Refine Your Search

Topic

Author

Affiliation

Search Results

Technical Paper

Open-loop Torque Control Strategy based on Constant Volume Instantaneous Combustion Model

2024-04-09
2024-01-2840
A model-based torque control strategy which is simple and easily adaptable to various types of engines is developed in this paper. A torque model is derived from constant-volume combustion model, and applications of the model to engine torque control problem are also discussed. As examples, the torque model is calibrated with experimental data collected from two different engines, and simulation and experimental results from the torque control strategy are presented as well.
Technical Paper

Combustion Timing Control Based on First Modal Coefficients of Individual Cylinder Pressure Traces

2024-04-09
2024-01-2842
When an SI engine is equipped with individual cylinder pressure transducers, combustion timing of each cylinder can be precisely controlled by adjusting spark timing in real-time. In this paper, a novel method based on principal component analysis (PCA) is introduced to control the combustion timing with a significantly less computational burden than a conventional method.
Technical Paper

Advanced Engine Cooling System for a Gas-Engine Vehicle Part I: A New Coolant Flow Control During Cold Start

2024-04-09
2024-01-2414
In this paper, we present a novel algorithm designed to accurately trigger the engine coolant flow at the optimal moment, thereby safeguarding gas-engines from catastrophic failures such as engine boil. To achieve this objective, we derive models for crucial temperatures within a gas-engine, including the engine combustion wall temperature, engine coolant-out temperature, engine block temperature, and engine oil temperature. To overcome the challenge of measuring hard-to-measure signals such as engine combustion gas temperature, we propose the use of new intermediate parameters. Our approach utilizes a lumped parameter concept with a mean-value approach, enabling precise temperature prediction and rapid simulation. The proposed engine thermal model is capable of estimating temperatures under various conditions, including steady-state or transient engine performance, without the need for extra sensors.
Technical Paper

Kinetic Model Development for Selective Catalytic Converter Integrated Particulate Filters

2024-04-09
2024-01-2631
To meet the stringent NOx and particulate emissions requirements of Euro 6 and China 6 standard, Selective Catalyst Reduction (SCR) catalyst integrated with wall flow particulate filter (SCR-DPF) has been found to be an effective solution for the exhaust aftertreatment systems of diesel engines. NOx is reduced by ammonia generated from urea injection while the filter effectively traps and burns the particulate matter periodically in a process called regeneration. The engine control unit (ECU) effectively manages urea injection quantity, timing and soot burning frequency for the stable functioning of the SCR-DPF without impacting drivability. To control the NOx reduction and particulate regeneration process, the control unit uses lookup tables generated from extensive hardware testing to get the current soot load and NOx slip information of SCR-DPF as a function of main exhaust state variables.
Technical Paper

Thermomechanical Fatigue Behavior of a Cast Austenitic Stainless Steel

2024-04-09
2024-01-2683
Cast austenitic stainless steels, such as 1.4837Nb, are widely used for turbo housing and exhaust manifolds which are subjected to elevated temperatures. Due to assembly constraints, geometry limitation, and particularly high temperatures, thermomechanical fatigue (TMF) issue is commonly seen in the service of those components. Therefore, it is critical to understand the TMF behavior of the cast steels. In the present study, a series of fatigue tests including isothermal low cycle fatigue tests at elevated temperatures up to 1100°C, in-phase and out-of-phase TMF tests in the temperature ranges 100-800°C and 100-1000°C have been conducted. Both creep and oxidation are active in these conditions, and their contributions to the damage of the steel are discussed.
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

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

Gasoline Simulated Distillation Profiles of U.S. Market Gasoline and Impacts on Vehicle Particulate Emissions

2023-10-31
2023-01-1632
A gasoline’s distillation profile is directly related to its hydrocarbon composition and the volatility (boiling points) of those hydrocarbons. Generally, the volatility profiles of U.S. market fuels are characterized using a very simple, low theoretical plate distillation separation, detailed in the ASTM D86 test method. Because of the physical chemistry properties of some compounds in gasoline, this simple still or retort distillation has some limitations: separating azeotropes, isomers, and heavier hydrocarbons. Chemists generally rely on chromatographic separations when more detailed and precise results are needed. High-boiling aromatic compounds are the primary source of particulate emissions from spark ignited (SI), internal combustion engines (ICE), hence a detailed understanding and high-resolution separation of these heavy compounds is needed.
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

Virtual Development of Control Coordinator for Engine and Aftertreatment Architecture Equipped with Diesel Fuel Burner

