Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 3 of 3
Technical Paper

Modeling the Evaporative Emissions of Oil-Fuel Mixtures

2006-10-16
2006-01-3402
Motor vehicle hydrocarbon evaporative emissions are a crucial part of emissions regulations, and increasingly-stringent regulations stipulate essentially zero fuel-based hydrocarbon evaporative emissions. In port fuel injected engines, there is the potential for accumulation of PCV effluent in the intake system under certain vehicle operating conditions. The majority of this effluent is oil, but a percentage has been shown to be fuel. The percentage of fuel in this oil-fuel mixture in the intake is at a minimum equivalent to the fuel dilution level of the crankcase oil, and at times can be higher due to other sources of fuel, and fuel vapor, in the intake. This accumulation of liquid oil-fuel mixture can be a contributor of hydrocarbon evaporative emissions migrating out of the air induction system when subjected to transient temperatures while the engine is off.
Technical Paper

Transient Fuel Modeling and Control for Cold Start Intake Cam Phasing

2006-04-03
2006-01-1049
Advancing intake valve timing shortly after engine crank and run-up can potentially reduce vehicle cold start hydrocarbon (HC) emissions in port fuel injected (PFI) engines equipped with intake variable cam timing (iVCT). Due to the cold metal temperatures, there can be significant accumulation of liquid fuel in the intake system and in the cylinder. This accumulation of liquid fuel provides potential sources for unburned hydrocarbons (HCs). Since the entire vehicle exhaust system is cold, the catalyst will not mitigate the release of unburned HCs. By advancing the intake valve timing and increasing valve overlap, liquid fuel vaporization in the intake system is enhanced thereby increasing the amount of burnable fuel in the cylinder. This increase in burnable HCs must be countered by a reduction in injector-delivered fuel via a compensator that reacts to cam movement.
Technical Paper

Analytical Assessment of Simplified Transient Fuel Tests for Vehicle Transient Fuel Compensation

2005-10-24
2005-01-3894
Good air/fuel ratio (A/F) control is essential to high quality combustion performance, drivability and emissions in internal combustion engine powered vehicles. Cold start and transient fuel wall wetting effects cause significant A/F control challenges in port fuel injected (PFI) engines. Transient fuel compensation (TFC) strategies are used to help control the A/F during cold starts and transient load and RPM conditions for good vehicle performance, but developing optimum TFC strategies and calibrations in a vehicle with many competing effects is very difficult. Thus, simplified transient tests such as fuel or throttle perturbation tests are often used to develop and validate new strategies or calibrations for use in vehicle. This paper will illustrate the use of a validated physical model to analytically assess the value of fuel and throttle perturbation tests for developing a TFC calibration for vehicle use.
X