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Technical Paper

Energy Based Hysteresis for Real-Time State Optimization in Hybrid Torque Controls

2024-04-09
2024-01-2778
Through real-time online optimization, the full potential of the performance and energy efficiency of multi-gear, multi-mode, series–parallel hybrid powertrains can be realized. The framework allows for the powertrain to be in its most efficient configuration amidst the constantly changing hardware constraints and performance objectives. Typically, the different gears and hybrid/electric modes are defined as discrete states, and for a given vehicle speed and driver power demand, a formulation of optimization costs, usually in terms of power, are assigned to each discrete states and the state which has the lowest cost is naturally selected as the desired of optimum state. However, the optimization results would be sensitive to numerical exactitude and would typically lead to a very noisy raw optimum state. The generic approach to stabilization includes adding hysteresis costs to state-transitions and time-debouncing.
Technical Paper

Dynamic Simulation of Steering Crimp Ring Assembly Process Using CAE and its Correlation with Testing

2024-04-09
2024-01-2733
The process of assembling the bearing and crimp ring to the steering pinion shaft is intricate. The bearing is pressed into its position via the crimp ring, which is tipped inward and fully fitted into a groove on the pinion shaft. Only when the bearing is pressed to a low surface on the pinion shaft, the caulking force for the crimp ring is achieved. The final caulking distance for the crimp ring confirms the proper bearing position. Simulating this transient fitting process using CAE is a challenging topic. Key factors include controlling applied force, defining contact between bearing and pinion surface, and defining contact between crimp ring and bearing surface from full close to half open transition. The overall CAE process is validated through correlation with testing.
Technical Paper

Virtual Chip Test and Washer Simulation for Machining Chip Cleanliness Management Using Particle-Based CFD

2024-04-09
2024-01-2730
Metal cutting/machining is a widely used manufacturing process for producing high-precision parts at a low cost and with high throughput. In the automotive industry, engine components such as cylinder heads or engine blocks are all manufactured using such processes. Despite its cost benefits, manufacturers often face the problem of machining chips and cutting oil residue remaining on the finished surface or falling into the internal cavities after machining operations, and these wastes can be very difficult to clean. While part cleaning/washing equipment suppliers often claim that their washers have superior performance, determining the washing efficiency is challenging without means to visualize the water flow. In this paper, a virtual engineering methodology using particle-based CFD is developed to address the issue of metal chip cleanliness resulting from engine component machining operations. This methodology comprises two simulation methods.
Technical Paper

Connected Vehicle Data Applied to Feature Optimization and Customer Experience Improvement

2024-01-08
2023-36-0109
In a recent time, which new vehicle lines comes with a huge number of sensors, control units, embedded technologies, and the complexity of these systems (electronics, electrical and electromechanical parts) increases in an exponential way. Considering these events, the expressive generated data amount grows in the same pace, so, consume, transform, and analyze all these data to better understand the modern customer, their needs and how they use the car features becomes necessary. Through that scenario, connected vehicles developed by Ford Motor Company has been generating opportunities to feature’s improvement and cost reduction based on data analysis. This growing quantity of data might be used to optimize feature systems and help engineering teams to understand how the features have been used and enhance the systems engineering design for new or existing features.
Technical Paper

Potential Application of Rubber-Graphene Compounds in the Automotive Parts

2024-01-08
2023-36-0028
Rubber is one of the most used materials currently selected to produce automotive parts, but, for specific applications, some improvement is required in its properties through the addition of some components to the rubber compound formulation. Because of that, mechanical, thermal, and chemical properties are enhanced in order to meet strict requirements of the vast range of application of the rubber compounds. In addition to improving material properties, the combination of different substances, also aims to improve processability and reduce the costs of the final product. Recently, the use of nanofillers has been very explored because of their distinctive properties and characteristics. Among the nanofillers under study, graphene is known for its high-barrier property, thermal and electrical conductivities, and good mechanical properties.
Technical Paper

CFD Analysis of a Centrifugal Pump Controlling a Vehicle Coolant Hydraulic System: a Comparison between MRF and Transient Approaches

