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Technical Paper

Real-Time Engine Models

2003-03-03
2003-01-1050
Engine management systems in modern motor vehicles are becoming increasingly extensive and complex. The functionality of the control units which are the central components of such systems is determined by the hardware and software. They are the result of a lengthy development and production process. Road testing of control units, together with testing them on the engine test bench, is very time consuming and costly. An alternative is to test control units away from their actual environment, in a virtual context. This involves operating the control unit on a Hardware-in-the-Loop test bench. The control unit's large number of individual and interlinked functions necessitates a structured, reproducible test procedure. These tests can, however, only be conducted once an engine prototype has been completed, as the parameters for the existing conventional models are determined from the data measured on the test bench.
Technical Paper

Trim-structure interface modelling and simulation approaches for FEM applications

2024-06-12
2024-01-2954
Trim materials are often used for vibroacoustic energy absorption purposes within vehicles. To estimate the sound impact at a driver’s ear, the substructuring approach can be applied. Thus, transfer functions are calculated starting from the acoustic source to the car body, from the car body to the trim and, finally, from the trim to the inner cavity where the driver is located. One of the most challenging parts is the calculation of the transfer functions from the car body inner surface to the bottom trim surface. Commonly, freely laying mass-spring systems (trims) are simulated with a fixed boundary and interface phenomena such as friction, stick-slip or discontinuities are not taken into consideration. Such an approach allows for faster simulations but results in simulations strongly overestimating the energy transfer, particularly in the frequency range where the mass-spring system’s resonances take place.
Journal Article

Variational Autoencoders for Dimensionality Reduction of Automotive Vibroacoustic Models

2022-06-15
2022-01-0941
In order to predict reality as accurately as possible leads to the fact that numerical models in automotive vibroacoustic problems become increasingly high dimensional. This makes applications with a large number of model evaluations, e.g. optimization tasks or uncertainty quantification hard to solve, as they become computationally very expensive. Engineers are thus faced with the challenge of making decisions based on a limited number of model evaluations, which increases the need for data-efficient methods and reduced order models. In this contribution, variational autoencoders (VAEs) are used to reduce the dimensionality of the vibroacoustic model of a vehicle body and to find a low-dimensional latent representation of the system.
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