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Technical Paper

A Fast and Reliable CFD Approach to Design Hydrogen SI Engines for Industrial Applications

2023-06-26
2023-01-1208
SI engines fueled with hydrogen represent a promising powertrain solution to meet the ambitious target of carbon-free emissions at the tailpipe. Therefore, fast and reliable numerical tools can significantly support the automotive industry in the optimization of such technology. In this work, a 1D-3D methodology is presented to simulate in detail the combustion process with minimal computational effort. First, a 1D analysis of the complete engine cycle is carried out on the user-defined powertrain configuration. The purpose is to achieve reliable boundary conditions for the combustion chamber, based on realistic engine parameters. Then, a 3D simulation of the power-cycle is performed to mimic the combustion process. The flow velocity and turbulence distributions are initialized without the need of simulating the gas exchange process, according to a validated technique.
Technical Paper

A Gear Shifting Indication Strategy of Eco-Driving Vehicle

2020-04-14
2020-01-0966
The current indication strategies of gear shifting indication system for manual transmission vehicles are developed based on the gear shifting strategies of the automatic transmission vehicles. In this paper, it is found that the gear shifting frequency of automatic transmission vehicles is significantly higher than that of manual transmission vehicles based on the collected driving data of several automatic transmission and manual transmission vehicles, which increases the fatigue of drivers.
Technical Paper

A Modeling Tool for Particulate Emissions in GDI Engines with Emphasis on the Injector Zone

2023-04-11
2023-01-0182
Fuel film deposits on combustion chamber walls are understood to be the main source of particle emissions in GDI engines under homogenous charge operation. More precisely, the liquid film that remains on the injector tip after the end of injection is a fuel rich zone that undergoes pyrolysis reactions leading to the formation of poly-aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) known to be the precursors of soot. The physical phenomena accompanying the fuel film deposit, evaporation, and the chemical reactions associated to the injector film are not yet fully understood and require high fidelity CFD simulations and controlled experimental campaigns in optically accessible engines. To this end, a simplified model based on physical principles is developed in this work, which couples an analytical model for liquid film formation and evaporation on the injector tip with a stochastic particle dynamics model for particle formation.
Technical Paper

A Numerical Study on Correlation of Chemiluminescent Species and Heat Release Distributions Using Large Eddy Simulation

2018-10-30
2018-32-0066
A mixed timescale subgrid model of a large eddy simulation was used to simulate the turbulence regime in diesel engine combustion. The combustion model used the direct integration approach with a diesel oil surrogate mechanism (developed at Chalmers University of Technology and consisting of 70 species and 309 reactions). Additional reactions for the generation and consumption of OH*, CO2*, and CH* species were added from recent kinetic studies. Collisional quenching and spontaneous emission resulted in de-excitation of the excited state radical. A phenomenological soot formation model (developed at Waseda University) was combined with the LES code. The following important steps were considered in the soot model: particle inception where naphthalene grows irreversibly to form soot, surface growth with the addition of C2H2, surface oxidation (induced by OH radicals and O2 attack), and particle coagulation.
Technical Paper

A Numerical Study on the Effects of the Orifice Geometry between Pre- and Main Chamber for a Natural Gas Engine

2017-10-08
2017-01-2195
The spark-ignited pre-chamber stratified combustion system is one of the most effective ways of expanding lean-burn ability and improving the performance of a natural gas engine. For these pre-chamber engines, the geometrical structure of orifices between the pre- and main chamber plays a significant role on the gas flow and flame propagation behaviors. The present study aims to investigate the effects of orifice number and diameter on combustion characteristics of a Shengdong T190 natural gas engine through CFD simulation. Various geometrical structures for the pre-chamber orifices were designed, offering variations in the number of orifices (4 to 8), and in the diameter of orifices (1.6mm to 2.9mm). A non-dimensional parameter β was employed to characterize the relative flow area of the orifices in the design. CFD simulations of combustion processes for these designs were carried out using a simplified chemical reaction kinetic mechanism for methane.
Journal Article

