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Journal Article

μ-CT Investigation into the Impact of a Fuel-Borne Catalyst Additive on the Filtration Efficiency and Backpressure of Gasoline Particulate Filters

2022-01-18
Abstract An investigation into the pre-ashing of new gasoline particulate filters (GPFs) has demonstrated that the filtration efficiency of such filters can be improved by up to 30% (absolute efficiency improvement) when preconditioned using ash derived from a fuel-borne catalyst (FBC) additive. The additive is typically used in diesel applications to enable diesel particulate filter (DPF) regeneration and can be added directly into the fuel tank of the vehicle. This novel result was compared with ash derived from lube oil componentry, which has previously been shown to improve filtration efficiency in GPFs. The lube oil-derived ash utilized in this work improved the filtration efficiency of the GPF by −30%, comparable to the ash derived from the FBC additive.
Journal Article

Water Droplet Collison and Erosion on High-Speed Spinning Wheels

2024-04-04
Abstract The water droplet erosion (WDE) on high-speed rotating wheels appears in several engineering fields such as wind turbines, stationary steam turbines, fuel cell turbines, and turbochargers. The main reasons for this phenomenon are the high relative velocity difference between the colliding particles and the rotor, as well as the presence of inadequate material structure and surface parameters. One of the latest challenges in this area is the compressor wheels used in turbochargers, which has a speed up to 300,000 rpm and have typically been made of aluminum alloy for decades, to achieve the lowest possible rotor inertia. However, while in the past this component was only encountered with filtered air, nowadays, due to developments in compliance with tightening emission standards, various fluids also collide with the spinning blades, which can cause mechanical damage.
Journal Article

Using Adsorbents to Mitigate Biodiesel Influence on the Deterioration of Engine Oil

2020-08-11
Abstract This study focused on using adsorbents to suppress engine oil deterioration as a result of the influence of biodiesel. Engine oil performance is affected by the use of biodiesel that results in short period of oil drain interval. Neat base oil, 80% blended with biodiesel, was 20% thermo oxidatively aged. Magnesium aluminum hydroxycarbonate and 1,3,5-trimethyl-2,4,6-tris(3,5-di-tert-buty-4-hydroxybenzyl)benzene were applied, and the formation of oligomers in the base oil-RME mixture was monitored. The adsorbents intercept the precursors of the aging procedure and, therefore, interfere with the aging process. The analysis with FTIR showed less to no formation of oligomers. About 90% reduction in the total acid number was observed, with about 90% reduction in viscosity increment. The adsorbents, therefore, have an enhanced influence on the oxidative stability of biodiesel and its blends.
Journal Article

Use of Solar Photovoltaic Energy Systems in Department of Transportation Facilities: A Review of Practice and Preliminary Assessment for Virginia Department of Transportation

2022-01-28
Abstract Renewable energy sources provide an excellent opportunity for state departments of transportation (DOTs) to benefit from a dual use of land while providing flexible, resilient, affordable, and environmentally responsible modes of generation. Solar photovoltaic (PV) systems are particularly useful in this regard. This study presents a literature review on the types of solar project partnerships, application of solar PV systems by DOTs in the United States (U.S.), solar energy potential, energy policies, and incentives in Virginia. In addition, a feasibility assessment of installing solar PV systems at six (6) Virginia DOT (VDOT)-owned sites is presented. The review of the literature indicated that twenty state DOTs have implemented or are developing solar projects using their facilities. The feasibility assessment showed the benefits of installing solar PV systems at VDOT facilities.
Journal Article

Use of Artificial Neural Network to Develop Surrogates for Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil with Experimental Validation in Ignition Quality Tester

2024-02-01
Abstract This article presents surrogate mixtures that simulate the physical and chemical properties in the auto-ignition of hydrotreated vegetable oil (HVO). Experimental investigation was conducted in the Ignition Quality Tester (IQT) to validate the auto-ignition properties with respect to those of the target fuel. The surrogate development approach is assisted by artificial neural network (ANN) embedded in MATLAB optimization function. Aspen HYSYS is used to calculate the key physical and chemical properties of hundreds of mixtures of representative components, mainly alkanes—the dominant components of HVO, to train the learning algorithm. Binary and ternary mixtures are developed and validated in the IQT. The target properties include the derived cetane number (DCN), density, viscosity, surface tension, molecular weight, and volatility represented by the distillation curve. The developed surrogates match the target fuel in terms of ignition delay and DCN within 6% error range.
Journal Article

