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Technical Paper

Application of a First Law Heat Balance Method to a Turbocharged Automotive Diesel Engine

2009-11-02
2009-01-2744
The First Law of Thermodynamics has been applied to the analysis of the dynamometer performance of a 2.0 litre,115 PS, common rail, turbocharged, automotive diesel engine operating under steady state conditions. Validation of the method is presented with correlation between the input fuel power and summed loss terms shown to be better than 3%. The study was conducted over a matrix of engine speed-load sites and maps of the underlying trends and magnitudes are presented. Detailed analysis of the relative heat balance contributions at a range of loads at fixed engine, water pump, and oil pump speeds is also presented. The proportions of heat rejected to the different primary paths (i.e. brake, coolant, oil, charge cooler, exhaust, and external) were found to vary with engine speed and load. Also, friction power was found to vary principally as a function of engine speed with some small dependency on engine load.
Technical Paper

Driving Down On-Highway Particulate Emissions

2006-04-03
2006-01-0916
It has been reported that particulate emissions from diesel vehicles could be associated with damaging human health, global warming and a reduction in air quality. These particles cover a very large size range, typically 3 to 10 000 nm. Filters in the vehicle exhaust systems can substantially reduce particulate emissions but until very recently it was not possible to directly characterise actual on-road emissions from a vehicle. This paper presents the first study of the effect of filter systems on the particulate emissions of a heavy-duty diesel vehicle during real-world driving. The presence of sulfur in the fuel and in the engine lubricant can lead to significant emissions of sulfate particles < 30 nm in size (nanoparticles).
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