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Journal Article

Estimation of deviations in NO and soot emissions between steady-state and EUDC transient operation of a common-rail diesel engine

2009-09-13
2009-24-0147
The study measured Mass Air Flow, (MAF), Manifold Absolute Pressure, (MAP), and emissions of NO and soot during fourteen transients of speed and load, representative of the Extra Urban Drive Cycle (EUDC). The tests were conducted on a typical passenger car/light-duty truck powertrain (a turbocharged common-rail diesel engine, of in-line 4-cylinder configuration). The objective was to compare NO and soot with corresponding steady-state emission results and propose an engine measurement methodology that will potentially quantify deviation (i.e. deterioration with respect to steady state optimum) in emissions of NO and soot during transients. Comparison between steady state, quasi-steady-states (defined later in the paper) and transients indicated that discrete quasi-steady-state engine operation, can be used for accurate prediction of transient emissions of NO and soot.
Journal Article

Effect of Manifold Orientation on Non-Reacting In-Cylinder Tumble Flows in an IC Engine with Pentroof Piston - An Investigation Using PIV

2010-04-12
2010-01-0956
This paper deals with experimental study of in-cylinder tumble flows in a single-cylinder, four-stroke, two-valve internal combustion engine using a pentroof-offset-bowl piston under non-reacting conditions with four intake manifold orientations at an engine speed of 1000 rev/min., during suction and compression strokes using particle image velocimetry. Two-dimensional in-cylinder tumble flow measurements and analysis are carried out in combustion space on a vertical plane passing through cylinder axis. Ensemble average velocity vectors are used to analyze the tumble flows. Tumble ratio (TR) and average turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) are evaluated and used to characterize the tumble flows. From analysis of results, it is found that at end of compression stroke, 90° intake manifold orientation shows an improvement in TR and TKE compared other intake manifold orientations considered.
Journal Article

Online Engine Speed Based Adaptation of Air Charge for Two- Wheelers

2013-10-15
2013-32-9037
Regarding the strongly growing two-wheeler market fuel economy, price and emission legislations are in focus of current development work. Fuel economy as well as emissions can be improved by introduction of engine management systems (EMS). In order to provide the benefits of an EMS for low cost motorcycles, efforts are being made at BOSCH to reduce the costs of a port fuel injection (PFI) system. The present paper describes a method of how to reduce the number of sensors of a PFI system by the use of sophisticated software functions based on high-resolution engine speed evaluation. In order to improve the performance of a system working without a MAP-sensor (manifold air pressure sensor) an air charge feature (ACFn) based on engine speed is introduced. It is shown by an experiment that ACFn allows to detect and adapt changes in manifold air pressure. Cross-influences on ACFn are analyzed by simulations and engine test bench measurements.
Journal Article

Reduced-Order Modeling of Intake Air Dynamics in Single-Cylinder Four-Stroke Engine

2013-10-15
2013-32-9041
This study deals with reduced-order modeling of intake air dynamics in single-cylinder four-stroke naturally-aspirated spark-ignited engines without surge tanks. It provides an approximate calculation method for embedded micro computers to estimate intake manifold pressures in real time. The calculation method is also applicable to multi-cylinder engines with individual throttle bodies since the engines can be equated with parallelization of the single-cylinder engines. In this paper, we illustrate the intake air dynamics, describe a method to estimate the intake manifold pressures, and show experimental results of the method.
Journal Article

Experimental Investigation of Channel Aspect Ratio on Interdigitated PEMFC Performance

2014-04-01
2014-01-1828
Novel water management and reactant distribution strategies are critical to next generation polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell systems (PEMFCs). Improving these strategies in PEMFCs leads to higher power density and reduced stack size for vehicle applications, which reduces weight and improves the price competitiveness of these systems. Interdigitated flow fields induce convective transport (cross flow) through the porous GDL between adjacent channels and are superior at water removal beneath land areas, which can lead to higher cell performance. However, the head loss due to flow, among other factors, may cause cross flow maldistribution of reactants down the channel. Such maldistribution may lead to areas of low or areas of excess cross flow. This, in turn, can cause areas of low oxygen concentration and water build up, and therefore higher pressure losses and uneven membrane hydration, all of which reduce overall cell performance.
Journal Article

