Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 5 of 5
Technical Paper

Engine Crankcase Pumping Flow Model

1999-03-01
1999-01-0215
A transient, one-dimensional, two-phase (crankcase gases and liquids) flow network model was developed (and coded in FORTRAN) to calculate the crankcase pressures versus crank angle during engine operation and the consequent crankcase pumping mean effective pressure (CPMEP). The two-phase flow was represented by an empirical expression. Note, CPMEP is one of the components of engine FMEP (friction mean effective pressure) and is being introduced here as a new term. The model was calibrated with engine crankcase pressure measurements. The motivation for the present work was the fact that no commercial (or public domain) software is available to adequately address this subject in sufficient detail. The model also predicts that closing (i.e. sealing) the individual bays of an engine can result in (nearly) zero CPMEP. This was confirmed by motored single cylinder engine measurements.
Technical Paper

A Transient, 3-Dimensional Multiphase CFD/Heat Transfer and Experimental Study of Oil Jet Cooled Engine Pistons

2019-04-02
2019-01-0154
This paper reports on a novel three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and heat transfer coupled methodology for analyzing piston cooling using oil jets. The method primarily consists of models of the fluid and the solid domains that are thermally coupled to one another. One of the models is a crank angle transient, three-dimensional, multiphase, volume of fluid (VOF) CFD model of the fluid behind the reciprocating piston consisting of the piston jet and crankcase gases. This model is coupled to a piston solid model. The piston motion and heat transfer from the piston to the liner are rigorously accounted for. The combustion heat flux on the piston surface was an input to the current analysis as a boundary condition. All simulations were performed using the commercial CFD software Simerics MP+. The developed method is applied to three DI Diesel engine pistons, one piston without a cooling gallery and two pistons with cooling galleries.
Journal Article

Transient, Three Dimensional CFD Model of the Complete Engine Lubrication System

2016-04-05
2016-01-1091
This paper reports on a comprehensive, crank-angle transient, three dimensional, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model of the complete lubrication system of a multi-cylinder engine using the CFD software Simerics-Sys / PumpLinx. This work represents an advance in system-level modeling of the engine lubrication system over the current state of the art of one-dimensional models. The model was applied to a 16 cylinder, reciprocating internal combustion engine lubrication system. The computational domain includes the positive displacement gear pump, the pressure regulation valve, bearings, piston pins, piston cooling jets, the oil cooler, the oil filter etc… The motion of the regulation valve was predicted by strongly coupling a rigorous force balance on the valve to the flow.
Technical Paper

Engineering Applications of Multi-Dimensional CFD Analysis of Lubrication System

2020-04-14
2020-01-1110
This paper reports on engineering insights that can be gained from a rigorous, transient, three-dimensional CFD analysis of the complete lubrication system of automotive internal combustion engines. Building such a model is a formidable task because the computational domain of such a model is vast and includes scores of bearings as well as components such as the pump, pressure relief valve, oil filter, oil cooler, piston cooling jets etc. Thus far, the only publication on 3D CFD analysis of an engine lubrication system was for a 16-cylinder engine in which the feasibility and the potential opportunities of such a model were demonstrated. The aim of this work is to cover four engineering topics of interest in a lubrication system: 1. Showcase the capability of the CFD tool to accurately, robustly and reliably predict the engine lube system performance of a wide variety of automotive engines with no reliance on tuning the inputs.
Journal Article

A Transient 3D CFD Thermal Model of the Complete DI Diesel Engine Fuel System

2023-04-11
2023-01-0949
This paper reports on a transient, three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) study of flow and heat transfer in the complete fuel system of an inline 6-cylinder, direct injection (DI) diesel engine used in commercial applications. The CFD software Simerics-MP+ was used for this purpose. Diesel engine development, to meet fuel economy and exhaust emission standards, requires the precise integration of each component in the fuel system in order to reliably deliver the fuel to the combustion chamber as a function of crank angle to the combustion chamber, at the specified injection pressure. Both the model set-up and run times are practical, thus the simulation tool can play a key role in the design and development of diesel engine fuel systems.
X