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Technical Paper

Controlling Cyclic Combustion Variations in Lean-Fueled Spark-Ignition Engines

2001-03-05
2001-01-0257
This paper describes the reduction of cyclic combustion variations in spark-ignited engines, especially under idle conditions in which the air-fuel mixture is lean of stoichiometry. Under such conditions, the combination of residual cylinder gas and parametric variations (such as variations in fuel preparation) gives rise to significant combustion instabilities that may lead to customer-perceived engine roughness and transient emissions spikes. Such combustion instabilities may preclude operation at air-fuel ratios that would otherwise be advantageous for fuel economy and emissions. This approach exploits the recognition that a component of the observed combustion instability results from a noise-driven, nonlinear deterministic mechanism that can be actively stabilized by small feedback control actions which result in little if any additional use of fuel.
Technical Paper

The Effects of Injector Targeting and Fuel Volatility on Fuel Dynamics in a PFI Engine During Engine Warm-up: Part I - Experimental Results

1998-10-19
982518
This study was performed to quantify the effects of injector targeting and fuel volatility on transient A/F excursions and fuel film mass in a port fuel injected (PFI) engine. Two injector targeting positions as well as injection timing and four different fuels were studied. Warm-up tests were performed with the throttle ramped between two positions over a one second interval to provide smooth changes in airflow and injected fuel. The exhaust A/F was recorded for each transient and fit using the X-τ model to estimate the change in the liquid fuel stored in the port and cylinder due to the throttle ramp. The change in fuel stored in the films was: ∼20% less with valve targeting ∼30% less with IVO injection timing 50-100% higher for hesitation fuel
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