Design and Development of a Flow Based Dual Intake Manifold System

2014-10-13
2014-01-2880
The Torque from an engine is a very critical parameter which controls the drivability of the vehicle, better torque availability at Partially Open Throttle (POT) condition improves drivability at city driving condition and better torque at Wide Open Throttle (WOT) condition improves cruising at highway driving condition, conventionally engine produces better torque at one particular operating condition leaving poor drivability at others. The Torque characteristics of an engine depends upon the volumetric efficiency of the engine. The volumetric efficiency of a naturally aspirated engine can be improved by tuning the intake manifold. With an overall improvement in volumetric efficiency throughout the engine operating conditions better torque curve can be achieved, which facilitates improved drivability.
Journal Article

Design of the Exhaust Manifold of a Turbo Charged Gasoline Engine Based on a Transient Thermal Mechanical Analysis Approach

2014-10-13
2014-01-2882
The present paper describes a CAE analysis approach to evaluate the design of exhaust manifold of a turbo charged gasoline engine. It allows design engineers to identify structural weakness at the early stage or to find the root cause of exhaust manifold failures. A transient none-linear finite element method is used to calculate the plastic deformation and thermal mechanical behaviors of the exhaust manifold assembly during thermal shock cycles, which include rated speed full load, rated speed motored and idle speed conditions. A transient heat transfer simulation is performed to provide thermal boundary conditions for the nonlinear stress/strain analysis. The finite element model includes a part of cylinder head, exhaust manifold, gaskets, turbo charger housing, catalytic converter, brackets, bolts and nuts. The results show that plastic deformation is the main cause of manifold cracking and the manifold flange distortion causes the exhaust leakage.
Journal Article

The Investigation and Application of Variable Tumble Intake System on a GDI Engine

2014-10-13
2014-01-2885
The in-cylinder tumble intensity of GDI engine is crucial to combustion stability and thermal efficiency, required to be different for the different operation conditions. A new variable tumble system (VTS) applied to GDI engine was introduced to meet tumble ratio requirements in various situations. The transient gas exchange of four combustion systems all were investigated during both intake and compression strokes based on CFD simulation, namely (1) Case 1-Intake port B (with flap valve)/Spherical piston crown; (2) Case 2-Intake port B (without flap valve)/Spherical piston crown; (3) Case 3- Intake port A/Spherical piston crown; (4) Case 4-Intake port A/Dented piston crown. The simulated results of dynamic tumble ratio showed that during the whole intake process the dynamic tumble ratio of Case1 was obviously higher than other Cases with the same boundary conditions, and the maximum value was about 5∼6 times higher.
Journal Article

Online Engine Speed based Altitude Adaptation of Air Charge and Limp Home for Two-Wheelers

2014-11-11
2014-32-0067
Cost reduction of engine management systems (EMS) for two-wheeler applications is the key to utilize their potentials compared to carburetor bikes regarding emissions, fuel economy and system robustness. In order to reduce the costs of a system with port fuel injection (PFI) Bosch is developing an EMS without a manifold air pressure (MAP) sensor. The pressure sensor is usually used to compensate for different influences on the air mass, which cannot be detected via the throttle position sensor (TPS) and mean engine speed. Such influences are different leakage rates of the throttle body and changing ambient conditions like air pressure. Bosch has shown in the past that a virtual sensor relying on model based evaluation of engine speed can be used for a detection of leakage air mass in idling to improve the pre-control of the air-fuel ratio. This provides a functionality which so far was only possible with an intake pressure sensor.
Journal Article

A Potentiality of Dedicated EGR in SI Engines Fueled by Natural Gas for Improving Thermal Efficiency and Reducing NOx Emission

2014-11-11
2014-32-0108
Recently, a potentiality of Dedicated EGR (D-EGR) concept SI engine has been studied. This concept engine had four cylinders and operated with exhaust gas supplied from the single cylinder to the intake manifold. Compared with conventional SI engines, it was able to increase thermal efficiency and decrease CO, HC, and NOx emission by the high D-EGR ratio 0.25. In this study, numerical analysis of a SI engine with D-EGR system with various D-EGR ratios was conducted for detailed understanding the potentiality of this concept in terms of thermal efficiency and NOx emission. #1 cylinder of assumed engine was used as D-EGR cylinder that equivalence ratio varied from 0.6 to 3.4. Entire exhaust gas from #1 cylinder was recirculated to the other cylinders. The other cylinders run with this exhaust gas and new premixed air and fuel with various equivalence ratios from 0.6-1.0.
Technical Paper

Combined CFD - Experimental Analysis of the In-Cylinder Combustion Phenomena in a Dual Fuel Optical Compression Ignition Engine