2022-03-29
2022-01-0780
Centrifugal pumps are widely used in different thermal fluid systems in automobile industries. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis of such a thermal fluid system depends on the accurate component modeling of the system components. This paper presents CFD analysis of a centrifugal pump with two different approaches: Transient (moving grid) and the steady state - Multiple Reference Frame (MRF) methods using a commercial CFD solver Simerics MP+®. In addition, flow and pressure drop data obtained using CFD simulations of a vehicle coolant hydraulic system was compared to results from rig test data. The Transient method incorporates the real motion of the pump blades geometry and temporal flow solutions are obtained for instantaneous positions of the blade geometry. In MRF approach, the flow governing equations for the stationary zone are solved in the absolute/inertial reference frame, whereas flow in the moving zone is solved in the relative/non-inertial reference frame.
Technical Paper

Fatigue Life Prediction and Correlation of Engine Mount Elastomeric Bushing using A Crack Growth Approach

2022-03-29
2022-01-0760
In a passenger car, suspension link bushings, engine and transmission mount bushings and bump-stops are made of elastomeric materials, to maximize the durability and comfort. Thus, deformation behavior of rubber and its durability is important for product design and development. In virtual engineering, simulating rubber fatigue is a complex exercise, since it needs right modeling strategy and coupon based testing material data. Principal stretches based Ogden model is used to characterize the hyper elastic deformation behavior of natural rubber. Fatigue crack growth approach used here for the fatigue analysis. Engine torque strut mount is used to control the engine and transmission fore aft motion and it is connected between body and Powertrain (PT) system. Powertrain events are predominant for damage contribution to mount failure. So, it is important to predict fatigue life of mount elastomer bushing under Powertrain loading.
Journal Article

3D CFD Simulation of Hydraulic Test of an Engine Coolant System

2022-03-29
2022-01-0207
Designing an efficient vehicle coolant system depends on meeting target coolant flow rate to different components with minimum energy consumption by coolant pump. The flow resistance across different components and hoses dictates the flow supplied to that branch which can affect the effectiveness of the coolant system. Hydraulic tests are conducted to understand the system design for component flow delivery and pressure drops and assess necessary changes to better distribute the coolant flow from the pump. The current study highlights the ability of a complete 3D Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulation to effectively mimic a hydraulic test. The coolant circuit modeled in this simulation consists of an engine water-jacket, a thermostat valve, bypass valve, a coolant pump, a radiator, and flow path to certain auxiliary components like turbo charger, rear transmission oil cooler etc.
Technical Paper

Fatigue Endurance Limit of Fasteners in Automotive Application

2022-03-29
2022-01-0260
Fasteners, commonly used in automotive industry, play an important role in the safety and reliability of the vehicle structural system. In practical application, bolted joints would never undergo fully reversed loading; there always will be positive mean stress on bolt. The mean stress has little influence on the fatigue life if the maximum stress is lower than a threshold which is near the yield stress of the bolt. However, when the sum of the mean stress and the stress amplitude exceeds the threshold, the endurance limit stress amplitude decreases fast as the mean stress increases. The purpose of this paper is to research the fatigue endurance limit of a fastener and establish the threshold for safe design in automotive application. In order to obtain the fatigue endurance limit at different mean stress levels, various mechanical tests were performed on M12x1.75 and M16x1.5 Class 10.9 fasteners using MTS test systems.
Technical Paper

A Multi-Physics Approach to Predict High Frequency NVH in Oil Pump Drives

2021-08-31
2021-01-1099
NVH problems are often the result of mechanisms that originate through complex interactions between different physical domains (flow, structural/mechanical, control logic, etc.). Parallel-shaft spur gears subject to light torque loading caused by the dynamic pressure fluctuation of the oil used in engine accessory or transmission pump drives are likely to exhibit unusual gear whine associated with higher order meshing harmonics, even when the tooth profile has a high-quality grade finishing. Therefore, accurate integrated models are becoming a requirement to solve modern NVH problems.
Journal Article

