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Journal Article

Thermo-Mechanical Coupled Analysis-Based Design of Ventilated Brake Disc Using Genetic Algorithm and Particle Swarm Optimization

2021-08-24
Abstract The brake discs are subjected to thermal load due to sliding by the brake pad and fluctuating loads because of the braking load. This combined loading problem requires simulation using coupled thermo-mechanical analysis for design evaluation. This work presents a combined thermal and mechanical finite element analysis (FEA) and evolutionary optimization-based novel approach for estimating the optimal design parameters of the ventilated brake disc. Five parameters controlling the design: inboard plate thickness, outboard plate thickness, vane height, effective offset, and center hole radius were considered, and simulation runs were planned. A total of 27 brake disc designs with design parameters as recommended by the Taguchi method (L27) were modeled using SolidWorks, and the FEA simulation runs were carried out using the ANSYS thermal and structural analysis tool.
Journal Article

Theoretical Study of Improving the Safety of the “Operator, Machine, and Environment” System when Performing Transport Operations

2018-06-05
Abstract The article considers the issues of a systemic approach to studying safety levels in transport operations and ways to increase the safety of the operator-machine system in Russian transport. The principal and problematic issues of reducing the risk of injury by preventing traffic accidents and reducing the severity of their impact have not been sufficiently addressed. When performing transport operations, there are often disagreements between the elements of the “Operator, Machine, and Environment” technological system due to the influence of external conditions and parameters of the constantly-changing environment in the workplace. This leads to a sharp increase in the number of failures of system elements, which reduces the level of safety of transport operations.
Journal Article

Theoretical Development of Localized Pseudo Damage

2020-02-18
Abstract Damage is accumulated by vehicles as they travel. Current damage methods allow for the total accumulated damage to be identified; however, they do not allow for identification of the road segments that induce the largest component of the damage. The objective of this article is to develop a measure, Localized Pseudo Damage (LPD), which defines the amount of damage each individual road excitation contributes to the total accumulated pseudo damage. A novel theoretical development of LPD along with analytical and discrete simulation analyses is presented. The results show that the LPD is causal and correctly identifies the location and magnitude of damaging events. This is further demonstrated with the application of the method on a real road surface.
Journal Article

The Use of Canola Oil, n-Hexane, and Ethanol Mixtures in a Diesel Engine

2021-07-06
Abstract Environmental protection and the depletion of nonrenewable energy sources necessitate the search for the replacement of, among others, diesel fuel (Df) in diesel engines with renewable fuel without major structural changes. For this reason, vegetable oils are of interest as a possible fuel for this type of engine. Unfortunately, the physicochemical properties of vegetable oils differ significantly from Df. In addition to the boiling and freezing points, these properties include viscosity, density, and surface tension as well as wetting properties. For this reason, an attempt was made to modify these properties by adding n-hexane (Hex) and ethanol (Et) to canola oil (Co). The viscosity, density, surface tension, and wetting properties of Hex and Et are significantly different from those for Co.
Journal Article

The Possibilities of Detecting Failures and Defects in the Injection System of a Marine Diesel Engine

2020-10-10
Abstract The article discusses the possibilities of detecting defects in the marine diesel engine injection system on a selected example. Basing on statistical data, it was pointed out that these engines had a significant failure rate in relation to the failure rate of other machinery and equipment used on ships. First, it concerns damage of the elements of the injection systems. Therefore, basing on the results of the authors’ own research, the possibility of improving diagnostic methods of the injection system that can be used in the ship operation process was pointed out. First, high diagnostic effectiveness of the analysis of pressure changes measured in the injection system was pointed out here. At the same time, taking into account the difficulties of such measurement in the conditions of the ship’s power plant, it has been shown that very good diagnostic effects can be obtained by using indicator diagrams to calculate heat release characteristics.
Journal Article

The Neutronic Engine: A Platform for Operando Neutron Diffraction in Internal Combustion Engines

2023-11-09
Abstract Neutron diffraction is a powerful tool for noninvasive and nondestructive characterization of materials and can be applied even in large devices such as internal combustion engines thanks to neutrons’ exceptional ability to penetrate many materials. While proof-of-concept experiments have shown the ability to measure spatially and temporally resolved lattice strains in a small aluminum engine on a timescale of minutes over a limited spatial region, extending this capability to timescales on the order of a crank angle degree over the full volume of the combustion chamber requires careful design and optimization of the engine structure to minimize attenuation of the incident and diffracted neutrons to maximize count rates.
Journal Article

The Knock Propensity of Carbon Dioxide-Containing Natural Gases: Effect of Higher Hydrocarbons on Knock-Mitigating Influence of Carbon Dioxide

2020-12-16
Abstract To assess the effect of the presence of carbon dioxide (CO2) in natural gases on the knock resistance of fuel, the knock behavior of a lean-burn, high-speed medium Brake Mean Effective Pressure (BMEP) Combined Heat and Power (CHP) engine fueled with CH4 + 8 mole% C3H8 mixtures. The engine experiments are supplemented with ignition measurements and simulations of ignition and cylinder processes for various fuel compositions. The engine results show that increasing the fraction of CO2 results in an increase in knock resistance. The analysis of simulations of cylinder processes shows that for binary mixtures (CH4/CO2) and ternary mixtures (CH4/C3H8/CO2) the increase in knock resistance with increasing CO2 fraction is caused by the reduction in peak pressure/temperature, which consequently increases the autoignition delay time of the mixture.
Journal Article

