Refinement of a Dedicated E85 1999 Silverado with Emphasis on Cold Start and Cold Drivability 2001-01-0679
The University of Texas 2000 Ethanol Vehicle Challenge team remains focused on cold start, cold drivability, fuel economy, and emissions reduction for our 2000 Ethanol Vehicle Challenge entry. We used the stock PCM for all control functions except control of an innovative cold-start system our team designed. The primary modifications for improved emissions control involved ceramic coating of the exhaust manifolds, use of close-coupled ethanol-specific catalysts, use of a moddified version of the California Emissions Calibrated PCM, and our cold-start system that eliminates the need to overfuel the engine at the beginning of the FTP. Additionally, we eliminated EGR at high load to improve power density. Major modifications, such as increasing the compression ratio or pressure boosting, were eliminated from consideration due to cost, complexity, reliability, or emissions penalties. Our major effort was aimed at refining our unique solution to the cold start and cold drivability problems associated with E85.
Citation: Kane, E., Huang, Y., Mehta, D., Frey, C. et al., "Refinement of a Dedicated E85 1999 Silverado with Emphasis on Cold Start and Cold Drivability," SAE Technical Paper 2001-01-0679, 2001, https://doi.org/10.4271/2001-01-0679. Download Citation
Author(s):
Edward Kane, Yiqun Huang, Darius Mehta, Courtney Frey, Michael Tillerson, Zak Chavis, Shrik Aithala, Ronald D. Matthews, Matt Hall
Affiliated:
The University of Texas at Austin
Pages: 18
Event:
SAE 2001 World Congress
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
2000 Ethanol Vehicle Challenge-SP-1618
Related Topics:
Fuel economy
Exhaust manifolds
Ethanol
Emissions
Exhaust gas recirculation (EGR)
Catalysts
Starters and starting
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