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Technical Paper

Fuzzy Control of Regenerative Braking on Pure Electric Garbage Truck Based on Particle Swarm Optimization

2024-04-09
2024-01-2145
To improve the braking energy recovery rate of pure electric garbage removal vehicles and ensure the braking effect of garbage removal vehicles, a strategy using particle swarm algorithm to optimize the regenerative braking fuzzy control of garbage removal vehicles is proposed. A multi-section front and rear wheel braking force distribution curve is designed considering the braking effect and braking energy recovery. A hierarchical regenerative braking fuzzy control strategy is established based on the braking force and braking intensity required by the vehicle. The first layer is based on the braking force required by the vehicle, based on the front and rear axle braking force distribution plan, and uses fuzzy controllers.
Technical Paper

Performance of Spark Current Boost System on a Production Engine under Lean-Burn Conditions

2024-04-09
2024-01-2106
In order to improve the fuel economy for future high-efficiency spark ignition engines, the applications of advanced combustion strategies are considered to be beneficial with an overall lean and/or exhaust gas recirculation diluted cylinder charge. Stronger and more reliable ignition sources become more favorable under extreme lean/EGR conditions. Existing research indicates that the frequency of plasma restrikes increases with increased flow velocity and decreased discharge current level, and a higher discharge current can reduce the gap resistance and maintain the stretched plasma for a longer duration under flow conditions. An in-house developed current boost control system provides flexible control of the discharge current level and discharge duration. The current boost ignition system is based on a multi-coil system with a discharge current level of 180mA.
Technical Paper

Performance and Emission Characteristics of Direct Injection DME Combustion under Low NOx Emissions

2023-04-11
2023-01-0327
Compression ignition internal combustion engines provide unmatched power density levels, making them suitable for numerous applications including heavy-duty freight trucks, marine shipping, and off-road construction vehicles. Fossil-derived diesel fuel has dominated the energy source for CI engines over the last century. To mitigate the dependency on fossil fuels and lessen anthropogenic carbon released into the atmosphere within the transportation sector, it is critical to establish a fuel source which is produced from renewable energy sources, all the while matching the high-power density demands of various applications. Dimethyl ether (DME) has been used in non-combustion applications for several decades and is an attractive fuel for CI engines because of its high reactivity, superior volatility to diesel, and low soot tendency. A range of feedstock sources can produce DME via the catalysis of syngas.
Journal Article

A Computational Investigation of Piston Bowl Geometry Effects on PPCI-Diffusion Combustion in a Light-Duty GCI Engine

2023-04-11
2023-01-0275
A PPCI-diffusion combustion strategy has shown the potential to achieve high efficiency, clean gasoline compression ignition (GCI) combustion across the full engine operating range. By conducting a 3-D CFD-led combustion system design campaign, this investigation was focused on developing a next generation (NextGen), step-lipped piston design concept in a 2.6L advanced light-duty GCI engine. Key geometric features of the NextGen piston bowl were parametrized and studied with customized spray targeting. A low lip positioning design with 128° spray targeting was found to provide the best performance. Fuel injection strategy optimization was performed at a full-load operating point (OP), 2000 rpm/24 bar closed-cycle IMEP (IMEPcc).
Technical Paper

Wear and Corrosion Behaviours of PEA Alumina Coatings on Gray Cast Iron

2022-03-29
2022-01-0329
Alumina (Al2O3) thin film coatings are applied on Al alloys using Plasma Electrolytic Oxidation (PEO) method to reduce the wear and corrosion problems. Plasma Electrolytic Aluminating (PEA) is a technique which could generate Alumina coatings on cast iron, mild steel and copper alloys. In this study, the aim is to explore the anti-wear and anti-corrosion behaviours of PEA Alumina coatings on gray cast iron. The dry sliding tribology test data was obtained from Pin-on-Disk (POD) tests against SAE 52100 steel and Tungsten Carbide (WC) counterfaces. Comparing with the PEO Alumina coatings, the PEA Alumina coating has much lower Coefficient of Friction (COF) and less wear. The microstructure, chemical composition and phase composition of this coating were investigated with Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM), Energy-Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy (EDX) and X-Ray Diffraction (XRD), respectively. There was FeO (or FeAl2O4) found on the PEA Alumina coating.
Technical Paper

An Investigation of OME3-Diesel Fuel Blend on a Multi-Cylinder Compression Ignition Engine