2023-08-28
2023-24-0103
Heating devices are effective technologies to strengthen emission robustness of AfterTreatment Systems (ATS) and to guarantee emission compliance in the new boundaries given by upcoming legislations. Moreover, they allow to manage the ATS warm-up independently from engine operating conditions, thereby reducing the need for specific combustion strategies. Within heating devices, an attractive solution to provide the required thermal power without mandating a 48V platform is the fuel burner. In this work, a model-based control coordinator to manage the interaction between engine, ATS and fuel burner device has been developed, virtually validated, and optimized. The control function features a burner model and a control logic to deliver the needed amount of thermal energy, while ensuring ATS hardware protection.
Technical Paper

Lubrication Effects on Automotive Steel Friction between Bending under Tension and Draw Bead Test

2023-04-11
2023-01-0729
Zinc-based electrogalvanized (EG) and hot-dip galvanized (HDGI) coatings have been widely used in automotive body-in-white components for corrosion protection. The formability of zinc coated sheet steels depends on the properties of the sheet and the interactions at the interface between the sheet and the tooling. The frictional behavior of zinc coated sheet steels is influenced by the interfacial conditions present during the forming operation. Friction behavior has also been found to deviate from test method to test method. In this study, various lubrication conditions were applied to both bending under tension (BUT) test and a draw bead simulator (DBS) test for friction evaluations. Two different zinc coated steels; electrogalvanized (EG) and hot-dip galvanized (HDGI) were included in the study. In addition to the coated steels, a non-coated cold roll steel was also included for comparison purpose.
Technical Paper

Effects of Injector Included Angle on Low-Load Low Temperature Gasoline Combustion Using LES

2023-04-11
2023-01-0270
A novel advanced combustion strategy that employs the kinetically controlled compression ignition of gasoline whose autoignition is sensitive to fuel concentration is termed Low Temperature Gasoline Combustion. The LTGC method can achieve high thermal efficiency with a commercially available fuel while generating ultra-low soot and NOx emissions relative to the conventional combustion modes. At high loads, a double direct injection (D-DI) strategy is used where the first injection generates a background premixed charge while a second compression stroke injection controls the level of fuel stratification on a cycle-to-cycle basis to manage the heat release rates. With lower loads, this combustion performance of this D-DI strategy decreases as the background charge becomes increasingly lean. Instead, a single direct injection (S-DI) is used at lower loads to maintain an adequate combustion efficiency.
Technical Paper

Application of a Mechanism-Based Short Crack Growth Model for the Fatigue Analysis of an Engine Cylinder Block Including Low-Frequency Thermal and High-Frequency Dynamic Loading

2023-04-11
2023-01-0595
Cast aluminum cylinder blocks are frequently used in gasoline and diesel internal combustion engines because of their light-weight advantage. However, the disadvantage of aluminum alloys is their relatively low strength and fatigue resistance which make aluminum blocks prone to fatigue cracking. Engine blocks must withstand a combination of low-cycle fatigue (LCF) thermal loads and high-cycle fatigue (HCF) combustion and dynamic loads. Reliable computational methods are needed that allow for accurate fatigue assessment of cylinder blocks under this combined loading. In several publications, the mechanism-based thermomechanical fatigue (TMF) damage model DTMF describing the growth of short fatigue cracks has been extended to include the effect of both LCF thermal loads and superimposed HCF loadings. This approach is applied to the finite life fatigue assessment of an aluminum cylinder block. The required material properties related to LCF are determined from uniaxial LCF tests.
Technical Paper

Thermomechanical Fatigue Life Predictions of Cast Aluminum Cylinder Heads Considering Defect Distribution

2023-04-11
2023-01-0594
Semi-Permanent Mold (SPM) cast aluminum alloy cylinder heads are commonly used in gasoline and diesel internal combustion engines. The cast aluminum cylinder heads must withstand severe cyclic mechanical and thermal loads throughout their lifetime. The casting process is inherently prone to introducing casting defects and microstructural heterogeneity. Porosity, which is one of the most dominant volumetric defects in such castings, has a significant detrimental effect on the fatigue life of these components since it acts as a crack initiation site. A reliable analytical model for Thermo-Mechanical Fatigue (TMF) life prediction must take into account the presence of these defects. In previous publications, it has been shown that the mechanism-based TMF damage model (DTMF) is able to predict with good accuracy crack locations and the number of cycles to propagate an initial defect into a critical crack size in aluminum cylinder heads considering ageing effects.
Technical Paper

Experimental Comparison of Diesel and Wet Ethanol on an Opposed-Piston Two Stroke (OP2S) Engine