2021-09-05
2021-24-0012
Methane supply in diesel engines operating in dual fuel mode has demonstrated to be effective for the reduction of particulate matter and nitric oxides emissions from this type of engine. In particular, methane is injected into the intake manifold to form a premixed charge with air, while a reduced amount of diesel oil is still directly injected to ignite the mixture inside the cylinder. As a matter of fact, the liquid fuel burns following the usual diffusive combustion, so activating the gaseous fuel oxidation in a premixed flame. Clearly, the whole combustion process appears to be more complex to be described in a CFD simulation, mainly because it is not always possible to select in the 3-dimensional codes a different combustion model for each fuel and, also, because other issues arise from the interaction of the two fuels.
Technical Paper

Effect of Numerical Configuration on Predicted EGR Cylinder-to-Cylinder Dispersion

2020-04-14
2020-01-1113
Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) is employed widely in compression-ignited engines and currently under consideration for being implemented into spark-ignited engines. EGR cylinder-to-cylinder dispersion is one of the features of such engines that developers are challenged to abate, because low EGR rates increase NOx emissions and excessive EGR rates can produce a significant amount of particulate matter. Taking into account the complex geometries of some automotive manifolds, the treatment of this topic through 3D computational fluid-dynamics (CFD) simulations seems mandatory to study the transport phenomena in a proper way. The main objective of this work is the analysis of the influence of the numerical setup main parameters (mesh, time-step size, turbulence modeling) in a CFD URANS simulation of an automotive engine intake manifold in the EGR distribution.
Technical Paper

Determination of Range of Fuel Premixing Ratio in Gasoline/Butanol-Diesel Dual-Fuel Engine for Lower Exhaust Emissions and Higher Efficiency

2020-04-14
2020-01-1128
In this study, the influence of fuel premixing ratio (PMR) on the performance, combustion, and emission characteristics of dual-fuel operation in the compression ignition (CI) engine have been investigated. For dual fuel operation in CI-engine, two fuels of different reactivity are utilized in the same combustion cycle. In this study, low reactivity fuels (gasoline/butanol) is injected into the intake manifold, and high reactivity fuel (diesel) is directly injected into the cylinder. To operate the conventional CI engine in dual-fuel mode, the intake manifold of the engine was modified and a solenoid based port fuel injector was installed. A separate port fuel injector controller was used for injecting the gasoline or butanol. Suitable instrumentation was used to measure in-cylinder pressure and exhaust gas emissions. Experiments were performed by maintaining the constant fuel energy at different fuel PMR for different engine loads at constant engine speed.
Technical Paper

Effects of Fuel Injection Method on Energy Efficiency and Combustion Characteristics of SI Engine Fed with a Hydrogen-Rich Reformate

2020-09-15
2020-01-2082
Various potential alternative fuels for internal combustion engines are studied nowadays to reduce dependency on fossil fuel. Hydrogen-rich reformate produced onboard as a result of fuel reforming in an internal combustion engine with a high-pressure thermochemical recuperation is a promising alternative gaseous fuel. This paper reports on the effects of the reformate fuel injection method on energy efficiency and combustion characteristics of a single-cylinder spark ignition (SI) engine with a high compression ratio (16:1) at steady-state conditions. A comparison between port (PFI) and direct (DI) reformate injection is performed. Engine performance and combustion parameters are evaluated and analyzed. For both injection strategies, a similar relatively high indicated efficiency (50%) is observed. This is a joint result of waste heat recovery and hydrogen combustion benefits.
Technical Paper

The Potential of Exhaust Waste Heat Use in a Turbocharged Diesel Engine for Charge Air Cooling

2020-09-15
2020-01-2089
Even a basic analysis of the use of fuel energy in a combustion engine would indicate that one-third of fuel energy is converted into exhaust waste, which is released into the environment. The scale of energy loss encourages scientists to try to consider the waste heat of exhaust gases as a potential source of useful energy. It is a standard today that waste heat is commonly used to power a turbocharger applied to internal combustion engines. Waste heat can also be used to drive an adsorption cooling system for air-conditioning inside the car. The drawback of that solution is complexity of the system and size of adsorption bed which make it not suitable for automotive industry use. The concept of increasing the capability of vehicles’ turbo engines can boost performance of turbo-charged engines through extra cooling of air being impelled into the combustion chamber of the engine.
Technical Paper

EGR Flow Control Strategy for a Smaller Capacity Diesel Engine Using a Phase Shifting Chamber

