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Technical Paper

Evaluating the Effects of an Electrically Assisted Turbocharger on Scavenging Control for an Opposed Piston Two Stroke (OP2S) Compression Ignition Engine

2024-04-09
2024-01-2388
Opposed piston two-stroke (OP2S) diesel engines have demonstrated a reduction in engine-out emissions and increased efficiency compared to conventional four-stroke diesel engines. Due to the higher stroke-to-bore ratio and the absence of a cylinder head, the heat transfer loss to the coolant is lower near ‘Top Dead Center.’ The selection and design of the air path is critical to realizing the benefits of the OP2S engine architecture. Like any two-stroke diesel engine, the scavenging process and the composition of the internal residuals are predominantly governed by the pressure differential between the intake and the exhaust ports. Without dedicated pumping strokes, the two-stroke engine architecture requires external devices to breathe.
Technical Paper

Vehicle Seat Occupancy Detection and Classification Using Capacitive Sensing

2024-04-09
2024-01-2508
Improving passenger safety inside vehicle cabins requires continuously monitoring vehicle seat occupancy statuses. Monitoring a vehicle seat’s occupancy status includes detecting if the seat is occupied and classifying the seat’s occupancy type. This paper introduces an innovative non-intrusive technique that employs capacitive sensing and an occupancy classifier to monitor a vehicle seat’s occupancy status. Capacitive sensing is facilitated by a meticulously constructed capacitance-sensing mat that easily integrates with any vehicle seat. When a passenger or an inanimate object occupies a vehicle seat equipped with the mat, they will induce variations in the mat’s internal capacitances. The variations are, in turn, represented pictorially as grayscale capacitance-sensing images (CSI), which yield the feature vectors the classifier requires to classify the seat’s occupancy type.
Technical Paper

Numerical Evaluation of Injection Parameters on Transient Heat Flux and Temperature Distribution of a Heavy-Duty Diesel Engine Piston

2024-04-09
2024-01-2688
A major concern for a high-power density, heavy-duty engine is the durability of its components, which are subjected to high thermal loads from combustion. The thermal loads from combustion are unsteady and exhibit strong spatial gradients. Experimental techniques to characterize these thermal loads at high load conditions on a moving component such as the piston are challenging and expensive due to mechanical limitations. High performance computing has improved the capability of numerical techniques to predict these thermal loads with considerable accuracy. High-fidelity simulation techniques such as three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics and finite element thermal analysis were coupled offline and iterated by exchanging boundary conditions to predict the crank angle-resolved convective heat flux and surface temperature distribution on the piston of a heavy-duty diesel engine.
Technical Paper

Machine Learning Approach for Open Circuit Fault Detection and Localization in EV Motor Drive Systems

2024-04-09
2024-01-2790
Semiconductor devices in electric vehicle (EV) motor drive systems are considered the most fragile components with a high occurrence rate for open circuit fault (OCF). Various signal-based and model-based methods with explicit mathematical models have been previously published for OCF diagnosis. However, this proposed work presents a model-free machine learning (ML) approach for a single-switch OCF detection and localization (DaL) for a two-level, three-phase inverter. Compared to already available ML models with complex feature extraction methods in the literature, a new and simple way to extract OCF feature data with sufficient classification accuracy is proposed. In this regard, the inherent property of active thermal management (ATM) based model predictive control (MPC) to quantify the conduction losses for each semiconductor device in a power converter is integrated with an ML network.
Technical Paper

The Influence of Cooling Air-Path Restrictions on Fuel Consumption of a Series Hybrid Electric Off-Road Tracked Vehicle

2023-10-31
2023-01-1611
Electrification of off-road vehicle powertrains can increase mobility, improve energy efficiency, and enable new utility by providing high amounts of electrical power for auxiliary devices. These vehicles often operate in extreme temperature conditions at low ground speeds and high power levels while also having significant cooling airpath restrictions. The restrictions are a consequence of having grilles and/or louvers in the airpath to prevent damage from the operating environment. Moreover, the maximum operating temperatures for high voltage electrical components, like batteries, motors, and power-electronics, can be significantly lower than those of the internal combustion engine. Rejecting heat at a lower temperature gradient requires higher flow rates of air for effective heat exchange to the operating environment at extreme temperature conditions.
Technical Paper

