel. HPAS performance is associated with the design characteristics of rotary valve, steering, suspension, kinematics, brake, tire, vehicle speed and load transfer. Thus a detailed power steering system model is absolutely necessary to evaluate and optimize the performance characteristics. However, many components of HPAS system are proprietary in nature so it is very challenging to get component characteristic of each sub-system for the complete power steering system model. Hence, it is very important to establish a technique to extract all such influencing characteristics with available test facility.
Technical Paper

Global COR iDOE Methodology: An Efficient Way to Calibrate Medium & Heavy Commercial Vehicle Engine Emission and Fuel Consumption Calibration

2017-01-10
2017-26-0032
Modern day diesel engines use systems like Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR), Variable Geometric Turbo Charger (VGT), inlet throttle for air regulation, multiple injection strategies, high pressure rail systems for fuel regulation to optimize the combustion for meeting the strict emission and fuel consumption demands. Torque based ECU structures which are commonly used for diesel engines require a large amount of calibration work. Conventional manual methods for emission and fuel consumption optimization (Full factorial or Line search method) results in increased test bed usage and it is almost impossible to use these methods as the number of parameters to optimize are very high. The conventional DoE tests have been limited by the necessity of calibration engineer’s expertise and manual prescreening of test points to be within thermal & mechanical limits of engine systems. This subsequently leads to excessive screening of variables; which is time consuming.
Technical Paper

Analysis of Automotive Control Pedals Ergonomics through Mathematical Modelling Based on Human Anthropometry

2017-01-10
2017-26-0252
Vehicle Ergonomics is one of the most vital factor to be considered in vehicle design and development, as the customer wants a comfortable and performance oriented vehicle. An uncomfortable driving posture can lead to painful driving experiences for longer hauls. The control pedals viz. Accelerator, Brake and clutch pedal (ABC Pedals), are the most frequently used parts in the vehicle, their proper positioning with respect to human anthropology is of prime importance, from driver comfort viewpoint. The methodology currently used for optimizing ergonomics with respect to the positioning of pedals in a vehicle included; measuring anthropometric angles manually with the help of H-Point Machine, subjective jury analysis and through software like RAMSIS, JACK, etc. Manual measurement doesn’t give the flexibility of iterations for optimization. The subjective analysis is based on insinuations thereby, cannot be standardized.
Technical Paper

A Robust Solution for a Power-Train Mounting System for Automotive NVH Refinements

2015-01-14
2015-26-0140
Production variations of a heavy duty truck for its vibrations were measured and then analyzed through an Ishikawa diagram. Noise and Control factors of the truck idle shake were indentified. The major cause was found to be piece to piece variations of its power-train (PT) rubber mounts. To overcome the same, a new nominal level of the mount stiffness was sought based on minimization of a cost function related to vibration transmissibility and fatigue damage of the mounts under dynamic loadings. Physical prototypes of such mounts were proved to minimize the variations of the driver's seat shake at idling among various trucks of the same design. These learning's are useful for design of various subsystems or components to refine the full vehicle-Noise Vibration Harshness (NVH) at the robust design level.
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