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Technical Paper

Advanced squeak and rattle noise prediction for vehicle interior development – numerical simulation and experimental validation

2024-06-12
2024-01-2925
Squeak and rattle (SAR) noise audible inside a passenger car causes the product quality perceived by the customer to deteriorate. The consequences are high warranty costs and a loss in brand reputation for the vehicle manufacturer in the long run. Therefore, SAR noise must be prevented. This research shows the application and experimental validation of a novel method to predict SAR noise on an actual vehicle interior component. The novel method is based on non-linear theories in the frequency domain. It uses the harmonic balance method in combination with the alternating frequency/time domain method to solve the governing dynamic equations. The simulation approach is part of a process for SAR noise prediction in vehicle interior development presented herein. In the first step, a state-of-the-art linear frequency-domain simulation estimates an empirical risk index for SAR noise emission. Critical spots prone to SAR noise generation are located and ranked.
Technical Paper

Frequency-based substructuring for virtual prediction and uncertainty quantification of thin-walled vehicle seat structures

2024-06-12
2024-01-2946
Finite element simulation (FE) makes it possible to analyze the structural dynamic behavior of vehicle seat structures in early design phases to meet Noise-Vibration-Harshness (NVH) requirements. For this purpose, linear simulations are usually used, which neglect many nonlinear mechanical properties of the real structure. These models are trimmed to fit global vibration behavior based on the complex description of contact or jointed definitions. Targeted design is therefore only possible to a limited extent. The aim of this work is to characterize the entire seat structure and its sub-components in order to identify the main contributors using experimental and simulative data. The Lagrange Multiplier Frequency Based Substructuring (LM-FBS) method is used for this purpose. Therefore, the individual subsystems of seat frame, seat backrest and headrest are characterized under different conditions.
Technical Paper

Harmonizing Safety Regulations and Perception: A Simulation Methodology for AVAS System Design

2024-06-12
2024-01-2915
The development of an effective Acoustic Vehicle Alert System (AVAS) is not solely about adhering to safety regulations; it also involves crafting an auditory experience that aligns with the expectations of vulnerable road users. To achieve this, a deep understanding of the acoustic transfer function is essential, as it defines the relationship between the sound emitter (the speaker inside the vehicle) and the receiver (the vulnerable road user). Maintaining the constancy of this acoustic transfer function is paramount, as it ensures that the sound emitted by the vehicle aligns with the intended safety cues and brand identity that is defined by the car manufacturer. In this research paper, three distinct methodologies for calculating the acoustic transfer function are presented: the classical Boundary Element method, the H-Matrix BEM accelerated method, and the Ray tracing method.
Technical Paper

Coupled Boundary Element and Poro-Elastic Element Simulation Approach to Designing Effective Acoustic Encapsulation for Vehicle Components

2024-06-12
2024-01-2956
To meet vehicle interior noise targets and expectations, components including those related to electric vehicles (EVs) can effectively be treated at the source with an encapsulation approach, preventing acoustic and vibration sources from propagating through multiple paths into the vehicle interior. Encapsulation can be especially useful when dealing with tonal noise sources in EVs which are common for electrical components. These treatments involve materials that block noise and vibration at its source but add weight and cost to vehicles – optimization and ensuring the material used is minimized but efficient in reducing noise everywhere where it is applied is critically important. Testing is important to confirm source levels and verify performance of some proposed configurations, but ideal encapsulation treatments are complex and cannot be efficiently achieved by trial-and-error testing.
Technical Paper

Tire Noise Synthesis from Test Stand Measurements and CAE Full Vehicle Models

2024-06-12
2024-01-2951
Tire/Road noise is a dominant contribution to a vehicle interior noise and requires significant engineering resources during vehicle development. A process has been developed to support automotive OEMs with road noise engineering during vehicle design and development which has test as its basis but takes advantage of simulation to virtually accelerate road noise improvement. The process uses airborne noise sources measured on a single tire installed on a test stand. The measured sources are then combined with vehicle level transfer functions calculated using a Statistical Energy Analysis (SEA) model to predict the sound at the driver ears. The process can be applied from the early stages of a vehicle development program and allows the evaluation of vehicle road noise performance as perceived by the driver long before the first prototype is available. This process is also extensible to other types of sources and loads impacting vehicle interior acoustics.
Technical Paper