Understanding Conductive Layer Deposits: Test Method Development for Lubricant Performance Testing for Hybrid and Electric Vehicle Applications

2022-11-07
Abstract Advances in hybrid vehicles and electric vehicles (EV) are creating a need for a new generation of lubricants and new lubricant performance tests. Copper corrosion is one prominent concern for hybrid vehicles and EVs and is routinely assessed using a coupon test. This is characterized as metal dissolution, a surface tarnish, or a corrosion layer where a corrosion product remains on the surface and is characterized by a qualitative visual rating. This deficiency does not provide insight into the nature of the corrosion deposit. In an electric drive unit, there are multiple sources of the electric potential present, which can significantly alter the formation of a corrosion deposit which is not assessed in the coupon tests. The formation of a conductive corrosion deposit can result in catastrophic failure of the electric drive unit, either through direct shorting of the motor winding or failure of the power electronics.
Journal Article

Uncertainty in Gravimetric Analysis Required for LEV III Light-Duty Vehicle PM Emission Measurements

2018-06-20
Abstract With the reduction in PM emission standards for light duty vehicles to 3 mg/mi for current Federal and California standards and subsequently to 1 mg/mi in 2025 for California, the required PM measurements are approaching the detection limits of the gravimetric method. A “filter survey” was conducted with 11 laboratories, representing industry, agencies, research institutes, and academic institutions to analyze the accuracy of the current gravimetric filter measurement method under controlled conditions. The reference filter variability, measured within a given day over periods as short as an hour, ranged from 0.61 μg to 2 μg to 5.0 μg for the 5th, 50th, 95th percentiles (n > 40,000 weights, 317 reference objects), with a laboratory average of 2.5 μg.
Journal Article

U.S. Light-Duty Vehicle Air Conditioning Fuel Use and Impact of Solar/Thermal Control Technologies

2018-12-11
Abstract To reduce fuel consumption and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from mobile air conditioning (A/C) systems, “U.S. Light-Duty Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Corporate Average Fuel Economy Standards” identified solar/thermal technologies such as solar control glazings, solar reflective paint, and active and passive cabin ventilation in an off-cycle credit menu. National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) researchers developed a sophisticated analysis process to calculate U.S. light-duty A/C fuel use that was used to assess the impact of these technologies, leveraging thermal and vehicle simulation analysis tools developed under previous U.S. Department of Energy projects. Representative U.S. light-duty driving behaviors and weighting factors including time-of-day of travel, trip duration, and time between trips were characterized and integrated into the analysis.
Journal Article

Transient Response of Turbocharged Compression Ignition Engine under Different Load Conditions

2023-07-26
Abstract In urban roads the engine speed and the load vary suddenly and frequently, resulting in increased exhaust emissions. In such operations, the effect of air injection technique to access the transient response of the engine is of great interest. The effectiveness of air injection technique in improving the transient response under speed transient is investigated in detail [1]; however, it is not evaluated for the load transients. Load step demand of the engine is another important event that limits the transient response of the turbocharger. In the present study, response of a heavy-duty turbocharged diesel engine is investigated for different load conditions. Three cases of load transients are considered: constant load, load magnitude variation, and load scheduling. Air injection technique is simulated and after optimization of injection pressure based on orifice diameter, its effect on the transient response is presented.
Journal Article

Transient Operation and Over-Dilution Mitigation for Low-Pressure EGR Systems in Spark-Ignition Engines

2018-09-17
Abstract Low-Pressure cooled Exhaust Gas Recirculation (LP-cEGR) is proven to be an effective technology for fuel efficiency improvement in turbocharged spark-ignition (SI) engines. Aiming to fully exploit the EGR benefits, new challenges are introduced that require more complex and robust control systems and strategies. One of the most important restrictions of LP-cEGR is the transient response, since long air-EGR flow paths introduce significant transport delays between the EGR valve and the cylinders. High dilution generally increases efficiency, but can lead to cycle-by-cycle combustion variation. Especially in SI engines, higher-than-requested EGR dilution may lead to combustion instabilities and misfires. Considering the long EGR evacuation period, one of the most challenging transient events is throttle tip-out, where the engine operation shifts from a high-load point with high dilution tolerance to a low-load point where EGR tolerance is significantly reduced.
Journal Article