A Progress Review on Soot Experiments and Modeling in the Engine Combustion Network (ECN)

2016-04-05
2016-01-0734
The 4th Workshop of the Engine Combustion Network (ECN) was held September 5-6, 2015 in Kyoto, Japan. This manuscript presents a summary of the progress in experiments and modeling among ECN contributors leading to a better understanding of soot formation under the ECN “Spray A” configuration and some parametric variants. Relevant published and unpublished work from prior ECN workshops is reviewed. Experiments measuring soot particle size and morphology, soot volume fraction (fv), and transient soot mass have been conducted at various international institutions providing target data for improvements to computational models. Multiple modeling contributions using both the Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) Equations approach and the Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) approach have been submitted. Among these, various chemical mechanisms, soot models, and turbulence-chemistry interaction (TCI) methodologies have been considered.
Journal Article

A Quasi-1D Model for the Description of ECN Spray a Combustion Process

2020-04-14
2020-01-0661
An existing one-dimensional (1D) spray model, which successfully captures inert spray processes, has been extended to enable prediction of ignition delay and lift-off length under reacting conditions. For that purpose, an additional transport equation for the progress variable has been incorporated, which includes detailed chemistry effects by means of a tabulation method based upon an external flamelet solver. The transport equation for the progress variable is solved in a quasi-1D fashion, along presumed mixture fraction trajectories, while the 1D approach is retained for the mixture fraction and axial velocity fields. The paper includes the model development, as well as the validation against Spray A measurements from the Engine Combustion Network. In spite of the simplified approach, the model captures some of the experimental trends of the lift-off length and ignition delay with a quite low computational cost.
Technical Paper

An Effect Study of Passenger Car Radial Tire Contour Design Theory on Tire Force and Moment Properties

2016-04-05
2016-01-0446
A 3D finite element (FE) model of a radial tire 205/55R16, established using ABAQUS software, is utilized to simulate tire force and moment properties. Drum tests are designed to validate the FE model’s reliability. To investigate the impacts of PCR contour design theory on tire force and moment, a modified string balance contour theory is presented. Based on string balance contour theory, it simplifies the shape of belt pressure share ratio as a trapezium. Besides, a program for calculating tire contour curve is compiled using MATLAB software. Applying different belt pressure share ratios, diverse tire contours are designed. One of the contours is selected according to its positive effect on cornering stiffness in simulation.
Technical Paper

An Experimental Investigation on Spray Mixing and Combustion Characteristics for Spray C/D Nozzles in a Constant Pressure Vessel

2018-09-10
2018-01-1783
The Engine Combustion Network (ECN) is a coordinate effort from research partners from all over the world which aims at creating a large experimental database to validate CFD calculations. Two injectors from ECN, namely Spray C and D, have been compared in a constant pressure flow vessel, which enables a field of view of more than 100 mm. Both nozzles have been designed with similar flow metrics, with Spray D having a convergent hole shape and Spray C a cylindrical one, the latter being therefore more prone to cavitation. Although the focus of the study is on reacting conditions, some inert cases have also been measured. High speed schlieren imaging, OH* chemiluminescence visualization and head-on broadband luminosity have been used as combustion diagnostics to evaluate ignition delay, lift off length and reacting tip penetration. Parametric variations include ambient temperature, oxygen content and injection pressure variations.
Journal Article

An Experimental Study on Diesel Spray Injection into a Non-Quiescent Chamber

2017-03-28
2017-01-0850
Visualization of single-hole nozzles into quiescent ambient has been used extensively in the literature to characterize spray mixing and combustion. However in-cylinder flow may have some meaningful impact on the spray evolution. In the present work, visualization of direct diesel injection spray under both non-reacting and reacting operating conditions was conducted in an optically accessible two-stroke engine equipped with a single-hole injector. Two different high-speed imaging techniques, Schlieren and UV-Light Absorption, were applied here to quantify vapor penetration for non-reacting spray. Meanwhile, Mie-scattering was used to measure the liquid length. As for reacting conditions, Schlieren and OH* chemiluminescence were simultaneously applied to obtain the spray tip penetration and flame lift-off length under the same TDC density and temperature. Additionally, PIV was used to characterize in-cylinder flow motion.
Technical Paper