2022-03-29
2022-01-0439
Oxygenated, low energy-density fuels have the potential to decouple the NOx-soot emissions trade-off in compression-ignition engines. Additionally, synthetic fuels can provide a pathway to reach carbon-neutral utilization of hydrocarbon-based fuels in IC engines. Oxymethylene Dimethyl Ether (OME) is one such synthetic, low energy-density fuel, derived from sustainable sources that in combination with conventional fossil fuels with higher energy content, has the potential to reduce CO2 emissions below the US and EU VI legislative limits, while maintaining ultra-low soot emissions. The objective of this work is to investigate and compare the performance, emissions and efficiency of a modern multi-cylinder diesel engine under conventional high temperature combustion (HTC) with two different fuels; 1) OME310 - a blend of 10% OME3 by volume, with conventional Ultra-Low Sulphur Diesel (ULSD), and 2) D100 - conventional ULSD in North America.
Technical Paper

Impact of Plasma Stretch on Spark Energy Release Rate under Flow Conditions

2022-03-29
2022-01-0438
Performance of the ignition system becomes more important than ever, because of the extensively used EGR in modern spark-ignition engines. Future lean burn SI and SACI combustion modes demand even stronger ignition capability for robust ignition control. For spark-based ignition systems, extensive research has been carried out to investigate the discharge characteristics of the ignition process, including discharge current amplitude, discharge duration, spark energy, and plasma stretching. The correlation between the spark stretch and the discharge energy, as well as the impact of discharge current level on this correlation, are important with respect to both ignition performance, and ignition system design. In this paper, a constant volume combustion chamber is applied to study the impact of plasma stretch on the spark energy release process with cross-flow speed from 0 m/s up to 70 m/s.
Technical Paper

Modeling Performance and Emissions of a Spark Ignition Engine with Machine Learning Approaches

2022-03-29
2022-01-0380
In the foreseeable future, the growing energy crisis and environmental pollution problem pose severe challenges to the automobile powertrains and exhaust systems. However, conventional optimization methods, including multi-dimensional computational fluid dynamics model and bench experiments, are very time-consuming or expensive. Adding the application of data-driven models to engine research and development has the potential to reduce computational costs or the number of in-depth experiments. This purpose of this study was to compare the performance of widely used artificial neural network (ANN) and random forest (RF) model for predicting the fuel consumption and engine-out emissions of a calibrated spark ignition (SI) engine for any given condition.
Technical Paper

Numerical Investigation to Fuel Injection Strategy and Thermal Condition Impacts on GCI Combustion at Low and Medium Loads Using CFD

2021-09-21
2021-01-1155
This research numerically investigated the combustion process and exhaust emissions from a light-duty Gasoline Compression Ignition (GCI) engine operating at low load as well as medium load conditions using a commercial computational fluid dynamic (CFD) software Converge. The fuel injection strategies and thermal boundary conditions effects were examined to produce locally stratified and globally lean partially premixed compression ignition (PPCI) combustion. The effects of fuel injection pressure, number of injections, and the quantity of fuel injected in each pulse were examined and optimized for emissions and fuel consumption (FC) under the design constraints of 180 bar peak cylinder pressure (PCP) and 10 bar/° CA maximum pressure rise rate (MPRR).
Technical Paper

Chemical Reactivity Control of DME/Ethanol Dual Fuel Combustion

2021-09-21
2021-01-1176
The use of renewable fuels in place of conventional hydrocarbon fuels can minimize the carbon footprint of internal combustion engines. DME has been treated as a suitable surrogate to diesel fuel because of its high reactivity and soot-less combustion characteristics. The lower energy density of DME fuel demands a higher fuel supply rate to match the engine loads compared to diesel, which was achieved through prolonged injection duration and larger nozzle holes. When used as a pilot fuel to control the combustion behavior in a dual-fuel application, the fuel energy delivery rate becomes less critical allowing the use of a standard diesel common-rail injector for DME direct injection. In this work, the combustion of DME-Ethanol dual-fuel reactivity-controlled compression ignition was experimentally investigated.
Technical Paper

Numerical Evaluation of Spark Assisted Cold Idle Operation in a Heavy-Duty Gasoline Compression Ignition Engine

