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Technical Paper

Assessment of Motor Cooling Performance in Commercial EV Vehicles through Numerical Simulation

2022-10-05
2022-28-0045
In an electric vehicle, engine is replaced with battery and transmission is replaced with traction motor. Thermal management of electric battery and motor became a necessary evaluation step in the design and development process of electric vehicles. The temperature of the traction motor coolant is required to be maintained below 600C to ensure proper functioning of the system. Coolant takes away heat from traction motor, motor controller along with an on-board charger in battery charging and discharging conditions. In this paper the cooling unit selection for the total required heat rejection from all three components is analytically calculated and thermal management methodology of liquid-cooled Electric Motor is being studied and documented with the help of numerical simulation. The results are further validated with test results in Electric bus for city application.
Technical Paper

Assessment & Optimization of Front End Cooling Module of a Commercial Vehicle by CFD Simulation & Prototype Testing

2020-04-14
2020-01-0164
Overall cycle time and prototype testing are significantly decreased by assessment of cooling module performance in the design stage itself. Hence, Front End Cooling and Thermal Management are essential components of the vehicle design process. Performance of the cooling module depends upon a variety of factors like frontal opening, air flow, under-hood sub-systems, module positioning, front grill design, fan operation. Effects of design modifications on the engine cooling performance are quantified by utilizing computational fluid dynamics (CFD) tool FluentTM. Vehicle frontal configuration is captured in the FE model considering cabin, cargo and underbody components. Heat Exchanger module is modelled as a porous medium to simulate the fluid flow. Performance data for the Heat Exchanger module is generated using the 1D KuliTM software. In this paper, CFD simulation of Front End Cooling is performed for maximum torque and maximum power operating conditions.
Technical Paper

Design Optimization of Engine Cooling Unit Packaging for Commercial Vehicle

2018-07-09
2018-28-0013
An engine cooling system is required to maintain stable operating temperature for the engine and prevent it from overheating. Thermal distortion of engine parts can take place if proper cooling is not maintained and engine may loss efficiency. One of the major problem in this domain is to incorporate separate cooling systems for the different variants of engines (different power rating). A single optimized cooling unit is desired to manage the entire range of engine rated power. The factors that affect the cooling system are front end grill opening area, air recirculation, location of snorkel inlet, radiator core size, which need to be tuned to get appropriate results. The above parameters are tuned to obtain appropriate results using the Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations. In the next stage, on road cooling trials are performed and real time data is collected.
Technical Paper

Performance Analysis of Engine down Speeding in Emission & Fuel Economy

2017-07-10
2017-28-1921
Engine down speeding is rapidly picking up momentum in many segment of world market. Numerous engine down speeding packages from OEM have been tailored to take advantage of the increased efficiencies associated with engine down speeding. Running engine at lower rpm has numerous advantages. The most obvious of these is reduced fuel consumption, since the engine can spend more time running within its optimum efficiency range. By down speeding, the engine is made to run at low speeds and with high torques. For the same power, the engine is operated at higher specific load- Brake Mean Effective pressure (BMEP) which results in higher efficiency and reduced fuel consumption-Brake Specific Fuel Consumption (BSFC). The reasons for increased fuel efficiency are reduced engine friction due to low piston speeds, reduced relative heat transfer and increased thermodynamic efficiency.
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