Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 3 of 3
Technical Paper

The Effects of the Specific Material Selection on the Structural Behaviour of the Piston-Liner Coupling of a High Performance Engine

2021-09-21
2021-01-1235
The materials commonly employed in the automotive industry are various and depend on the specific application field. For what concern the internal combustion engines the choice is guided by the thermomechanical performance required, technological constraints and production costs. Actually, for high-performance engines, steel and aluminium are the most common materials selected for the piston and the cylinder liner manufacturing. This study analyses the effect of possible material choice on the interaction between piston and cylinder liner, via Finite Element analyses. A motorcycle engine is investigated considering two possible pistons: one (standard) made of aluminium and one made of steel. Similarly, two possible cylinder liners are considered, the original one made of aluminium and a different version made of steel obtained by simply thinning the aluminium component in order to obtain two structurally equivalent components.
Technical Paper

A Simplified Methodology for the Analysis of the Cylinder Liner Bore Distortion: Finite Element Analyses and Experimental Validations

2019-09-09
2019-24-0164
Advances in modern engines are becoming more and more challenging. The intense increase of thermal and mechanical loads, as a consequence of a higher power density, requires the improvement of the main couplings encountered between moving engine components. In this scenario, the cylinder liner/piston coupling plays a crucial role in terms of engine performance and durability, especially with regards to pollution emission and friction reduction. In this paper a numerical methodology is proposed, which aims at simplifying the Finite Element evaluation of the cylinder liner bore distortion in an eight-cylinder V-type four stroke turbocharged engine. Finite Element simulations are performed to obtain a virtual approval of the component geometry, in advance with respect to the component manufacturing. In particular, preliminary Finite Element analyses are developed which accurately follow the experimental procedure, where a single engine bank is coupled with a simplified test engine head.
Technical Paper

Investigation via Finite Element Analysis of the Influence of Boiling on the Thermo-Structural Behavior of the Engine Head of a High-Performance Combustion Engine

2023-08-28
2023-24-0184
This paper presents a numerical methodology for studying the effect of boiling on the structural behavior of high-performance internal combustion engines. Boiling occurs when the portion of engine coolant in contact with hot walls reaches high temperatures and vapor bubbles form. While incipient vaporization of the coolant can promote additional cooling, excessive vapor can act as an insulator and lead to potentially dangerous high temperatures in the engine. Boiling is typically analyzed using Computational Fluid Dynamic Analyses, which are usually computationally intensive. In this study, the authors propose a Finite Element methodology that combines semi-empirical formulations, less demanding than Computational Fluid Dynamic models, with thermal Finite Element simulations to detect and manage boiling. Two different empirical formulations for boiling were employed, proposed by Garro and Chen respectively, and their results were compared.
X