An Insight on the Spray-A Combustion Characteristics by Means of RANS and LES Simulations Using Flamelet-Based Combustion Models

2017-03-28
2017-01-0577
Advanced Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) modeling of reacting sprays provides access to information not available even applying the most advanced experimental techniques. This is particularly evident if the combustion model handles detailed chemical kinetic models efficiently to describe the fuel auto-ignition and oxidation processes. Complex chemistry also provides the temporal evolution of key species closely related to emissions formation, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) that are well-known as soot precursors. In this framework, present investigation focuses on the analysis of the so-called Spray-A combustion characteristics using two different flamelet-based combustion models. Both Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) and Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) predictions are combined to study not only the averaged spray characteristics, but also the relevance of different realizations in this particular problem.
Technical Paper

An Investigation on the Fuel Temperature Variations Along a Solenoid Operated Common-Rail Ballistic Injector by Means of an Adiabatic 1D Model

2018-04-03
2018-01-0275
Most studies about common-rail diesel injection consider the fuel flow along the injector as isothermal. This hypothesis is arguable given the small diameter of the orifices along which the fuel flows, together with the expansions that take place across them. These phenomena may provoke variations in the fuel temperature, which in turn modify the fuel properties (i.e. viscosity, density, speed of sound…), thus influencing injector dynamics as well as the fuel atomization and mixing processes. The present investigation accounts for these effects by means of a 1D model for the fuel flow along a common-rail ballistic injector. Local variations of fuel temperature and pressure are considered by the model thanks to the implementation of the adiabatic flow hypothesis.
Technical Paper

An Optimal Design of the Suspension Linkage

2009-10-06
2009-01-2923
This paper proposes an optimal method for the air suspension linkages design, which takes multiple critical geometric dimensions of the linkage as design variables, takes the maximum stress of critical areas in certain parts and the total mass of the assembly as objective functions, normalizes those objectives, and combines them together to evaluate the design. A design flow is developed to integrate the proposed method with a 3-D modeling software and a finite element software, and to expedite the design process. The effect of design variables on the stress of each part and on the mass is analyzed. Based on the sensitivity analysis and the objectives' values, the best design is determined from several available candidate schemes. The stress at critical areas is decreased significantly, as well as the total mass, which improve the safety and cut the cost. The optimization method is also applicable to any multi-parameter multi-objective mechanical part design.
Technical Paper

Analysis of Kinetic Characteristic and Structural Parameter Optimization of Multi-Link Suspension

2007-08-05
2007-01-3558
Taking the five-link suspension of a car as the subject investigated on the basis of ADAMS/Car, this paper builds the parameterized mode of the multi-link suspension. The simulation shows the influence relations among multi-link suspension structure parameter and the wheel location parameter, wheel track, roll center. On the base of this, aim for improving the ride safety and comfort, multi-link suspension optimization model is built and carried out parameter optimization design by using ADAMS/Insight. The result shows that this method is high-performance and can be used in the design of multi-link suspension conveniently.
Journal Article

CFD Modeling of Reacting Diesel Sprays with Primary Reference Fuel

2021-04-06
2021-01-0409
Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modeling has many potentials for the design and calibration of modern and future engine concepts, including facilitating the exploration of operation conditions and casting light on the involved physical and chemical phenomena. As more attention is paid to the matching of different fuel types and combustion strategies, the use of detailed chemistry in characterizing auto-ignition, flame stabilization processes and the formation of pollutant emissions is becoming critical, yet computationally intensive. Therefore, there is much interest in using tabulated approaches to account for detailed chemistry with an affordable computational cost. In the present work, the tabulated flamelet progress variable approach (TFPV), based on flamelet assumptions, was investigated and validated by simulating constant-volume Diesel combustion with primary reference fuels - binary mixtures of n-heptane and iso-octane.
Technical Paper