2020-04-14
2020-01-1358
Exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) is an effective strategy to control NOx emissions in diesel engines. EGR reduces NOx through lowering the oxygen concentration in the combustion chamber, as well as through heat absorption. The stringent emission norms have forced diesel engines to further improve thermal efficiency and reduce nitrogen oxides (NOx). Throttle control is adopted in diesel intake system to control the EGR & fresh charge flow and to meet the emissions norms. In three or lesser cylinder. diesel engines, predominantly single and two-cylinder diesel engines, there is a higher possibility of the exhaust gas reaching the intake throttle and Particulate matter getting deposited on the throttle body. This can significantly affect the idling stability and intake restriction in prolonged usage. In idling condition, the clogged throttle body stagnates the fresh charge from entering the cylinder. The work aims at the study of flow pattern for EGR reaching the throttle body.
Technical Paper

Characterization and Comparison of Steady-Flow Techniques Used for Engine Airflow Development

2021-09-21
2021-01-1151
This paper compares bulk impulse-torque and 2D planar PIV steady flow-field measurements created by an engine cylinder head and intake system model using a steady-flow bench and evaluates operational aspects of the steady-flow test system. The model included a full-sized intake manifold and cylinder head section from a Chrysler 2.4L PFI four-valve per cylinder engine mounted to an optical cylinder. Two test system operational aspects were evaluated: (1) upstream versus downstream engine location relative to the flowbench (operational modes corresponding to flow bench pulling or pushing through the system), (2) PIV seeding particulate choice. Several dry and oil fog particulates were assessed however, of the options tested, only laboratory grade glass and consumer grade talc allowed long enough operation for practical data acquisition. Tests were performed over lift-over-diameter (L/D) ratios spanning from 0.1 to 0.3.
Technical Paper

Homogeneous Charge with Direct Multi-Pulse Injection - A Promising High Efficiency and Clean Combustion Strategy for Diesel Engines

2021-09-21
2021-01-1156
Extensive experimental investigations done over a decade in different engine types demonstrated the capability of achieving high efficiency along with low levels of oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and soot emissions with low temperature combustion (LTC) modes. However, the commercial application of LTC strategies requires several challenges to be addressed, including precise ignition timing control, reducing higher unburned hydrocarbon (UHC) and carbon monoxide (CO) emissions. The lower exhaust gas temperatures with LTC operation pose severe challenges for after-treatment control systems. Among the available LTC strategies, Reactivity Controlled Compression Ignition (RCCI) has emerged as the most promising strategy due to better ignition timing control with higher thermal efficiency. Nevertheless, the complexity of engine system hardware due to the dual fuel injection system and associated controls, high HC and CO emissions are the major limiting factors in RCCI.
Technical Paper

Combustion, Performance and Emission Characteristics of Early Direct Injection Compression Ignition Engine with Varying Oxy Hydrogen Gas Concentration

2021-09-21
2021-01-1171
Early Direct Injection Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition is one of the clean combustion technologies which reduces the oxides of nitrogen and soot emissions significantly. However, this strategy suffered from drawbacks of fuel spray impingement on cylinder walls, excessive carbon monoxide, and unburnt hydrocarbon emissions, and lower thermal efficiency than conventional diesel combustion in CI engines. A novel attempt has been made in this experimental research work to address the above-said issues by injection of oxy hydrogen gas as a fuel additive to diesel in stationary Compression Ignition engine. This gas was injected into the intake manifold where it premixes with the incoming air. Experiments were conducted at a constant rpm of 1500 and load was varied from 0 to 75%. The diesel was injected by common rail direct injector 45 Before Top Dead Center which ensured an almost homogenous mixture of air, oxy hydrogen gas, and diesel.
Technical Paper

Modelling of Internal Manifold Flow Distribution in PEMFC

2021-09-22
2021-26-0340
In a Polymer Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cell (PEMFC) uniform reaction rate is very crucial to obtain maximum performance and to maintain the life of the cells. In PEMFC stack manifold plays an important role in maintaining uniform flow distribution of reactants (hydrogen, air and coolant) to the cells. Many studies have been carried out for examining the effect of manifold on flow distribution and pressure drop. Most studies are limited to small scale level (5 to 10 kW stack). This paper describes large scale fuel cell stack manifold design, flow distribution and pressured contours which is suitable for automotive vehicles (30 to 50 kW). The design consists of simplified scaled up fuel cell stack with cells connected in the series. Modelled the effect of internal manifold geometry of the fuel cell stack on pressure and flow distribution to the cells.
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