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Technical Paper

Systematic Analysis and Particle Emission Reduction of Homogeneous Direct Injection SI Engines

2013-04-08
2013-01-0248
Due to increasing interest in air quality concerns, worldwide legislation towards lower particle emissions is getting more and more stringent. Because of this, the development towards even cleaner internal combustion engines (ICE) with Spark Ignition (SI) is of upmost importance. Along with the development targeting higher efficiency and specific power output, Direct Injection (DI) technology became more and more important than Port Fuel Injection (PFI) and is one of the main SI engine development fields. SI engine mixture preparation (PFI or DI) and combustion produce much lower particle raw emissions than Diesel engines, but these emissions also have to be reduced to fulfill worldwide legislation and customer expectations. In this paper the focus lies on the analysis and development methods used to drastically reduce particle emissions in a gasoline-fueled DI SI engine.
Technical Paper

New Criteria for 0D/1D Knock Models to Predict the Knock Boundary for Different Gasoline Fuels

2021-04-06
2021-01-0377
As engine knock limits the efficiency of spark ignition engines and consequently further reduction of CO2 emissions, SI engines are typically designed to operate at the knock boundary. Therefore, a precise knock model is necessary to consider this phenomenon in an engine process simulation. The basis of the introduced 0D/1D knock model is to predict when the unburnt mixture auto-ignites, since auto-ignitions precede knocking events. The knock model further needs to evaluate the auto-ignition, because not every auto-ignition results in engine knock. As the introduced model’s prediction of the auto-ignition onset is already validated at extensive variations of operating conditions, this publication focusses on its evaluation. For this, two new, independent criteria are developed that take the pre-reactions of the unburnt mixture before the start of combustion into account to calculate a respective threshold for the auto-ignition onset at the knock boundary.
Technical Paper

Knock Model Covering Thermodynamic and Chemical Influences on the Two-Stage Auto-Ignition of Gasoline Fuels

2021-04-06
2021-01-0381
Engine knock is limiting the efficiency of spark ignition engines and consequently further reduction of CO2 emissions. Thus, an combustion process simulation needs a well working knock model to take this phenomenon into account. As knocking events result from auto-ignitions, the basis of a knock model is the accurate modeling of the latter. For this, the introduced 0D/1D knock model calculates the Livengood-Wu integral to estimate the state of the pre-reactions of the unburnt mixture and considers the two-stage auto-ignition of gasoline fuels, which occurs at specific boundary conditions. The model presented in this publication is validated against measurement data of a single cylinder engine. For this purpose, more than 12 000 knocking working cycles are investigated, covering extensively varied operating conditions for a wide-ranging validation.
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