Circumferential Variation of Noise at the Blade-Pass Frequency in a Turbocharger Compressor with Ported Shroud

2021-08-31
2021-01-1044
The ported shroud casing treatment for turbocharger compressors offers a wider operating flow range, elevated boost pressures at low compressor mass flow rates, and reduced broadband whoosh noise in spark-ignition internal combustion engine applications. However, the casing treatment elevates tonal noise at the blade-pass frequency (BPF). Typical rotational speeds of compressors employed in practice push BPF noise to high frequencies, which then promote multi-dimensional acoustic wave propagation within the compressor ducting. As a result, in-duct acoustic measurements become sensitive to the angular location of pressure transducers on the duct wall. The present work utilizes a steady-flow turbocharger gas stand featuring a unique rotating compressor inlet duct to quantify the variation of noise measured around the duct at different angular positions.
Technical Paper

Multiple Metamodeling Approaches for Improved Design Space Mapping

2021-04-06
2021-01-0840
The complexities involved in an optimization problem at a system level require knowledge base that has information on different approaches and customization of these approaches to a specific class of the optimization problems. One approach that is commonly used is the metamodel based design optimization. The metamodel is 1) a conceptual model for capturing, in abstract terms, essential characteristics of a given optimization problem, and 2) a schema of sufficient formality to enable the problem modeled to be serialized to statements in a concrete optimization language [1]. Optimization is performed based on this metamodel. This metamodel approach has been proven effective and accurate in providing the global optimum. Depending upon the computational hardware availability in an organization, the metamodel based optimization could be much faster way of achieving the optimized solution. However, the accuracy of the optimization is highly dependent on the quality of metamodel generated.
Technical Paper

Assessment of Exhaust Actuator Control at Low Ambient Temperature Conditions

2021-04-06
2021-01-0681
Exhaust sensors and actuators used in automotive applications are subjected to wide variety of operating ambient conditions , the performance of these actuators is challenging especially at cold ambient operating conditions, active exhaust tuning valves with position sensors are used to adjust the sound levels, or noise, vibration and harshness (NVH) from a control unit within the vehicle that leads to an improved driving experience wherein the driver selects their preferred sound levels. However, the operating behavior is crucially influenced by the characteristics of the drive cycle and ambient temperature. The study in this paper is intended to evaluate the icing formation at the start of drive cycle and at different ambient temperature conditions. The test data were obtained through real road and chassis dyno testing at different ambient conditions.
Technical Paper

CAE Correlation of Sealing Pressure of a Press-in-Place Gasket

2021-04-06
2021-01-0299
The Press-in-Place (PIP) gasket is a static face seal with self-retaining feature, which is used for the mating surfaces of engine components to maintain the reliability of the closed system under various operating conditions. Its design allows it to provide enough contact pressure to seal the internal fluid as well as prevent mechanical failures. Insufficient sealing pressure will lead to fluid leakage, consequently resulting in engine failures. A test fixture was designed to simulate the clamp load and internal pressure condition on a gasket bolted joint. A sensor pad in combination with TEKSCAN equipment was used to capture the overall and local pressure distribution of the PIP gasket under various engine loading conditions. Then, the test results were compared with simulated results from computer models. Through the comparisons, it was found that gasket sealing pressure of test data and CAE data shows good correlations in all internal pressure cases when the bolt load was 500 N.
Technical Paper

Cast Magnesium Subframe Development - Bolt Load Retention

2021-04-06
2021-01-0274
A cast magnesium subframe was designed and manufactured for a C Class sedan to reduce weight and improve vehicle fuel economy. The magnesium subframe achieved 5 kg (32%) weight reduction from the equivalent steel subframe and met all the required structural performance targets. All the joints of the magnesium subframe were tested for bolt load retention. The tests were conducted with a temperature profile of 100°C to -30°C designed to investigate the creep behavior of the selected magnesium alloy AE44 under high stress.
Technical Paper