Experimental Study of Low Thermal Inertia Thermal Barrier Coating in a Spark Ignited Multicylinder Production Engine

2023-10-31
2023-01-1617
Thermal barrier coatings (TBCs) have long been studied as a potential pathway to achieve higher thermal efficiency in spark ignition engines. Researchers have studied coatings with different thicknesses and thermophysical properties to counteract the volumetric efficiency penalty associated with TBCs in spark ignition. To achieve an efficiency benefit with minimal charge heating during the intake stroke, low thermal inertia coatings characterized by their larger temperature swings are required. To study the impact of low thermal inertia coatings in spark ignition, coatings were applied to the cylinder head, piston crown, intake and exhaust valve faces, and intake and exhaust valve backsides. Tier III EEE E10 certification gasoline was used to keep the experiments relevant to the present on-road vehicles. This study is aimed at analyzing durability of the coatings as well as efficiency and emissions improvements.
Technical Paper

Experimental Comparison of a Rotary Valvetrain on the Performance and Emissions of a Light Duty Spark Ignition Engine

2023-10-31
2023-01-1613
Rotary valve technology can provide increased flow area and higher discharge coefficients than conventional poppet valves for internal combustion engines. This increase in intake charging efficiency can improve the power density of four-stroke internal combustion engines, particularly at high engine speeds, where flow is choked through conventional poppet valves. In this work, the valvetrain of a light duty single cylinder spark ignition engine was replaced with a rotary valve train. The impact of this valvetrain conversion on performance and emissions was evaluated by comparing spark timing sweeps with lambda ranging from 0.8 to 1.1 at wide open throttle. The results indicated that the rotary valvetrain increased the amount of air trapped at intake valve closing and resulted in a significantly faster burn duration than the conventional valvetrain.
Technical Paper

GT-Suite Modeling of Thermal Barrier Coatings in a Multi-Cylinder Turbocharged DISI Engine for Catalyst Light-Off Delay Improvement

2023-10-31
2023-01-1602
Catalytic converters, which are commonly used for after-treatment in SI engines, exhibit poor performance at lower temperatures. This is one of the main reasons that tailpipe emissions drastically increase during cold-start periods. Thermal inertia of turbocharger casing prolongs the catalyst warm-up time. Exhaust enthalpy management becomes crucial for a turbocharged direct injection spark ignition (DISI) engine during cold-start periods to quickly heat the catalyst and minimize cold-start emissions. Thermal barrier coatings (TBCs), because of their low thermal inertia, reach higher surface temperatures faster than metal walls, thereby blocking heat transfer and saving enthalpy for the catalyst. The TBCs applied on surfaces that exchange heat with exhaust gases can increase the enthalpy available for the catalyst warm-up.
Technical Paper

Impact of Active Cooling on the Thermal Management of 3-Level NPC Converter for Hybrid Electric Vehicle Application

2023-10-31
2023-01-1684
The application of power electronic converters (PEC) in electric vehicles (EVs) has increased immensely as they provide enhanced controllability and flexibility to these vehicles. Accordingly, the interest in developing innovative and sustainable technologies to ensure safe and reliable operation of PECs has also risen. One of the most difficult challenges experienced during the development of reliable PECs is the design of proper thermal management systems for controlling the junction temperature and reducing the thermal cycling of power semiconductors. The addition of Active Thermal Control (ATC) can mitigate these concerns. Moreover, the performance of the thermal management system can be enhanced further by the integration of active cooling methods. An active cooling system consumes external energy for circulating cooling air or liquid within the PECs.
Technical Paper

Analysis of a Split Injection Strategy to Enable High Load, High Compression Ratio Spark Ignition with Hydrous Ethanol

2023-10-31
2023-01-1616
High compression ratios are critical to increasing the efficiency of spark ignition engines, but the trend in downsized and down sped configurations has brought attention to the nominally low compression ratios used to avoid knock. Knock is an abnormal combustion event defined by the acoustic sound caused by end-gas auto-ignition ahead of the flame front. In order to avoid engine-damaging levels of knock, low compression ratios and retarded combustion phasing at high loads are used, both of which lower efficiency. Low carbon alternative fuels such as ethanol or water-based alcohol fuels combine strong chemical auto-ignition resistance with large charge cooling characteristics that can suppress knock and enable optimal combustion phasing, thus allowing an increase in the compression ratio.
Technical Paper

