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Journal Article

Method to Compensate Fueling for Individual Firing Events in a Four-Cylinder Engine Operated with Dynamic Skip Fire

2018-04-03
2018-01-1162
Cylinder deactivation in multicylinder spark-ignition (SI) engines leads to increased fuel efficiency at part load by allowing fired cylinders to operate closer to their peak thermal efficiency compared to all-cylinder operation. Unlike traditional cylinder deactivation strategies that are limited to deactivating only certain cylinders, Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF) is an advanced cylinder deactivation control strategy that makes deactivation decisions for every cylinder on an individual firing opportunity basis to best meet driver torque demand while saving fuel and mitigating noise, vibration, and harshness (NVH). During DSF operation, inducted charge air mass can vary for each firing event due to the firing sequence history. To maximize efficiency, cylinder fueling should be adjusted for each firing event in DSF based on the inducted charge air mass for that event.
Technical Paper

Fuel Economy Gains through Dynamic-Skip-Fire in Spark Ignition Engines

2016-04-05
2016-01-0672
Pumping losses are one of the primary energy losses in throttled spark ignition engines. In order to reduce fuel consumption, engine manufacturers are incorporating devices that deactivate the valve-train in some cylinders. In the operating strategies currently implemented in the market, fixed sets of cylinders are deactivated, allowing 2 or 3 operating modes. In contrast, Tula Technology has developed Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF), in which the decision of whether or not to fire a cylinder is decided on a cycle-by-cycle basis. Testing the DSF technology in an independent certified lab on a 2010 GMC Denali, reduces the fuel consumption by 18% on a cycle-average basis, and simultaneously increases the ability to mitigate noise and vibration at objectionable frequencies.
Technical Paper

Electrified Dynamic Skip Fire (eDSF): Design and Benefits

2018-04-03
2018-01-0864
Tula’s Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF®) technology combines highly responsive torque control with cylinder deactivation to optimize fuel consumption of spark ignited engines. Through careful control of individual combustion events, engine operation occurs at peak efficiency over the full range of torque demand. A challenge with skip-fire operation is avoiding objectionable noise and vibration. Tula’s DSF technology uses sophisticated firing control algorithms which manage the skip-fire sequence to avoid excitation of the powertrain and vehicle at sensitive frequencies. DSF enables a production-quality driving experience while reducing CO2 emissions by 8-15% with no impact on regulated toxic emissions. Moreover, DSF presents a high value solution for meeting global emissions mandates, with estimated cost less than $40 per percent gain in fuel efficiency.
Technical Paper

λDSF: Dynamic Skip Fire with Homogeneous Lean Burn for Improved Fuel Consumption, Emissions and Drivability

2018-04-03
2018-01-0891
Dynamic skip fire (DSF) has shown significant fuel economy improvement potential via reduction of pumping losses that generally affect throttled spark-ignition (SI) engines. In DSF operation, individual cylinders are fired on-demand near peak efficiency to satisfy driver torque demand. For vehicles with a downsized-boosted 4-cylinder engine, DSF can reduce fuel consumption by 8% in the WLTC (Class 3) drive cycle. The relatively low cost of cylinder deactivation hardware further improves the production value of DSF. Lean burn strategies in gasoline engines have also demonstrated significant fuel efficiency gains resulting from reduced pumping losses and improved thermodynamic characteristics, such as higher specific heat ratio and lower heat losses. Fuel-air mixture stratification is generally required to achieve stable combustion at low loads.
Technical Paper

mDSF: Improved Fuel Efficiency, Drivability and Vibrations via Dynamic Skip Fire and Miller Cycle Synergies

2019-04-02
2019-01-0227
mDSF is a novel cylinder deactivation technology developed at Tula Technology, which combines the torque control of Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF) with Miller cycle engines to optimize fuel efficiency at minimal cost. mDSF employs a valvetrain with variable valve lift plus deactivation and novel control algorithms founded on Tula’s proven DSF technology. This allows cylinders to dynamically alternate among 3 potential states: high-charge fire, low-charge fire, and skip (deactivation). The low-charge fire state is achieved through an aggressive Miller cycle with Early Intake Valve Closing (EIVC). The three operating states in mDSF can be used to simultaneously optimize engine efficiency and driveline vibrations. Acceleration performance is retained using the all-cylinder, high-charge firing mode.
Technical Paper

Dynamic Skip Fire Applied to a Diesel Engine for Improved Fuel Consumption and Emissions

2019-04-02
2019-01-0549
Dynamic skip fire (DSF) is an advanced cylinder deactivation technology where the decision to fire or skip a singular cylinder of a multi-cylinder engine is made immediately prior to each firing opportunity. A DSF-equipped engine features the ability to selectively deactivate cylinders on a cylinder event-by-event basis in order to match the requested torque demand at optimum fuel efficiency while maintaining acceptable noise, vibration and harshness (NVH). Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF) has already shown significant fuel economy improvements for throttled spark-ignition engines. This paper explores the potential benefits of DSF technology in improving fuel economy while maintaining ultra-low tailpipe emissions for light-duty (LD) Diesel powertrains.
Journal Article

Controls and Hardware Development of Multi-Level Miller Cycle Dynamic Skip Fire (mDSF) Technology

2021-04-06
2021-01-0446
mDSF is a novel cylinder deactivation technology developed at Tula Technology, which combines the torque control of Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF) with Miller cycle engines to optimize fuel efficiency at minimal cost. mDSF employs a valvetrain with variable valve lift plus deactivation and novel control algorithms founded on Tula’s proven DSF technology. This allows cylinders to dynamically alternate among 3 potential states designated as: High Fire, Low Fire, and Skip (deactivation). The Low Fire state is achieved through an aggressive Miller cycle with Early Intake Valve Closing (EIVC). The three operating states in mDSF can be used to simultaneously optimize engine efficiency and driveline vibrations. Acceleration performance is retained using the all-cylinder, High Fire mode. mDSF can be implemented cost-effectively using an asymmetric intake valve lift strategy, with one high-flow power charging port and one high-efficiency Miller port.
Technical Paper

Challenges in Developing Hydrogen Direct Injection Technology for Internal Combustion Engines

2008-10-06
2008-01-2379
Development status and insight on a “research level” piezoelectric direct injection fuel injection system for prototype hydrogen Internal Combustion Engines (ICEs) is described. Practical experience accumulated from specialized material testing, bench testing and engine operation have helped steer research efforts on the fuel injection system. Recent results from a single cylinder engine are also presented, including demonstration of 45% peak brake thermal efficiency. Developing ICEs to utilize hydrogen can result in cost effective power plants that can potentially serve the needs of a long term hydrogen roadmap. Hydrogen direct injection provides many benefits including improved volumetric efficiency, robust combustion (avoidance of pre-ignition and backfire) and significant power density advantages relative to port-injected approaches with hydrogen ICEs.
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