Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 6 of 6
Technical Paper

Evaluation of New High Efficiency Engine Concept with Atkinson Cycle, Cooled EGR and Dynamic Skip Fire

2021-04-06
2021-01-0459
Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF) is a proven cylinder deactivation strategy developed at Tula Technology that, in production, has proven to deliver significant fuel consumption improvements across engine and vehicle platforms. DSF allows cylinders to operate near optimal efficiency by reducing pumping losses and improving combustion stability. The Atkinson cycle is also a well-known strategy to improve thermodynamic efficiency by reducing pumping losses and over-expanding combustion gases. This strategy is commonly implemented with long duration intake cams and late intake valve closing. The Atkinson cycle sacrifices power density in a naturally aspirated engine so displacement is commonly increased. The upsized Atkinson cycle engine still shows significant reduction in fuel consumption at high load but has a fuel consumption penalty at low loads due to increased friction and throttling losses.
Journal Article

Controls and Hardware Development of Multi-Level Miller Cycle Dynamic Skip Fire (mDSF) Technology

2021-04-06
2021-01-0446
mDSF is a novel cylinder deactivation technology developed at Tula Technology, which combines the torque control of Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF) with Miller cycle engines to optimize fuel efficiency at minimal cost. mDSF employs a valvetrain with variable valve lift plus deactivation and novel control algorithms founded on Tula’s proven DSF technology. This allows cylinders to dynamically alternate among 3 potential states designated as: High Fire, Low Fire, and Skip (deactivation). The Low Fire state is achieved through an aggressive Miller cycle with Early Intake Valve Closing (EIVC). The three operating states in mDSF can be used to simultaneously optimize engine efficiency and driveline vibrations. Acceleration performance is retained using the all-cylinder, High Fire mode. mDSF can be implemented cost-effectively using an asymmetric intake valve lift strategy, with one high-flow power charging port and one high-efficiency Miller port.
Journal Article

Application of Dynamic Skip Fire for NOx and CO2 Emissions Reduction of Diesel Powertrains

2021-04-06
2021-01-0450
Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF®) has been shown to significantly reduce CO2 on gasoline engines and has been in mass production since 2018. Diesel Dynamic Skip Fire (dDSF™) builds upon the technology and extends it to diesel engine applications. dDSF is an advanced cylinder deactivation technology that allows the deactivation of any number of cylinders dynamically to deliver the requested torque while maintaining acceptable noise, vibration, and harshness (NVH) performance. NOx regulations are becoming progressively more stringent on light, medium and heavy-duty (HD) diesel engines. Meeting low NOx standards is becoming increasingly challenging, especially in lightly loaded operating conditions where maintaining ideal aftertreatment system efficiency is difficult. Most existing techniques to increase aftertreatment temperatures at low loads incur a fuel consumption penalty, which increases greenhouse gas emissions.
Technical Paper

Smart Cylinder Deactivation Strategies to Improve Fuel Economy and Pollutant Emissions for Diesel-Powered Applications

2019-09-09
2019-24-0055
Further improvement of the trade-off between CO2 and pollutant emissions is the main motivating factor for the development of new diesel engine concepts, from light-duty car applications via medium-duty commercial vehicles up to large long-haul trucks. The deactivation of one or more cylinders of a light-duty diesel engine during low load operation can be a sophisticated method to improve fuel economy and reduce especially NOx emissions at the same time. Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF) is an advanced cylinder deactivation technology, where the decision to fire or skip singular units of a multi-cylinder engine architecture is taken just prior to each firing opportunity, based on a balanced rankling of multiple input parameters.
Technical Paper

Dynamic Skip Fire Applied to a Diesel Engine for Improved Fuel Consumption and Emissions

2019-04-02
2019-01-0549
Dynamic skip fire (DSF) is an advanced cylinder deactivation technology where the decision to fire or skip a singular cylinder of a multi-cylinder engine is made immediately prior to each firing opportunity. A DSF-equipped engine features the ability to selectively deactivate cylinders on a cylinder event-by-event basis in order to match the requested torque demand at optimum fuel efficiency while maintaining acceptable noise, vibration and harshness (NVH). Dynamic Skip Fire (DSF) has already shown significant fuel economy improvements for throttled spark-ignition engines. This paper explores the potential benefits of DSF technology in improving fuel economy while maintaining ultra-low tailpipe emissions for light-duty (LD) Diesel powertrains.
Technical Paper

Multi-dimensional Modeling of Non-equilibrium Plasma for Automotive Applications

2018-04-03
2018-01-0198
While spark-ignition (SI) engine technology is aggressively moving towards challenging (dilute and boosted) combustion regimes, advanced ignition technologies generating non-equilibrium types of plasma are being considered by the automotive industry as a potential replacement for the conventional spark-plug technology. However, there are currently no models that can describe the low-temperature plasma (LTP) ignition process in computational fluid dynamics (CFD) codes that are typically used in the multi-dimensional engine modeling community. A key question for the engine modelers that are trying to describe the non-equilibrium ignition physics concerns the plasma characteristics. A key challenge is also represented by the plasma formation timescale (nanoseconds) that can hardly be resolved within a full engine cycle simulation.
X