2021-04-06
2021-01-0410
Gasoline compression ignition (GCI) has been shown to offer benefits in the NOx-soot tradeoff over conventional diesel combustion while still achieving high fuel efficiency. However, due to gasoline’s low reactivity, it is challenging for GCI to attain robust ignition and stable combustion under cold operating conditions. Building on previous work to evaluate glow plug-assisted GCI combustion at cold idle, this work evaluates the use of a spark plug to assist combustion. The closed-cycle 3-D CFD model was validated against GCI test results at a compression ratio of 17.3 during extended cold idle operation under laboratory-controlled conditions. A market representative, ethanol-free, gasoline (RON92, E0) was used in both the experiment and the numerical analysis. Spark-assisted simulations were performed by incorporating an ignition model with the spark energy required for stable combustion at cold start.
Technical Paper

Air-System and Variable Valve Actuation Recipe for High Load Gasoline Compression Ignition Operation in a Heavy-Duty Diesel Engine

2021-04-06
2021-01-0516
Gasoline compression ignition (GCI) offers improved efficiency by harnessing gasoline’s low reactivity to induce an extended ignition delay that promotes partial premixing of air and fuel before combustion occurs. However, enabling GCI across the full engine operating load map poses several challenges. At high load, due to the elevated pressures and temperatures of the charge mixture, the ignition delay time shrinks, leading to diminished GCI efficiency benefits. At low load, insufficient temperatures and pressures can lead to combustion instability. Variable valve actuation offers a practical solution to these challenges by enabling effective compression ratio (ECR) control. In this paper, the effects of variable intake valve closings were investigated for high load operations in a prototype heavy-duty GCI engine, using a research octane number 93 gasoline fuel. The study focused on the 50% (B50) and the 75% (B75) load conditions at 1375 RPM.
Technical Paper

An Investigation of Emission Species over a Diesel Oxidation Catalyst Using Flow Reversal Strategy

2021-04-06
2021-01-0606
With the increasing demand of emission reductions from the automotive industry, advanced after-treatment strategies have been investigated to overcome the challenges associated with meeting increasingly stringent emission regulations. Ongoing investigations on low temperature combustion (LTC) strategies are being researched to meet future emission regulations, however, the lowered exhaust temperature presents an even greater issue for exhaust after-treatment due to the change in combustion modes. Catalyst temperature is critical for the catalytic ability to maintain effective conversion efficiency of regulated emissions. The use of periodic flow reversal has shown benefits of maintaining catalyst temperature by alternating the exhaust flow direction through the catalytic converter, reducing the catalyst sensitivity to inlet gas temperature fluctuations.
Technical Paper

Performance of Spark Energy Distribution Strategy on a Production Engine under Lean-Burn Conditions

2021-04-06
2021-01-0476
Stronger ignition sources become more favorable under extreme lean/EGR conditions. Under those conditions, the reduced pumping loss and low combustion temperature can contribute to further engine efficiency improvement for spark ignited engines. Multicoil ignition system can enhance ignition energy as well as modulate discharge profile. The ignition energy can either be deployed through single spark gap to enhance the ignition capability of the plasma channel, or be distributed to multiple ignition sites to establish multiple flame kernels to secure flame kernel initiation. The multiple ignition coils used for energy distribution ignition strategy also consume more power, in order to maintain the stable operation of the engine under lean operation limit. In this paper, efficacy of concentrated and distributed multicoil ignition strategies were investigated on a spark ignited inline 4-cylinder production engine using a three-ignition-coil pack.
Journal Article

A Computational Investigation of PPCI-Diffusion Combustion Strategy at Full Load in a Light-Duty GCI Engine

2021-04-06
2021-01-0514
A two-stage PPCI-diffusion combustion process recently showed good potential to enable clean and fuel-efficient gasoline compression ignition (GCI) combustion at medium-to-high loads. By conducting closed-cycle 3-D CFD combustion analysis, a further step was undertaken in this work to evaluate and optimize the PPCI-diffusion combustion strategy at a full load operating point (2000rpm-23.5 bar IMEPcc) while keeping engine-out NOx below 1 g/kWh. The light-duty GCI engine used in this investigation featured a custom-designed piston bowl geometry at a 17.0 compression ratio (CR), a high pressure diesel fuel injection system, and advanced single-stage turbocharging. A split fuel injection strategy was used to enable the two-stage PPCI-diffusion combustion process. First, the injector spray pattern and swirl ratio effects were evaluated. In-cylinder air utilization and the PPCI-diffusion combustion process were notably influenced by the closed-cycle combustion system design.
Technical Paper

