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Technical Paper

Optimization of Air Extraction Path for Superior Customer Comfort While Door Closing Event of a Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV)

2023-04-11
2023-01-0601
The passenger car segment has been extremely competitive and automotive OEMs are thriving to provide superior customer experience. Door closing is an event that requires slamming of the door with a certain velocity to get the door latched. A good latching provides that thud sound and assurance of the door getting closed for an SUV. While the door is closed, it pushes the volume of air inside the cabin. As the amount of air moved in is proportionate to the size of the door it becomes more critical for the SUV segment of vehicles to ensure the air extraction path is efficient. Else, steep pressure rise inside the cabin causes severe discomfort to the passengers sitting inside the vehicle. Current work focused on the process of simulation of cabin pressure while door closing, implementing changes based on results and validating with test results. Test results are in close correlation with simulation predictions.
Technical Paper

Evaluation of Hardtop Roof Mounting Schemes for High Speed Performance and Noise

2021-04-06
2021-01-0292
Customer comfort has been at the core of any vehicle design. A segment of vehicle wherein the provision given for roof to be removed to enhance the customer experience. A similar vehicle is the subject matter for the evaluation here. The vehicle being off-roader, customer buying such vehicles are passionate about these lifestyle vehicle’s performance aspects. The roof components are plastic and are bolted with the BIW structure with sealing in place at the interface. The windshield angle being close to vertical, there is a tendency for flow separation at the front tip of roof, while vehicle driven at speed. This creates significant pressure difference across the roof surface, leading to vertical deformation of roof between the bolted mounts. In case the magnitude of deformations not controlled, the reduced sealing effectiveness lets air gushing in the cabin and make noise which can be audible to customer.
Technical Paper

Development of Virtual Hood Slam Test

2016-04-05
2016-01-1365
The overall automotive industry is moving toward first time right test which in turn needs first time right analysis. This is due to the enormous pressure of cost, mass, time to market and availability of prototype vehicles for testing. Use of finite element methods enables to upfront predict the system behavior in operating conditions and evaluation of structural strength. In vehicle product development process, hood slam durability evaluation is one of the important tests for body closure structure. Current work showcases an effort made for developing virtual hood slam test. The virtual model consists of BIW, hood, hinge joint, interface like CRFM (cooling-radiator-fan module) and latch mechanism with spring preload. Analysis performed with LSDyna solver. An impact loading is applied by converting potential energy to kinetic energy, mimicking the hood dropping from a specified height on the hood latch.
Technical Paper

Closure Slam CAE Method Investigation for Automobiles

2016-04-05
2016-01-1349
In the current scenario, the major thrust is to simulate the customer usage pattern and lab test using virtual simulation methods. Going ahead, prime importance will be to reduce the number of soft tool prototype for all tests which can be predicted in CAE. Automotive door slam test is significantly complex in terms of prediction through simulation. Current work focuses on simulating the slam event and deriving load histories at different mounting locations through dynamic analysis using LSDyna. These extracted load histories are applied to trimmed door Nastran model and modal transient analysis is performed to find the transient stress history. This approach has a significant advantage of less computation time and stress-convergence with Nastran for performing multiple design iterations compared to LSDyna. Good failure correlation is achieved with the test using this approach. Using these load histories, design improvements are evaluated and robustness of the approach is validated.
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