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Technical Paper

Cylinder Head Gasket Leakage Trouble Shooting Analysis

2021-09-21
2021-01-1234
The present paper describes a CAE analysis approach to evaluate the transient cylinder head gasket sealing performance of a turbo charged GDI engine in the bench test development. In this approach, both transient gasket sealing force and gasket wear work are calculated to allow design engineers to find out the root cause of cylinder head gasket leakage failures. In this paper, the details of the method development are described. Firstly how to use and get the cylinder head gasket property are described, which is the basic theory and data for the gasket sealing analysis. A transient heat transfer calculation for accurately simulating the engine thermal shock test is established, which is mapped to the transient gasket sealing calculation as pivotal boundary.
Technical Paper

Effect of Injection Parameters on Particulate Matter Emission in a Direct Injection Gasoline Engine

2021-04-06
2021-01-0628
PN(Particle Number) emission limits are more stringent for gasoline vehicles in Chinese VI emission standards (6×1011 #/km). A EEPS engine exhaust particle size spectrometer was employed to characterize the effects of injection strategies on particulates emissions from a turbocharged gasoline direct injection (GDI) engine. The effects of operating parameters (injection pressure, second injection ratio and second injection end time) on particle diameter distribution and particle number density of emission was Investigated. The experimental result indicates that the quantity of particles decrease with the increase of injection pressure obviously, especially at high load including the 20% reduction of the particle number density. When the engine is at low load, the accumulation mode particle emissions are higher than the nucleation mode particle emissions compared with high load, which present opposite results. The second injection can restrain engine knock at low speed.
Technical Paper

The Development of Engine-in-the-Loop (EIL) Testing Methodology for Front Loading Emission Investigations

2023-04-11
2023-01-0371
The introduction of more stringent emission regulatory standards, such as China 6 and Euro 6, with test cycles that are more representative of real-world driving, from WLTP to RDE presents significant challenges to the emission development of internal combustion engine program. In the typical development process, the emission development requires complex work such as after-treatment development and calibration optimizations. In addition, it is late in the process, after the prototype vehicle that is more representative of the production status is ready. To address the situation outlined above, an Engine-in-the-Loop (EIL) testing methodology is developed at SAIC Motor, to front load part of the emission development work to the engine testbed early in the development stage, in the face of ever compressed vehicle program development time. This methodology is to emulate vehicle operations on the engine testbed. Key techniques are developed to achieve this.
Technical Paper

Thermal Management Development for a Dedicated Hybrid Engine

2024-04-09
2024-01-2416
The high-efficiency dedicated hybrid engine (DHE) has led to increasingly complex challenges in engine thermal management. On one hand, the high compression ratio of up to 16:1 makes the engine more susceptible to knocking, necessitating meticulous thermal management to mitigate the potential sensitivity to metal temperature. On the other hand, extensive use of external cooled exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) helps reduce knocking and improve thermal efficiency, but it also raises temperature levels and requires additional cooling measures. For the 1.5L DHE developed by SAIC Motor, a split cooling structure was employed in the engine cooling system design, with the cylinder head water jacket and cylinder block water jacket arranged in parallel and equipped with different coolant outlets. By utilizing a dual thermostat to control flow, this design allows for adjustable flow distribution, providing effective cooling to the cylinder head while reducing cooling to the cylinder block.
Technical Paper

Combustion Development and Efficiency Improvement for Hybrid Engines

2024-04-09
2024-01-2093
In the pursuit of carbon emission reduction, hybridization has emerged as a significant trend in powertrain electrification. As a crucial aspect of hybrid powertrain system development, achieving high brake thermal efficiency (BTE) and a wide operating range with high efficiency are essential for hybrid engines to effectively integrate with the hybrid system. When developing dedicated hybrid engines (DHE), several design considerations come into play. First, in order to make efficient use of available resources and enable engine production on the same assembly line as conventional engines, it is crucial to maintain consistency in key design parameters of the cylinder head and block, thus extending the platform-based design approach. Among the key measures to achieve high BTE, cooled exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) has been extensively explored and proven effective in improving efficiency by mitigating knocking and reducing engine cooling heat loss.
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