CFD Modelling of Hydrogen-Fueled SI Engines for Light-Duty Applications

2023-08-28
2023-24-0017
The employment of hydrogen as energy carrier for transportation sector represents a significant challenge for powertrains. Spark-ignition (SI) engines are feasible and low-cost devices to convert the hydrogen chemical energy into mechanical work. However, significant efforts are needed to successfully retrofit the available configurations. The computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modelling represents a useful tool to support experiments, clarifying the impact of the engine characteristics on both the mixture preparation and the combustion development. In this work, a CFD investigation is carried out on typical light-duty SI engine configurations, exploring the two main strategies of hydrogen addition: port fuel injection (PFI) and direct injection (DI). The purpose is to assess the behaviour of widely-used numerical models and methodologies when hydrogen is employed instead of traditional carbon-based fuels.
Technical Paper

Combined CFD - PIV Methodology for the Characterization of Air Flow in a Diesel Engine

2018-09-10
2018-01-1769
It is known that in-cylinder airflow structures during intake and compression strokes deeply affects the combustion process in compression ignition (CI) engines. This work presents a methodology for the analysis of the swirling structures by means of the CFD proprietary code Converge 2.3. The methodology is based on the CFD modelling and the comparison of results with in-cylinder velocity fields measured by particle image velocimetry (PIV). Furthermore, the analysis is extended to the accuracy evaluation of other methods available to define the flow in the cylinder of internal combustion engines, such as experiments in steady flow rigs. These methods, in junction with simple phenomenological models, have been traditionally used to determine some of the fundamental variables that define the in-cylinder flow in ICE engines. The CFD analysis is focused in the flow structures around top dead centre (TDC) at the end of the compression stroke.
Technical Paper

Combining DMDF and Hybrid Powertrains: A Look on the Effects of Different Battery Modelling Approaches

2022-03-29
2022-01-0658
Fleet electrification has been demonstrated as a feasible solution to decarbonize the heavy-duty transportation sector. The combination of hybridization and advanced combustion concepts may provide further advantages by also introducing reductions on criteria pollutants such as nitrogen oxides and soot. In this scenario, the interplay among the different energy paths must be understood and quantified to extract the full potential of the powertrain. One of the key devices in such powertrains is the battery, which involves different aspects regarding operation, safety, and degradation. Despite this complexity, most of the models still rely on resistance-capacity models to describe the battery operation. These models may lead to unpractical results since the current flow is governed by limiters rather than physical laws. Additionally, phenomena related with battery degradation, which decreases the nominal capacity and enhances the heat generation are also not considered in this approach.
Journal Article

Combustion Recession after End of Injection in Diesel Sprays

2015-04-14
2015-01-0797
This work contributes to the understanding of physical mechanisms that control flashback, or more appropriately combustion recession, in diesel sprays. A large dataset, comprising many fuels, injection pressures, ambient temperatures, ambient oxygen concentrations, ambient densities, and nozzle diameters is used to explore experimental trends for the behavior of combustion recession. Then, a reduced-order model, capable of modeling non-reacting and reacting conditions, is used to help interpret the experimental trends. Finally, the reduced-order model is used to predict how a controlled ramp-down rate-of-injection can enhance the likelihood of combustion recession for conditions that would not normally exhibit combustion recession. In general, fuel, ambient conditions, and the end-of-injection transient determine the success or failure of combustion recession.
Technical Paper

Complete 3D Dynamic Analysis of Blade Reversal Behavior in a Windshield Wiper System

2003-03-03
2003-01-1373
This paper details an analysis theory to simulate various dynamic characteristics of a windshield wiper system on a vehicle for the purposes of computer-aided virtual prototyping. The analytical model consists of three-dimensional (3D) mechanical models of the complete wiper system and arm & blade subsystem which carries out complex reversal behavior. The equations of motion are solved considering the vehicle's 3D windshield surface data. Thus, the dynamic reaction forces in the vertical and frictional directions can be calculated at any point within the wiping pattern.
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