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Technical Paper

Design of Engine Gear-Driven Mass Balance Unit and NVH Performance Optimization

2012-04-16
2012-01-0890
Extensive experimental and numerical investigations with respect to mass balance unit (MBU) were reported to improve the vibration and acoustic performance for inline 4-cylinder engine due to unbalanced inherent secondary order inertial forces. Design of gear-driven MBU with two parallel shafts and two gear pairs which was positioned beneath the crankshaft would be described in the paper. For the sake of compact package and reliable design, the driving gear ring of the system was shrink fitted onto the crankweb, and issues such as lubrication, strength, assembly were taken into account during design process. As a result, 93.66% of 2nd order mass force balance was achieved and2nd vibration level of engine was decreased remarkably. However, acoustical behavior was deteriorated due to gear impact and rattle at the engagement. Extra efforts were paid to solve the unpleasant noise through internal and external excitation optimizations.
Technical Paper

Estimation and Analysis of Crank-Angle-Resolved Gas Exchange Process of Spark-Ignition Engines

2012-04-16
2012-01-0835
Intake volumetric efficiency (VE) of a spark-ignition engine varies with valve timings, engine speeds, and manifold air loads. The existing approaches to reveal the underlying effects of these VE factors on instant valve flows remain complicated and expensive. In an effort to develop an applicable approach to analyze the detail valve flows, a naturally aspirated production engine with dual independent VVT was dynamometer-tested with fast in-cylinder pressure measurements and slow manifold pressure measurements. Both intake and exhaust valve flow was then reproduced using a new model, DQS model, in crank-angle resolution (CAR). One new flow mechanism, the flow wave subsidence, has been revealed to be one of the major drives of VE changes. We propose a dynamic quasi-steady (DQS) flow model to reproduce the valve flow profile from the measured pressure data. The DQS model features two manifold dynamics and a delay in the use of in-cylinder pressure measurements.
Technical Paper

Effect of Intake Cam Phasing on First Cycle Fuel Delivery and HC Emissions in an SI Engine

2004-06-08
2004-01-1852
A strategy to facilitate the mixture preparation process in PFI engines is to delay the Intake Valve Opening (IVO) by shifting the cam phasing so that the cylinder pressure is sub-atmospheric when the valve opens. The physics of the effect are discussed in terms of the pressure differential between the manifold and the cylinder, and the resulting flow and charge temperature history. The effect was evaluated by measuring the equivalence ratio of the trapped charge and the exhaust HC emissions in the first cycle of cranking in a 2.4L engine. When the IVO timing was changed from 18° BTDC to 21° ATDC, the in-cylinder fuel equivalence ratio increased by approximately 10%. This increase was attributed mainly to the enrichment of the charge by displacing the leaner mixture at the top of the cylinder in the period between BDC and IVC. The exhaust HC, however, increased by 40%. No conclusive explanation was established for this increase in HC emissions.
Technical Paper

Identification and Analysis of Key Technical Elements and Prospects for Software-Defined Vehicles

2022-01-31
2022-01-7002
The new technological revolution is promoting the intelligent upgrade of vehicles. Traditional vehicles are gradually developing into intelligent connected vehicles (ICVs). New features such as autonomous driving, smart cockpits, and Internet of Vehicle of ICVs have brought users safe, comfortable and interesting travel experiences. Vehicle software, containing a wealth of functions and continuously outputting valuable data, has become the core of the definition of vehicle functions. Traditional vehicle hardware has gradually decoupled from software and become standardized, modular and shared resources. At present, the era of Software-Defined Vehicle (SDV) is coming soon, which is bound to bring subversive changes to both vehicle technologies and industrial ecologies. However, the lack of comprehensive understanding and the clear development way of SDV are ubiquitous in all kinds of corporations in vehicle industry. This will make them be caught off guard when SDV really comes.
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