Toward Unsupervised Test Scenario Extraction for Automated Driving Systems from Urban Naturalistic Road Traffic Data

2023-02-02
Abstract Scenario-based testing is a promising approach to solving the challenge of proving the safe behavior of vehicles equipped with automated driving systems (ADS). Since an infinite number of concrete scenarios can theoretically occur in real-world road traffic, the extraction of scenarios relevant in terms of the safety-related behavior of these systems is a key aspect for their successful verification and validation. Therefore, a method for extracting multimodal urban traffic scenarios from naturalistic road traffic data in an unsupervised manner, minimizing the amount of (potentially biased) prior expert knowledge, is proposed. Rather than an (elaborate) rule-based assignment by extracting concrete scenarios into predefined functional scenarios, the presented method deploys an unsupervised machine learning pipeline. The approach allows for exploring the unknown nature of the data and their interpretation as test scenarios that experts could not have anticipated.
Journal Article

Toward Privacy-Aware Traceability for Automotive Supply Chains

2021-07-14
Abstract The lack of traceability in today’s supply-chain system for auto components makes counterfeiting a significant problem leading to millions of dollars of lost revenue every year and putting the lives of customers at risk. Traditional solutions are usually built upon hardware such as radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags and barcodes, and these solutions cannot stop attacks from supply-chain (insider) parties themselves as they can simply duplicate products in their local database. This industry-academia collaborative work studies the benefits and challenges associated with the use of distributed ledger (or blockchain) technology toward preventing counterfeiting in the presence of malicious supply-chain parties. We illustrate that the provision of a distributed and append-only ledger jointly governed by supply-chain parties themselves makes permissioned blockchains such as Hyperledger Fabric a promising approach toward mitigating counterfeiting.
Journal Article

Thin-Wire Thermocouple Design for Exhaust Gas Temperature Pulse Measurements in Internal Combustion Engines

2023-05-17
Abstract Accurate exhaust gas temperature (EGT) measurements are vital in the design and development process of internal combustion engines (ICEs). The unsteady ICE exhaust flow and thermal inertia of commonly used sheathed thermocouples and resistance thermometers require high bandwidth EGT pulse measurements for accurate cycle-resolved and mean EGTs. The EGT pulse measurement challenge is typically addressed using exposed thin-wire resistance thermometers or thermocouples. The sensor robustness to response tradeoff limits ICE tests to short durations over a few exhaust conditions. Larger diameter multiwire thermocouples using response compensation potentially overcomes the tradeoff. However, the literature commonly adopts weaker slack wire designs despite indications of coated weld taut wires being robust.
Journal Article

Thermomechanical Fracture Failure Analysis of a Heavy-Duty Diesel Engine Cylinder Liner through Performance Analysis and Finite Element Modeling

2020-10-02
Abstract Diesel engines include systems for cooling, lubrication, and fuel injection and contain a variety of components. A malfunction in any of the engine systems or the presence of any faulty element influences engine performance and deteriorates its components. This research is concerned with the untimely appearance of vital cracks in the liners of a turbocharged heavy-duty Diesel engine. To find the root causes for premature failure, rigorous examinations through visual observations, material characterization, and metallographic investigations are performed. These include Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) and Energy-Dispersive Spectroscopy (EDS), fracture mechanics analysis, and performance examination, which are also followed by Finite Element Moldings. To find the proper remedy to resolve the problem, drawing a precise and reliable picture of the engine’s operating conditions is required.
Journal Article

Thermohydrodynamic Modeling of Squeeze Film Dampers in High-Speed Turbomachinery

2018-04-07
Abstract This work develops a comprehensive thermohydrodynamic (THD) model for high-speed squeeze film dampers (SFDs) in the presence of lubricant inertia effects. Firstly, the generalized expression for Reynolds equation is developed. Additionally, in order to reduce the complexity of the hydrodynamic equations, an average radial viscosity is defined and integrated into the equations. Subsequently, an inertial correction to the pressure is incorporated by using a first-order perturbation technique to represent the effect of lubricant inertia on the hydrodynamic pressure distribution. Furthermore, a thermal model, including the energy equation, the Laplace heat conduction equations in the surrounding solids (i.e. the journal and the bush), and the thermal boundary conditions at the interfaces is constructed. Moreover, the system of partial differential hydrodynamic and thermal equations is simultaneously solved by using an iterative numerical algorithm.
Journal Article