Transmission of sound under the influence of various environmental conditions

2024-06-12
2024-01-2933
Electrified vehicles are particularly quiet, especially at low speeds due to the absence of combustion noises. This is why there are laws worldwide for artificial driving sounds to warn pedestrians. These sounds are generated using a so-called Acoustic Vehicle Alerting System (AVAS) which must maintain certain minimum sound pressure levels in specific frequency ranges at low speeds. The creation of the sound currently involves an iterative and sometimes time-consuming process that combines composing the sound on a computer with measuring the levels with a car on an outside noise test track. This continues until both the legal requirements and the subjective demands of vehicle manufacturers are met. To optimize this process and reduce the measurement effort on the outside noise test track, the goal is to replace the measurement with a simulation for a significant portion of the development.
Technical Paper

Trim-structure interface modelling and simulation approaches for FEM applications

2024-06-12
2024-01-2954
Trim materials are often used for vibroacoustic energy absorption purposes within vehicles. To estimate the sound impact at a driver’s ear, the substructuring approach can be applied. Thus, transfer functions are calculated starting from the acoustic source to the car body, from the car body to the trim and, finally, from the trim to the inner cavity where the driver is located. One of the most challenging parts is the calculation of the transfer functions from the car body inner surface to the bottom trim surface. Commonly, freely laying mass-spring systems (trims) are simulated with a fixed boundary and interface phenomena such as friction, stick-slip or discontinuities are not taken into consideration. Such an approach allows for faster simulations but results in simulations strongly overestimating the energy transfer, particularly in the frequency range where the mass-spring system’s resonances take place.
Technical Paper

A Simulation Methodology to Design the AVAS System to Meet Safety Regulations and Create the Expected Perception for the Vulnerable Road User

2024-01-16
2024-26-0230
Designing an effective AVAS system, not only to meet safety regulations, but also to create the expected perception for the vulnerable road user, relies on knowledge of the acoustic transfer function between the sound actuator and the receiver. It is preferable that the acoustic transfer function be as constant as possible to allow transferring the sound designed by the car OEM to ensure the safety of vulnerable road users while conveying the proper brand image. In this paper three different methodologies for the acoustic transfer function calculations are presented and compared in terms of accuracy and calculation time: classic Boundary Element method, H-Matrix BEM accelerated method and Ray tracing method. An example of binaural listening experience at different certification positions in the modeled simulated space is also presented.
Technical Paper

Redundant Sensor-Based Perception Sensor Reliability Estimation from Field Tests without Reference Truth

2023-11-08
2023-01-5078
The introduction of autonomous vehicles has gained significant attention due to its potential to revolutionize mobility and safety. A critical aspect underpinning the functionality of these autonomous vehicles is their sensor perception system. Demonstrating the reliability of the environment perception sensors and sensor fusion algorithms is, therefore, a necessary step in the development of automated vehicles. Field tests offer testing conditions that come closest to the environment of an automated vehicle in the future. However, a significant challenge in field tests is to obtain a reference truth of the surrounding environment. Here, we propose a pipeline to assess the sensor reliabilities without the need for a reference truth. The pipeline uses a model to estimate the reliability of redundant sensors. To do this, it relies on a binary representation of the surrounding area, which indicates either the presence or absence of an object.
Technical Paper

Cold Start Performance of Sustainable Oxygenated Spark Ignition Fuels

2023-09-29
2023-32-0166
The objective of this study was to reduce pollutant emissions during cold start conditions in a spark-ignited direct injection engine, by exploring the potential of oxygenated fuels. With their high oxygen content and lack of direct C-C bonds, they effectively reduce particle number (PN) and NOx emissions under normal conditions. Methanol was chosen due to its wide availability. As methanol is toxic to humans and associated with cold-start issues, a second promising synthetic fuel was selected to be benchmarked against gasoline, comprising 65 vol% of dimethyl carbonate and 35 vol% of methyl formate (C65F5). Currently, there is a lack of detailed investigations on the cold start performance for both oxygenated fuels utilizing today’s injector capabilities. Spray measurements were caried out in a constant volume chamber to assess the spray of C65F35. Reduced fuel temperature increased spray-penetration length and compromised fast vaporization.
Technical Paper