Static Targets Recognition and Tracking Based on Millimeter Wave Radar

2020-12-30
2020-01-5132
Due to the poor ability of millimeter wave radar in recognizing distant static objects, target loss and incomplete information will occur when it recognizes the static target in front, thus increasing the false alarm rate and missing alarm rate of the radar-dependent driving assistant system, which will reduce the driving safety and the acceptability of the assistant system. Aiming at the radar's poor ability to recognize static targets, this paper uses a model based on machine learning algorithm to recognize and track targets. The radar signals are collected and processed in different conditions, and the results show that the radar has a poor recognition effect when the distance is more than 100 meters and the speed is more than 19m/s.
Technical Paper

Wear Performances of Gray Cast Iron Brake Rotor with Plasma Electrolytic Aluminating Coating against Different Pads

2020-10-05
2020-01-1623
Gray cast iron brake rotor experiences substantial wear during braking and contributes largely to the wear debris emissions. Surface coating on the gray cast iron rotor represents a trending approach dealing with the problems. In this research, a new plasma electrolytic aluminating (PEA) process was used for preparing an alumina-based ceramic coating with metallurgical bonding to the gray cast iron. Three different types of brake pads (ceramic, semi-metallic and non asbestos organic (NAO)) were used for tribotests. Performances of PEA coatings vs. different brake pad materials were comparatively investigated with respect to their coefficients of friction (COFs) and wear. The PEA-coated brake rotor has a dimple-like surface which promotes the formation of a thin transferred film to protect the rotor from wear. The transferred film materials come from the wear debris of the pads. The secondary plateaus are regenerated on the brake pads through compacting wear debris of the pads.
Technical Paper

Combustion Stability Improvement via Multiple Ignition Sites on a Production Engine

2020-04-14
2020-01-1115
For spark ignition (SI) engines, further improvement of engine efficiency has become the major development trend, and lean burn/EGR technologies, as well as intensified in-cylinder flow, need to be adapted to reach that target. Stronger ignition sources become more favorable under extreme lean/EGR conditions. Among the ignition technologies developed, multiple ignition sites technology has been proved to be an effective way to help with the initial flame kernel development. In this paper, a spark ignited 4-cylinder turbo-charged production engine is employed to investigate the impact of multiple ignition sites technology on engine performance under lean burn conditions. Four in-house designed 3-core sparkplugs are installed on the cylinders to replace traditional stock sparkplugs, in order to generate multiple ignition sites in the cylinders.
Technical Paper

System-level 1-D Analysis to Investigate Variable Valve Actuation Benefits in a Heavy-Duty Gasoline Compression Ignition Engine

2020-04-14
2020-01-1130
In recent years gasoline compression ignition (GCI) has been shown to offer an attractive combination of low criteria pollutants and high efficiency. However, enabling GCI across the full engine load map poses several challenges. At high load, the promotion of partial premixing of air and fuel is challenging due to the diminished ignition-delay characteristics at high temperatures, while under low load operations, maintaining combustion robustness is problematic due to the low reactivity of gasoline. Variable valve actuation (VVA) offers a means of addressing these challenges by providing flexibility in effective compression ratio. In this paper, the effects of VVA were studied at high loads in a prototype heavy-duty GCI engine using a gasoline research octane number (RON) 93 at a geometric compression ratio (CR) of 15.7. Both late intake valve closing (LIVC) and early intake valve closing (EIVC) strategies were analyzed as a measure to reduce the effective compression ratio.
Technical Paper

Numerical Evaluation of Gasoline Compression Ignition at Cold Conditions in a Heavy-Duty Diesel Engine

2020-04-14
2020-01-0778
Achieving robust ignitability for compression ignition of diesel engines at cold conditions is traditionally challenging due to insufficient fuel vaporization, heavy wall impingement, and thick wall films. Gasoline compression ignition (GCI) has shown the potential to offer an enhanced NOx-particulate matter tradeoff with diesel-like fuel efficiency, but it is unknown how the volatility and reactivity of the fuel will affect ignition under very cold conditions. Therefore, it is important to investigate the impact of fuel physical and chemical properties on ignition under pressures and temperatures relevant to practical engine operating conditions during cold weather. In this paper, 0-D and 3-D computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations of GCI combustion at cold conditions were performed.
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