The Use of Canola Oil, n-Hexane, and Ethanol Mixtures in a Diesel Engine

2021-07-06
Abstract Environmental protection and the depletion of nonrenewable energy sources necessitate the search for the replacement of, among others, diesel fuel (Df) in diesel engines with renewable fuel without major structural changes. For this reason, vegetable oils are of interest as a possible fuel for this type of engine. Unfortunately, the physicochemical properties of vegetable oils differ significantly from Df. In addition to the boiling and freezing points, these properties include viscosity, density, and surface tension as well as wetting properties. For this reason, an attempt was made to modify these properties by adding n-hexane (Hex) and ethanol (Et) to canola oil (Co). The viscosity, density, surface tension, and wetting properties of Hex and Et are significantly different from those for Co.
Journal Article

The Synergies of Valve Overlap Reduction and External Exhaust Gas Recirculation Dilution at Boosted Loads of a Downsized Gasoline Turbo Direct Injection Engine

2021-04-09
Abstract Uncertainty of fuel reserves, environmental crisis, and health concerns arise from transport demands and reliance on fossil fuels. Downsized gasoline turbocharged direct injection (GTDI) engines have been developed and applied to most modern gasoline vehicles, delivering superior efficiency in high-load operation, reduced friction, and weight. But fuel enrichment and late combustion phasing to mitigate knocking combustion have hindered the efficiency benefits at higher loads with high boost. Furthermore, the wide valve-overlap with a three-cylinder setup for the maximum scavenging efficiency produces bursts of short-circuit (SC) air to cause underestimation of the equivalence ratio by the oxygen sensor, resulting in higher tailpipe nitrogen oxides (NOx) emissions with three-way catalyst (TWC) exhaust aftertreatment. Reducing the valve overlap to limit short-circuiting and enrichment will recover the combustion efficiency and the engine ER, but at the cost of high knock onset.
Journal Article

The Placement of Digitized Objects in a Point Cloud as a Photogrammetric Technique

2018-08-08
Abstract The frequency of video-capturing collision events from surveillance systems are increasing in reconstruction analyses. The video that has been provided to the investigator may not always include a clear perspective of the relevant area of interest. For example, surveillance video of an incident may have captured a pre- or post-incident perspective that, while failing to capture the precise moment when the pedestrian was struck by a vehicle, still contains valuable information that can be used to assist in reconstructing the incident. When surveillance video is received, a quick and efficient technique to place the subject object or objects into a three-dimensional environment with a known rate of error would add value to the investigation.
Journal Article

The Key Role of Advanced, Flexible Fuel Injection Systems to Match the Future CO2 Targets in an Ultra-Light Mid-Size Diesel Engine

2019-01-23
Abstract The article describes the results achieved in developing a new diesel combustion system for passenger car application that, while capable of high power density, delivers excellent fuel economy through a combination of mechanical and thermodynamic efficiencies improvement. The project stemmed from the idea that, by leveraging the high fuel injection pressure of last generation common rail systems, it is possible to reduce the engine peak firing pressure (pfp) with great benefits on reciprocating and rotating components’ light-weighting and friction for high-speed light-duty engines, while keeping the power density at competitive levels. To this aim, an advanced injection system concept capable of injection pressure greater than 2500 bar was coupled to a prototype engine featuring newly developed combustion system. Then, the matching among these features has been thoroughly experimentally examined.
Journal Article

The Impact of Miller Valve Timing on Combustion and Charging Performance of an Ethanol- and Methanol-Fueled Heavy-Duty Spark Ignition Engine

2021-05-10
Abstract Combustion engines and liquid fuels are likely to continue playing a central role in freight transportation with renewable fuels reducing carbon emissions. Ethanol and methanol are future renewable fuels with a knock resistance that make them suitable for heavy-duty (HD) spark ignition (SI) engines. This simulation work focuses on the potential for improving the efficiency of an ethanol- and methanol-fueled HD SI engine using early intake valve closing Miller valve timing. With Miller valve timing, the expansion ratio and thermodynamic efficiency can be increased while maintaining the same effective compression ratio. However, Miller timing requires increased boost pressure to retain the same trapped air mass and also suffers from reduced in-cylinder turbulence.
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