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Technical Paper

Modeling and Simulation of Airflow Dynamics in a Dynamic Skip Fire Engine

2015-04-14
2015-01-1717
Dynamic skip fire is a control method for internal combustion engines in which engine cylinders are selectively fired or skipped to meet driver torque demand. In this type of engine operation, fueling, and possibly intake and exhaust valves of each cylinder are actuated on an individual firing opportunity basis. The ability to operate each cylinder at or near its best thermal efficiency, and to achieve flexible control of acoustic and vibrational excitations has been described in previous publications. Due to intermittent induction and exhaust events, air induction and torque production in a DSF engine can vary more than conventional engines on a cycle-to-cycle basis. This paper describes engine thermofluid modeling for this type of operation for purposes of air flow and torque prediction.
Technical Paper

An Efficient Machine Learning Algorithm for Valve Fault Detection

2022-03-29
2022-01-0163
Multi-level Miller-cycle Dynamic Skip Fire (mDSF) is a combustion engine technology that improves fuel efficiency by deciding on each cylinder-event whether to skip (deactivate) the cylinder, fire with low (Miller) charge, or fire with a high (Power) charge. In an engine with two intake and two exhaust valves per cylinder, skipping can be accomplished by deactivating all valves, while firing with a reduced charge is accomplished by deactivating one of the intake valves. This new ability to modulate the charge level introduces new failure modes. The first is a failure to reactivate the single, high-charge intake valve, which results in a desired High Fire having the air intake of a Low Fire. The second is a failure to deactivate the single intake valve, which results in a Low Fire having the air intake of a High Fire.
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