Exploration of Support Methods for Tradespace Exploration

2023-04-11
2023-01-0117
Tradespace exploration (TSE) is an important aspect of the early stages of the design process, in which stakeholders search for the most optimal solutions within a design variable-bounded solution space. This decision-making process requires stakeholders to understand the trade-offs and compromises that may be required to choose a solution. In order for stakeholders to make these decisions appropriately, information must be presented in an efficient manner and should ensure that the trade-offs between solutions are clearly visible. Existing visualizations often struggle to elucidate these trade-offs, and can rapidly become difficult to understand as the dimensionality of the tradespace increases. In this paper, the benefits and drawbacks to these existing methods will be discussed. In addition, this paper will explore potential methods to improve information presentation for TSE, including framing, visual steering, and visualization options.
Technical Paper

Split Injection of High-Ethanol Content Fuels to Reduce Knock in Spark Ignition

2023-04-11
2023-01-0326
Spark ignition engines have low tailpipe criteria pollutants due to their stoichiometric operation and three-way catalysis and are highly controllable. However, one of their main drawbacks is that the compression ratio is low due to knock, which incurs an efficiency penalty. With a global push towards low-lifecycle-carbon renewable fuels, high-octane alternatives to gasoline such as ethanol are attractive options as fuels for spark ignition engines. Under premixed spark ignition operating conditions, ethanol can enable higher compression ratios than regular-grade gasoline due to its high octane number. The high cooling potential of high-ethanol content gasolines, like E85, or of ethanol-water blends, like hydrous ethanol, can be leveraged to further reduce knock and enable higher compression ratios as well as further downsizing and boosting to reduce frictional and throttling losses.
Technical Paper

Impact of Thermal Barrier Coatings on Intake and Exhaust Valves in a Spark Ignition Engine

2023-04-11
2023-01-0243
Spark ignition knock is highly sensitive to changes in intake air temperature. Hot surface temperatures due to ceramic thermal barrier coatings increase knock propensity by elevating the incoming air temperature, thus mitigating the positive impacts of low heat transfer losses by requiring spark retard to avoid knock. Low thermal inertia coatings (i.e. Temperature swing coatings) have been proposed as a means of reducing or eliminating the open cycle charge heating penalty of traditional TBCs through a combination of low thermal conductivity and low volumetric heat capacity materials. However, in order to achieve a meaningful gain in efficiency, a significant fraction of the combustion chamber must be coated. In this study, a coated piston and intake and exhaust valves with coated combustion faces, backsides, and stems are installed in a single-cylinder research engine to evaluate the effect of high coated fractions of the combustion chamber in a knock-sensitive architecture.
Journal Article

Thermodynamic Modeling of Military Relevant Diesel Engines with 1-D Finite Element Piston Temperature Estimation

2023-04-11
2023-01-0103
In military applications, diesel engines are required to achieve high power outputs and therefore must operate at high loads. This high load operation leads to high piston component temperatures and heat rejection rates limiting the packaged power density of the powertrain. To help predict and understand these constraints, as well as their effects on performance, a thermodynamic engine model coupled to a finite element heat conduction solver is proposed and validated in this work. The finite element solver is used to calculate crank angle resolved, spatially averaged piston temperatures from in-cylinder heat transfer calculations. The calculated piston temperatures refine the heat transfer predictions as well requiring iteration between the thermodynamic model and finite element solver.
Technical Paper

Multiple Heat Exchangers for Automotive Systems - A Design Tool

2022-03-29
2022-01-0180
A single radiator cooling system architecture has been widely applied in ground vehicles for safe equipment (e.g., engine block, electronics, and motors) temperature control. The introduction of multiple smaller heat exchangers provides additional energy management features and alternate pathways for continued operation in case of critical subsystem failure. Although cooling performance is often designed for maximum thermal loads, systems typically operate at a fraction of the peak values for most of their life cycle. In this project, a two-radiator configuration with variable flow rates and valve positions has been mathematically modelled and experimentally validated to study its performance feasibility. A multi-node resistance-capacitance thermal model was derived using the ε−NTU approach with accompanying convective and conductive heat transfer pathways within the system.
Technical Paper