The Influence of Carbon Fiber Composite Specimen Design Parameters on Artificial Lightning Strike Current Dissipation and Material Thermal Damage

2023-04-29
Abstract Previous artificial lightning strike direct effect research has examined a broad range of specimen design parameters. No works have studied how such specimen design parameters and electrical boundary conditions impact the dissipation of electric current flow through individual plies. This article assesses the influence of carbon fiber composite specimen design parameters (design parameters = specimen size, shape, and stacking sequence) and electrical boundary conditions on the dissipation of current and the spread of damage resulting from Joule heating. Thermal-electric finite element (FE) modelling is used and laboratory scale (<1 m long) and aircraft scale (>1 m long) models are generated in which laminated ply current dissipation is predicted, considering a fixed artificial lightning current waveform. The simulation results establish a positive correlation between the current exiting the specimen from a given ply and the amount of thermal damage in that ply.
Journal Article

The Effect of Equal-Channel Angular Pressing Processing on Microstructural Evolution, Hardness Homogeneity, and Mechanical Properties of Pure Aluminum

2020-07-25
Abstract Equal-channel angular pressing (ECAP) is among the most applicable severe plastic deformation processes used to fabricate ultrafine-grained materials with superior mechanical properties. In this work, a commercial purity aluminum has been processed via ECAP process up to four passes. The influence of ECAP routes (A and Bc) on the mechanical properties of the material and its grain size was investigated. Microstructural observations of the as-annealed and the rods processed via ECAP were undertaken using optical microscopy. Hardness profiles and contour maps of sections cut perpendicularly and parallel to the load direction were assessed to investigate the effect of ECAP processing on the hardness distribution across the deformed rods. Compressive properties of the rods were also examined. In addition, digital images correlation was used to display the stress distribution along the longitudinal section of the processed sample during the compression test.
Journal Article

The Effect of Current Mode on the Crack and Failure in the Resistance Spot Welding of the Advanced High-Strength DP590 Steel

2020-09-09
Abstract The causes of failure due to cracking in the resistance spot welding of the advanced high-strength steels dual-phase 590 (DP590) were investigated using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), optical microscopy, and the tensile-shear test. The results showed that by increasing the current amount, the formation of the melting zone occurred in the heat-affected zone, leading to the cracking in this area, reducing the tensile strength and decreasing the mechanical properties; the initiation and growth of cracking and failure in this region also happened. In the heat-affected zone, by increasing the current amount with the softening phenomenon, the recrystallized coarse grains also occurred, eventually resulting in the loss of mechanical properties. The results of the tensile-shear test also indicated that by increasing the current up to 12 kA, the strength was raised, but the ductility was reduced.
Journal Article

The Application of Flame Image Velocimetry to After-injection Effects on Flow Fields in a Small-Bore Diesel Engine

2021-09-14
Abstract This study implements Flame Image Velocimetry (FIV), a diagnostic technique based on post-processing of high-speed soot luminosity images, to show the in-flame flow field development impacted by after-injection in a single-cylinder, small-bore optical diesel engine. Two after-injection cases with different dwell times between the main injection and after-injection, namely, close-coupled and long-dwell, as well as a main-injection-only case are compared regarding flow fields, flow vector magnitude, and turbulence intensity distribution. For each case, high-speed soot luminosity movies from 100 individual combustion cycles are recorded at a high frame rate of 45 kHz for FIV processing. The Reynolds decomposition using a spatial filtering method is applied to the obtained flow vectors so that bulk flow structures and turbulence intensity distributions can be discussed.
Journal Article

Temperature and Consumed Energy Predictions for Air-Cooled Interior Permanent Magnet Motors Driving Aviation Fans—Part 1: Mathematical Analytical Solutions for Incompressible Air Cases

2022-04-13
Abstract The increase in worldwide awareness of environmental issues has necessitated the air transport industry to drastically reduce carbon dioxide emissions. To meet this goal, one solution is the electrification of aircraft propulsion systems. In particular, single-aisle aircraft with partial turboelectric propulsion with approximately 150 passenger seats in the 2030s are the focus. To develop a single-aisle aircraft with partial turboelectric propulsion, an air-cooled interior permanent magnet (IPM) motor with an output of 2 MW is desired. In this article, mathematical system equations that describe heat transfer inside the target air-cooled IPM motor are formulated, and their mathematical analytical solutions are obtained.
Journal Article

Technological Stability of the Liner in a Separable Metal Composite Pressure Vessel

2020-04-21
Abstract The article considers one of the possible mechanisms of loading the solidity of a cylindrical metal composite high-pressure vessel (MC HPV). This mechanism manifests itself as delamination of a thin-walled metal shell (liner) from a more rigid composite shell causing local buckling. A similar effect can be detected in the manufacturing process of MC HPV, when the composite shell is formed by winding with tension a carbon fiber-reinforced plastic tape on the liner. Pressure transfer from the composite shell to the liner is carried out by the method of temperature analogy, that is, by cooling the composite shell, thermally insulated from the liner. To solve the problem of externally confined liner local buckling an approach is proposed, which is based on three points: the introduction of local technological deviations inherent in actual structures, the determination of the general stress-strain state, and a real-time deforming.
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2020-06-25
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2022-09-07
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2020-05-15
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2022-10-21
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2022-12-30
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2023-02-28
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2023-12-18
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