2023-04-11
2023-01-0335
Renewable fuels, such as the alcohols, ammonia, and hydrogen, have a high autoignition resistance. Therefore, to enable these fuels in compression ignition, some modifications to existing engine architectures is required, including increasing compression ratio, adding insulation, and/or using hot internal residuals. The opposed-piston two-stroke (OP2S) engine architecture is unique in that, unlike conventional four-stroke engines, the OP2S can control the amount of trapped residuals over a wide range through its scavenging process. As such, the OP2S engine architecture is well suited to achieve compression ignition of high autoignition resistance fuels. In this work, compression ignition with wet ethanol 80 (80% ethanol, 20% water by mass) on a 3-cylinder OP2S engine is experimentally demonstrated. A load sweep is performed from idle to nearly full load of the engine, with comparisons made to diesel at each operating condition.
Technical Paper

Correlation of Detailed Hydrocarbon Analysis with Simulated Distillation of US Market Gasoline Samples and its Effect on the PEI-SimDis Equation of Calculated Vehicle Particulate Emissions

2023-04-11
2023-01-0298
Several predictive equations based on the chemical composition of gasoline have been shown to estimate the particulate emissions of light-duty, internal combustion engine (ICE) powered vehicles and are reviewed in this paper. Improvements to one of them, the PEISimDis equation are detailed herein. The PEISimDis predictive equation was developed by General Motor’s researchers in 2022 based on two laboratory gas chromatography (GC) analyses; Simulated Distillation (SimDis), ASTM D7096 and Detailed Hydrocarbon Analysis (DHA), ASTM D6730. The DHA method is a gas chromatography mass spectroscopy (GC/MS) methodology and provides the detailed speciation of the hundreds of hydrocarbon species within gasoline. A DHA’s aromatic species from carbon group seven through ten plus (C7 – C10+) can be used to calculate a Particulate Evaluation Index (PEI) of a gasoline, however this technique takes many hours to derive because of its long chromatography analysis time.
Journal Article

Estimating Brake Pad Life in Regenerative Braking Intensive Vehicle Applications

2022-09-19
2022-01-1161
Regenerative braking without question greatly impacts brake pad service life in the field, in most cases extending it significantly. Estimating its impact precisely has not been an overriding concern - yet - due in part to the extensive sharing of brake components between regen-intensive battery-electric and hybrid vehicles, and their more friction-brake intensive internal combustion engine powered sibling. However, a multitude of factors are elevating the need for a more accurate estimation, including the emerging of dedicated electric vehicle architectures with opportunities for optimizing the friction brake design, a sharp focus on brake particulate emissions and the role of regenerative braking, a need to make design decisions for features such as corrosion protection for brake pad and pad slide components, and the emergence of driver-facing features such as Brake Pad Life Monitoring.
Technical Paper

An Investigation into the Effects of Swirl on the Performance and Emissions of an Opposed-Piston Two-Stroke Engine using Large Eddy Simulations

2022-08-30
2022-01-1039
Opposed-piston two-stroke (OP-2S) engines have the potential to achieve higher thermal efficiency than a conventional four-stroke diesel engine. However, the uniflow scavenging process is difficult to control over a wider range of speed and loads due to its sensitivity to pressure dynamics, port timings, and port design. Specifically, the angle of the intake ports can be used to generate swirl which has implications for open and closed cycle effects. This study proposes an analysis of the effects of port angle on the in-cylinder flow distribution and combustion performance of an OP-2S using computational fluid dynamics engine. Large Eddy Simulation (LES) was used to model turbulence given its ability to predict in-cylinder mixing and cyclic variability. A three-cylinder model was validated to experimental data collected by Achates Power and the grid was verified using an LES quality approach from the literature.
Technical Paper

Update on Gasoline Fuel Property and Gasoline Additives Impacts on Stochastic Preignition with Review of Global Market Gasoline Quality

2022-08-30
2022-01-1071
Stochastic Preignition (SPI) is an abnormal combustion phenomenon for internal combustion engines (ICE), which has been a significant impact to automotive companies developing high efficiency, turbocharged, direct fuel injection, spark ignited engines. It is becoming clearer what fuel properties are related to the cause of SPI, whether directly with fuel preparation in the cylinder, or mechanisms related to the deposit build-up which contributes to initial and follow-on SPI events. The purpose of this paper is to provide a summary of global market gasoline fuel properties with special attention given to properties and specific compounds from the fuel and fuel additives that can contribute to SPI and the deposit build-up in engines. Based on a review of the global fuel quality, it appears that the fuel quality has not caught up to meet the technology requirements for fuel economy from modern technology engines.
X