Assessing the Impact of a Novel TBC Material on Heat Transfer in a Spark Ignition Engine through 3D CFD-FEA Co-Simulation Routine

2022-03-29
2022-01-0402
Thermal barrier coatings (TBCs) have been of interest since the 1970s for application in internal combustion (IC) engines. Thin TBCs exhibit a temperature swing phenomenon wherein wall temperatures dynamically respond to the transient working-gas temperature throughout the engine cycle, thus reducing the temperature difference driving the heat transfer. Determining these varying wall temperatures is necessary to evaluate and study the effect of coatings on wall heat transfer. This study focuses on developing a 3D computational fluid dynamics (CFD)-finite element analysis (FEA) coupled simulation, or co-simulation, routine to determine the wall temperatures of a piston coated with a thin TBC layer subject to spark ignition combustion heat flux. A CONVERGE 3D-CFD model was used to simulate the combustion process in a single-cylinder, light-duty experimental spark ignition (SI) engine.
Journal Article

Designing the Design Space: Evaluating Best Practices in Tradespace Exploration, Analysis and Decision-Making

2022-03-29
2022-01-0354
Determining the validity of the design space early in the conceptualization of a project can make the difference between project success and failure. Early assessment of technical feasibility, project risk, technical readiness and realistic performance expectations based on models with different levels of fidelity, uncertainty, and technical robustness is a challenging mission critical task for large procurement projects. Tradespace exploration uses model-based engineering analysis, design exploration methods, and multi-objective optimization techniques to enable project stakeholders to make informed decisions and tradeoffs concerning the scope, schedule, budget, performance and risk profile of a project. As the intersection with a number of project stakeholders, tradespace studies can provide a significant impact upon the direction and decision-making in a project.
Journal Article

Approaches for Simulation Model Reuse in Systems Design — A Review

2022-03-29
2022-01-0355
In this paper, we review the literature related to the reuse of computer-based simulation models in the context of systems design. Models are used to capture aspects of existing or envisioned systems and are simulated to predict the behavior of these systems. However, developing such models from scratch requires significant time and effort. Researchers have recognized that the time and effort can be reduced if existing models or model components are reused, leading to the study of model reusability. In this paper, we review the tasks necessary to retrieve and reuse model components from repositories, and to prepare new models and model components such that they are more amenable for future reuse. Model reuse can be significantly enhanced by carefully characterizing the model, and capturing its meaning and intent so that potential users can determine whether the model meets their needs.
Technical Paper

Thermodynamic Analysis of Novel 4-2 Stroke Opposed Piston Engine

2021-09-05
2021-24-0096
In this work, a novel opposed piston architecture is proposed where one crankshaft rotates at twice the speed of the other. This results in one piston creating a 2-stroke profile and another with a 4-stroke profile. In this configuration, the slower piston operates in the 2-stroke CAD domain, while the faster piston completes 2 reciprocating cycles in the same amount of time (4-stroke). The key benefit of this cycle is that the 4-stroke piston increases the rate of compression and expansion (dV/dθ), which lowers the combustion-induced pressure rise rate after top dead center (crank angle location of minimum volume). Additionally, it lowers in-cylinder temperatures and pressures more rapidly, resulting in a lower residence time at high temperatures, which reduces residence time for thermal NOx formation and reduces the temperature differential between the gas and the wall, thereby reducing heat transfer.
Technical Paper

A Numerical Simulation for the Hybrid Single Shot (HSS) Process Used to Manufacture Thermoset-Thermoplastic Components

2021-04-06
2021-01-0350
Multi-material design is one of the trending methods for automakers to achieve lightweighting cost-efficiently and meet stringent regulations and fuel efficiency concerns. Motivated by this trend, the hybrid single-shot (HSS) process has been recently introduced to manufacture thermoset-thermoplastic composites in one single integrated operation. Although this integration is beneficial in terms of reducing the cycle time, production cost, and manufacturing limitations associated with such hybrid structures, it increases the process complexity due to the simultaneous filling, forming, curing, and bonding actions occurring during the process. To overcome this complexity and have a better understanding on the interaction of these physical events, a quick yet accurate simulation of the HSS process based on an experimentally calibrated numerical approach is presented here to elucidate the effect of different process settings on the final geometry of the hybrid part.
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