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Technical Paper

An Application Study of Evaporative Cooling to Heavy Duty Diesel Engines

1987-02-01
870023
Evaporative cooling was applied to a heavy duty diesel engine to investigate the feasibility of this cooling method. Engine test results showed the following benefits of this cooling method: Reduction of the size of theradiator and cooling fan is feasible. The maximum temperature of the combustion chamber wall did not increase, though the coolant temperature rose by 20°C. The fuel consumption could be reduced especially at partial load. Engine warm-up performance was significantly improved. An oil cooler rig test was also conducted to investigate the heat transfer characteristics of the oil cooler with evaporative cooling.
Technical Paper

Development of a Heavy-Duty Turbocharged and Aftercooled CNG-Fueled Lean-Burn Engine - Conversion of a Naturally-Aspirated Diesel Engine into Otto-Type CNG Engine

1993-10-01
932818
A heavy-duty, naturally aspirated diesel engine was converted into a turbocharged, aftercooled, compressed natural gas engine. Engine test results show that excess air ratio and ignition timing strongly affect NOx and THC emissions. Leaning the air-fuel mixture reduces NOx emission, but it increases THC emission and combustion becomes unstable above a certain excess air ratio. Retarding the ignition timing reduces both the NOx and THC emissions. Dual-plug ignition improves brake thermal efficiency. The NOx emission level can be reduced to meet the Japanese long-term emission regulation limit for heavy-duty gasoline engines with a sufficient safety margin by appropriately selecting the air-fuel ratio and ignition timing so as to keep the THC emission level below the regulation limit without using any after-treatment. The engine full torque characteristics were almost the same as the base engine throughout the engine speed range, while the maximum exhaust gas temperature was lower.
Technical Paper

Investigation into Extending Diesel Engine Oil Drain Interval (Part 2) - Development of Long Drain Diesel Engine Oil Having Low Soot Dispersancy

1991-10-01
912340
Soot accumulation in diesel engine crankcase is the dominant factor which governs engine oil drain interval. So, efficient soot elimination from crankcase oil can be a practical way to achieve drain interval extension. Combination of high performance oil filter and low soot dispersancy oil results in an effective measure to trap soot efficiently. In this paper, the behavior of newly developed high performance diesel engine oil having low soot dispersancy is reported. Prior to oil development, an evaluation method of soot dispersancy in oil was elaborated. Based on relative viscosity defined as ratio of soot containing oil viscosity to soot eliminated oil viscosity, dispersancy parameter was determined. Oil dispersancy evaluated on this parameter agreed with the results obtained from particle size analyzer. Secondly, a method to obtain oil filter soot trap rate to total soot contaminated into crankcase (trap rate) was established.
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