A Qualitative Comparison of the Macroscopic Spray Characteristics of Gasoline Mixtures and their Multi-Component Surrogates Using a Rapid Compression Machine

2021-04-06
2021-01-0558
Rapid Compression Machines (RCM) offer the ability to easily change the compression ratio and the pressure/mixture composition/temperature to gather ignition delay data at various engine relevant conditions. Therefore, RCMs with optical access to the combustion chamber can provide an effective way to analyze macroscopic spray characteristics needed to understand the spray injection process and for spray model development, validation and calibration at conditions that are suitable for engines. Fuel surrogates can help control fuel parameters, develop models for spray and combustion, and perform laser diagnostics with known fluorescence characteristics. This study quantifies and evaluates the macroscopic spray characteristics of multicomponent gasoline surrogates in comparison to their gasoline counterparts, under gasoline direct injection (GDI) engine conditions.
Technical Paper

Compressor Sizing for a Battery Electric Vehicle with Heat Pump

2021-04-06
2021-01-0221
With the demand of growing cooling requirements of fast charging and new thermal architecture design in battery electric vehicles, the automotive industry is exploring electric compressors of large displacement. Compared with small and mid-size (displacement less than 33 cc) compressor, large (34-44 cc) and extra-large (45 cc and above) compressor products are used. This paper investigates the compressor sizing effect for heat pump (HP) system of A-Segment and D-Segment battery electric vehicles. The system performance is evaluated with large (34 cc) and extra-large (57 cc) compressors by considering energy efficiency, cabin thermal management and battery fast charging use cases.
Technical Paper

A Fresh Perspective on Hypoid Duty Cycle Severity

2021-04-06
2021-01-0707
A new method is demonstrated for rating the “severity” of a hypoid gear set duty cycle (revolutions at torque) using the intercept of T-N curve to support gearset selection and sizing decision across vehicle programs. Historically, it has been customary to compute a cumulative damage (using Miner's Rule) for a rotating component duty cycle given a T-N curve slope and intercept for the component and failure mode of interest. The slope and intercept of a T-N curve is often proprietary to the axle manufacturer and are not published. Therefore, for upfront sizing and selection purposes representative T-N properties are used to assess relative component duty cycle severity via cumulative damage (non-dimensional quantity). A similar duty cycle severity rating can also be achieved by computing the intercept of the T-N curve instead of cumulative damage, which is the focus of this study.
Technical Paper

Corrosion Performance of a Magnesium Tower Brace

2021-04-06
2021-01-0276
This study reports the corrosion performance of three different coating strategies tested on an AE44 high performance magnesium strut tower brace used on the 2020 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500. The alloy was selected due to its improved structural performance at higher temperatures over conventional AM60B magnesium die castings. The first coating strategy used no pretreatment, conversion coating, or topcoat to gage the baseline corrosion performance of the uncoated alloy. The second coating strategy used a conventional pretreatment commonly used on AM60B alloy. The third used a ceramic-based conversion coating. A textured (stipple) powder coat was then applied to the two non-baseline parts over the pretreatment. All three coating strategies were then evaluated by comparing the corrosion performance after cyclic corrosion testing for 12 weeks using the Ford L-467 test.
Technical Paper

Virtual Method for Electronic Stop-Start Simulation & VDV Prediction Using Modified Discrete Signal Processing for Short Time Signals

2020-04-14
2020-01-1270
Electronic Stop-Start (ESS) system automatically stops and restarts the engine to save energy, improve fuel economy and reduce emissions when the vehicle is stationary during traffic lights, traffic jams etc. The stop and start events cause unwanted vibrations at the seat track which induce discomfort to the driver and passengers in the vehicle. These events are very short duration events, usually taking less than a second. Time domain analysis can help in simulating this event but it is difficult to see modal interactions and root cause issues. Modal transient analysis also poses a limitation on defining frequency dependent stiffness and damping for multiple mounts. This leads to inaccuracy in capturing mount behavior at different frequencies. Most efficient way to simulate this event would be by frequency response analysis using modal superposition method.
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