Clarification of Fuel and Oil Flow Behaviour Around the Piston Rings of Internal Combustion Engines: Visualization of Oil and Fuel Behaviour by Photochromism in Gasoline Engine Under Transient Operating Conditions

2023-09-29
2023-32-0046
Photochromism is a reversible color change phenomenon based on chemical reactions caused by light illumination. In the present study, this technique is applied to visualize the lubricating oil and fuel around the piston rings in the gasoline engine. The oil film was colored with a UV laser and photographed by synchronizing the shutter of a high-speed camera with a flashlight. The color density was evaluated as a value of absorbance, calculated from images taken at two different wavelengths and two different times before and after the coloration. The authors performed photochromism visualization experiments in an engine under motored operation. However, using photochromic dyes that are robust to temperature changes makes it possible to visualize the engine under fired operation. The experiment was conducted mainly by switching to the motored operation for a fixed time between the fired operations.
Technical Paper

Trailer Electrification – A HIL Approach for MPC Powertrain Control to Ensure Driver Safety in Micromobility

2023-08-28
2023-24-0180
Bicycle-drawn cargo trailers with an electric drive to enable the transportation of high cargo loads are used as part of the last-mile logistics. Depending on the load, the total mass of a trailer can vary between approx. 50 and 250 kg, potentially more than the mass of the towing bicycle. This can result in major changes in acceleration and braking behavior of the overall system. While existing systems are designed primarily to provide sufficient power, improvements are needed in the powertrain control system in terms of driver safety and comfort. Hence, we propose a novel prototype that allows measurement of the tensile force in the drawbar which can subsequently be used to design a superior control system. In this context, a sinusoidal force input from the cyclist to the trailer according to the cadence of the cyclist is observed. The novelty of this research is to analyze whether torque impulses of the cyclist can be reduced with the help of Model Predictive Control (MPC).
Technical Paper

Applications of an Advanced Multiple Injection Calibration Strategy to Address Future Emission Legislation Challenges

2023-08-28
2023-24-0081
A novel algorithm-based approach is employed in this publication to calculate multiple direct injection patterns for spark ignition engines. The algorithm is verified by investigating the combustion and emission behavior of a single-cylinder research engine. State-of-the-art standard exhaust gas analyzers, a particle counter and an additional FTIR analyzer enable in-depth investigation of engine exhaust gas composition. With the upcoming worldwide pollutant emission targets, the emission limits will be reduced while the test procedures’ requirements to the engine increase. Special attention to the engine-out emissions must be paid during cold-start, during which the aftertreatment system lacks sufficient pollutant emission conversion efficiency. With advanced injection control, the engine-out emissions can be reduced and exhaust aftertreatment heat-up can be accelerated.
Technical Paper

Leveraging Historical Thermal Wind Tunnel Data for ML-Based Predictions of Component Temperatures for a New Vehicle Project

2023-06-26
2023-01-1216
The thermal operational safety (TOS) of a vehicle ensures that no component exceeds its critical temperature during vehicle operation. To enhance the current TOS validation process, a data-driven approach is proposed to predict maximum component temperatures of a new vehicle project by leveraging the historical thermal wind tunnel data from previous vehicle projects. The approach intends to support engineers with temperature predictions in the early phase and reduce the number of wind tunnel tests in the late phase of the TOS validation process. In the early phase, all measurements of the new vehicle project are predicted. In the late phase, a percentage of measurements with the test vehicle used for the model training and the remaining tests are predicted with the trained ML model. In a first step, data from all wind tunnel tests is extracted into a joint dataset together with metadata about the vehicle and the executed load case.
Technical Paper

Prediction of Minimum Sound Emission Requirements of an Electric/Hybrid Vehicle

2023-05-08
2023-01-1099
Electric and Hybrid vehicles have standards for emitting enough noise to reduce danger and risk to pedestrians when operating at low speeds. Simulation can help to support development and deployment of these systems while avoiding a time-consuming, test-based approach to design these AVAS (Acoustic Vehicle Alerting System) warning systems. Traditionally, deterministic simulation methods such as Finite Element Method (FEM) and Boundary Element Method (BEM) are used at low frequencies and statistical, energy-based methods such as Statistical Energy Analysis (SEA) are used at high frequencies. The deterministic methods are accurate, but computationally inefficient, particularly when the frequency increases. SEA is computationally efficient but does not capture well the physics of exterior acoustic propagation. An alternative method commonly used in room acoustics, based on geometrical or ray acoustics, is “Ray Tracing” and can be used for sound field prediction.
Technical Paper

