Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 5 of 5
Technical Paper

Aggressive Catalyst Heating Strategy Using Advanced Mixture Formation and Combustion Timing Techniques in a GDI Engine

2021-09-22
2021-26-0185
Precise control over mixture formation withhigh fuel pressure and multiple injections allows Gasoline Direct Injection (GDI) engines to be operated satisfactorily at extreme conditions wherePort Fuel Injection (PFI) engines wouldnormally struggle due to combustion instability issues. Catalyst heating phase is one such important condition which is initiated after a cold engine start to improve the effectiveness of the three-way catalyst (TWC). For a given TWC specification, fast light-offof TWC is achieved in the catalyst heating phase by increasing the exhaust gas temperature with higher exhaust mass flow. The duration of this phase must be as short as possible, as it is a trade-off between achieving sufficient TWC light off performance and fuel efficiency.
Technical Paper

Innovative Method of Calibration to Meet BS4 Emission with Optimized Fuel Economy and Noise in a MPV with 2.5Lit Common Rail Diesel Engine

2011-01-19
2011-26-0028
In today's fast growing automobile world, the Emission limits are stringent; customer expectations of vehicle performance and Fuel economy are more. Achieving these parameters for the given engine are challenging task for any automobile engineers. BS4 Emission limits are 50% more stringent than BS3 limits and from April 2010 onwards, all passenger cars which will be selling in 13 metro cities in India should be BS4 emission compliant. In this paper, we have described how BS4 limits were achieved in a MPV with 2.49 l, 70kW Common Rail Direct Injection Turbocharged Diesel engine, with push rod. During Emission development, the following processes were followed to meet BS4 emission limits without sacrificing the engine performance, Fuel Economy and Noise. Selecting suitable hardwares like Turbocharger, EGR cooler at engine level to reduce NOx and Unburned Hydrocarbon Emissions with best Brake specific fuel consumption.
Technical Paper

Fluid Structure Interaction Simulation of Automotive Fuel Tank Sloshing using Nonlinear Fluid Properties

2015-01-14
2015-26-0240
In commercial vehicles which generally have large capacity fuel tank, sloshing of fuel and its effect on the tank structure is very important aspect during fuel tank design. Dynamic pressures exerted by the fuel on baffles, end plates and tank shell during sloshing can lead to structural failures and fuel leakage problems. Fluid structure interaction simulation of automotive fuel tank sloshing and its correlation with physical test is demonstrated in this study. During physical sloshing test of 350 L fuel tank, cracks were observed on center baffle and spot weld failures developed on fuel tank shell. Same sloshing test was simulated for one sloshing cycle using fluid structure interaction approach in LS Dyna explicit FE solver. Water was used instead of fuel. Mesh free Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) method is used to represent water as it requires less computational time as compared to Eulerian or ALE method.
Technical Paper

Weight and Drivetrain Optimization via Fuel Pump & Vacuum Pump Drive Integration on Engine Camshaft in a Pushrod Type Valve Actuated Engine

2024-01-16
2024-26-0046
In the realm of modern powertrains, the paramount objectives of weight reduction, cost efficiency, and friction optimization drive innovation. By streamlining drive trains through component minimization, the paper introduces a groundbreaking approach: the integration of fuel pump and vacuum pump drive systems into the main camshaft of a two-valve-per-cylinder push-rod actuated 4-cylinder diesel engine. This innovation is poised to concurrently reduce overall weight, lower costs, and minimize drive losses. The proposed integration entails the extension of the camshaft with a tailored slot, accommodating a three-lobed cam composed of advanced materials. This novel camshaft configuration enables the unified propulsion of the oil pump, vacuum pump, fuel pump, and valve train, effectively consolidating functions and components.
Technical Paper

Experimental Emission Characteristics Study of Ethanol-Gasoline Fuel Blends on a GDI Engine with a Three-Way Catalyst

2024-01-16
2024-26-0155
Ethanol-gasoline blended fuels have been widely implemented in Indian markets followed by the Govt of India’s road map as ethanol reduces life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions and improves anti-knock performance. However, effects of Ethanol Blending on engine out emissions characteristics including particulates from gasoline direct injection (GDI) engine remains under development and investigation. In this study the effect of ethanol blended gasoline fuels with two blending rates 10% and 20% (v/v %) on catalyst conversion efficiencies and emissions on a 1.2 litre 3-cylinder turbo GDI engine is investigated. The addition of ethanol to gasoline fuel enhances the Octane rating (RON) of the blended fuels, oxygen content and changes Reid vapor pressure (RVP). The influence of lambda biasing, and lambda trim controller has been tested. The approach for calibration was adopted based on achieving the target pollutant conversion efficiencies.
X