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Technical Paper

Influence of a Fuel Additive on the Performance and Emissions of a Medium-Duty Diesel Engine

1994-03-01
941015
This report describes tests of a fuel additive in a medium-duty, high-swirl, direct-injection diesel engine. The additive was found to have little influence on general combustion performance or on NOx emissions. On the other hand, it had a profound effect on particulate emissions. This was most clear under high load where particle emissions are highest. Here, when the engine was switched from running on the base fuel to the additive treated fuel, particle emissions at first increased and then fell to levels about 40% lower (by particle volume) than those initially produced by the base fuel. The additive had a long lasting effect. After running with the additive for about 25 hours, emission levels with the base fuel were only slightly higher than those with the additive treated fuel. We believe that the additive action is associated with a combination of cleaning and surface conditioning. More work should be done to understand the relative importance of these two mechanisms.
Technical Paper

Effects of Motor and Transmission on Noise Level of Electric Bus Powertrain Using Lead Packaging Method

2018-04-03
2018-01-1281
Because of the advantages of excellent power, fuel economy and zero-emission characteristics, electric buses have been used widely as cities’ short-range commuter vehicles. However, the high-frequency noise becomes more prominent for the powertrain system of the electric bus due to the lack of noise masking effect for the traditional internal combustion engine. To improve the noise characteristic of electric bus powertrain, the identification of the main noise source of the powertrain is well needed. In this paper, the effects of the motor and transmission on the noise level of the electric bus powertrain have been studied using lead packaging method. The variations of acoustical power level of the powertrain according to different rotation speed and torque under the conditions of only motor covered and only transmission covered have been discussed.
Technical Paper

Noise Source Identification of the Electric Bus Powertrain Using a Wavelet Transform and EEMD-RobustICA

2019-04-02
2019-01-0789
Electric buses have been used widely as cities' short-range commuter vehicles, because of their excellent power, fuel economy and emission characteristics. However, the lack of a noise masking effect for the traditional internal combustion engine, the high-frequency noise becomes more prominent for the powertrain system. The high-frequency noise gives people an unpleasant feeling on psychological and physiological. To control electric vehicle powertrain noise, the identification of the main noise source of the powertrain is well needed. In this paper, Empirical Mode decomposition (EMD) combined with Independent component Analysis (ICA) and continuous Wavelet transform (CWT) was used to identify the main noise source of the electric bus powertrain. The contribution of each noise source to the overall noise level was calculated and compared.
Technical Paper

A Real-Time Predictive Fuzzy Energy Management Based on Speed Prediction for Range Extended Electric Logistics Vehicle

2024-04-09
2024-01-2785
Due to the complexity and timeliness of the dual power source control system for range extended electric vehicles, a real-time predictive fuzzy energy management strategy based on speed prediction, which comprehensively takes into account the demand power of auxiliary power unit, future average speed and driving distance is proposed in this work. Firstly, to improve the topicality and accuracy of the control system, the convolutional neural network with long short-term memory neural network (CNN-LSTM) algorithm is adopted to predict the future driving speed by the speed features and adjacent speeds.
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