Using Numerical Models within an SEA Framework

2023-05-08
2023-01-1110
Statistical Energy Analysis (SEA) is widely used for modeling the vibro-acoustic response of large and complex structures. SEA makes simulations practical thanks to its intrinsic statistical approach and the lower computational cost compared to FE-based techniques. However, SEA still requires underlying models for subsystems and junctions to compute the SEA coefficients which appear in the power balance equations of the coupled system. Classically, such models are based on simplified descriptions of the structures to allow analytical or semi-analytical developments. To overcome this limitation, the authors have proposed a general approach to SEA which only requires the knowledge of impedances of the structures to compute SEA coefficients. Such impedances can always be computed from an accurate FE model of each component of a coupled system.
Technical Paper

Highly Efficient and Clean Combustion Engine for Synthetic Fuels

2023-04-11
2023-01-0223
This paper provides an overview of possible engine design optimizations by utilizing highly knock-resistant potential greenhouse gas (GHG) neutral synthetic fuels. Historically the internal combustion engine was tailored to and highly optimized for fossil fuels. For future engine generations one of the main objectives is to achieve GHG neutrality. This means that either carbon-free fuels such as hydrogen or potential greenhouse gas neutral fuels are utilized. The properties of hydrogen make its use challenging for mobile application as it is very diffusive, not liquid under standard temperature/pressure and has a low volumetric energy density. C1-based oxygenated fuels such as methanol (MeOH), dimethyl carbonate (DMC) and methyl formate (MeFo) have properties like conventional gasoline but offer various advantages. Firstly, these fuels can be produced with renewable energy and carbon capture technologies to be GHG neutral.
Technical Paper

Comparison of Deep Learning Architectures for Dimensionality Reduction of 3D Flow Fields of a Racing Car

2023-04-11
2023-01-0862
In motorsports, aerodynamic development processes target to achieve gains in performance. This requires a comprehensive understanding of the prevailing aerodynamics and the capability of analysing large quantities of numerical data. However, manual analysis of a significant amount of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) data is time consuming and complex. The motivation is to optimize the aerodynamic analysis workflow with the use of deep learning architectures. In this research, variants of 3D deep learning models (3D-DL) such as Convolutional Autoencoder (CAE) and U-Net frameworks are applied to flow fields obtained from Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) simulations to transform the high-dimensional CFD domain into a low-dimensional embedding. Consequently, model order reduction enables the identification of inherent flow structures represented by the latent space of the models.
Journal Article

A New Generation Automotive Tool Access Architecture for Remote in-Field Diagnosis

2023-04-11
2023-01-0848
Software complexity of vehicles is constantly growing especially with additional autonomous driving features being introduced. This increases the risk for bugs in the system, when the car is delivered. According to a car manufacturer, more than 90% of availability problems corresponding to Electronic Control Unit (ECU) functionality are either caused by software bugs or they can be resolved by applying software updates to overcome hardware issues. The main concern are sporadic errors which are not caught during the development phase since their trigger condition is too unlikely to occur or is not covered by the tests. For such systems, there is a need of safe and secure infield diagnosis. In this paper we present a tool software architecture with remote access, which facilitates standard read/write access, an efficient channel interface for communication and file I/O, and continuous trace.
Technical Paper

Algorithm-Calculated Multiple Injection Patterns to Meet Future Requirements to Direct-Injection Spark Ignited Engines

2022-08-30
2022-01-1068
Future emission regulations require further development for internal combustion engines operating on gasoline. To comply with such regulations and simultaneously improve fuel efficiency, major development trends are found in reduced displacements, increased compression ratios and turbocharging. To counteract such engines’ increased tendencies to knocking combustion, direct fuel injection systems are necessarily applied. Compared to standard port fuel injection, direct injection systems cause increased particle emissions. State-of-the-art magnet-driven gasoline direct injectors are capable of realizing various injection events of small injected mass per event and short dwell time between one another. Thereby, they facilitate multiple injection strategies, able to overcome the drawbacks of direct injection systems in relation to exhaust emissions. However, the full potential of multiple injection strategies is not yet taken advantage of.
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