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Technical Paper

Description of preliminary Study for Technology Transfer of an Ethanol Mixture Preparation System from Automotive Application to a 4-Cylinder 5.9 liter Aircraft Engine.

2006-11-21
2006-01-2878
On the basis of the large amount of know-how accumulated in the field of automotive ethanol SI-engine fuelling in Brazil, it seemed appropriate to continue and set a new milestone in the usage of ethanol fuel. The paper presents the preliminary study made to enable the transfer of the ethanol technology to a 5.9-liter 4-cylinder boxer aircraft engine. The study describes the steps made to define the optimal parameter configuration for the transfer of the fuel system packaging, the fuel injector layout, the engine control unit (ECU) and the legislative redundancy requirements for aviation applications. The paper illustrates the use of numerical simulation techniques and special visualization approaches necessary to understand the physical phenomena of mixture preparation (spray atomization and momentum). Two different layouts are presented and discussed and a certain number of experimental results obtained with the retained solution are presented and discussed.
Technical Paper

Direct Injection for Future SI-Engines - Stand Alone Combustion Layout or Integrated Part of Multi-Function Fuel/Air Management Approach?

2003-03-03
2003-01-0540
In the future generation of low consumption SI-engine layouts, it has become necessary to reduce costs as well as the complexity level and, increase the system reliability by the latter. To avoid driving the GDI-system in the critical, very lean stratified operation mode without losing the fuel consumption benefit, a solution is suggested, which combines a fully variable valve control system with a low level, robust GDI combustion layout. The first part of the present paper presents the latest development in the field of high precision multi-hole GDI injector spray nozzles. The basic aspects of mixture preparation with multi-hole gasoline atomizers are highlighted and their spray behavior compared to that of the current swirl atomizer nozzle. The second part of the paper presents primary optimization of a largely homogeneous GDI combustion layout combined with a fully variable valve timing control system including complete cylinder de-activation.
Technical Paper

Enhanced Mixture Preparation Approach for Lean Stratified SI-Combustion by a Combined Use of GDI and Electronically Controlled Valve-Timing

2000-03-06
2000-01-0532
The first part of the paper gives an overview of the current status in fuel consumption gain of the GDI-vehicles previously launched on the European market. In order to increase the potential for a further gain in specific fuel consumption the behaviour of 3 different combustion chamber layouts are studied. The chamber layouts are aimed to adapt as well as possible to the particular requirements for application to a small displacement/small bore engine working in stratified lean conditions. The paper continues with a description of the application that shows the different steps of a structured optimisation methodology for a 1.2 litre, small bore 4-cylinder engine. The applications of an air-motion-guided and a wall-guided layout with a mechanically actuated valve train to the same combustion chamber are discussed. The potential of the air-motion-guided concept is enhanced through the introduction of an electromagnetic fully variable valve train.
Technical Paper

Experimental and Numerical Approach to Productionizing a GDI-2 Stroke Spark Ignited Small Displacement Engine Design

1999-09-28
1999-01-3290
The first part of the paper gives an overview of the environmental conditions with which a future two stroke powered vehicle must comply and explains the reasons for which a direct gasoline injection into the combustion chamber offers a potential solution. The paper continues with a description of the fuel/air mixture injection used in the F.A.S.T. concept and gives a detailed overview of the layout of the 125 cc engine to which it is applied. The structure of its electronic engine management system, mandatory for the necessary control precision, is presented. Hereafter is made a short introduction to the visualization and numerical computation tools used for the engine design optimization. The paper concludes with a detailed presentation and discussion of the experimental results obtained with the engine operated, either in steady state and transient conditions on an engine test rig, and mounted in a classic small dimension two-wheel vehicle submitted to road tests.
Technical Paper

New developments of the 3rd generation SFS-Flex system to meet PL5/6 emission requirements.

2009-10-06
2009-36-0159
The paper presents a short introduction on the evolution from the first generation of software based flex fuel sensor systems over the second system generation including new gasoline/ethanol optimized fuel injectors to the 3rd generation, which combines all available optimized mechanical components. It demonstrates that to meet the new emission regulations and On Board Diagnostic requirements a new highly flexible Electronic Control Unit (ECU) is needed. A detailed description of the new powerful, layered-structure ECU-family is given. The paper concludes with some illustrative experimental results obtained by combining the new ECU-family with engine-layout optimized mechanical components.
Technical Paper

Parametric Study of Physical Requirements for Successful Use of a Homogenous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI) Approach in a Direct Injected Gasoline Engine

2006-04-03
2006-01-0632
The present paper is a contribution in which is used a numerical simulation approach, the Virtual Engine Model, to study the combination of the Compression Ignition process with a Gasoline Direct Injection mixture preparation in a limited number of load-points. The first part of the paper describes the reasons for which current Gasoline Direct Injection engine technology must be combined with other technologies related to the in-cylinder mixture preparation control to further increase their potential for decreased fuel consumption. The paper continues with a description of the physics of spark and compression ignited processes as well as of the involved mixture preparation hardware components. The setup and the practical use of the Virtual Engine Model are discussed for both spark and compression ignited approaches.
Technical Paper

Presentation of the Development of a Downsized, Turbocharged Prototype Engine and the Optimization of the Layout of its PFI Mixture Preparation System

2013-10-07
2013-36-0180
The paper describes the setup of a 4-cylinder 1.4-liter prototype Spark Ignited (SI)-engine, which is highly boosted, extremely downsized and port fuel injected. During experimental data gathering with the engine it was discovered that the originally mounted fuel injectors were non-optimized an unable to produce an expected low fuel consumption performance at low speed, low load engine working conditions. To solve this problem by finding an optimized alternative solution for the mixture preparation process it was decided to use a high-performance numerical simulation tool. The paper presents the overall layout of the prototype engine as well as the structure of the 3-D dynamic optimization tool used to address the mixture preparation problem. The paper continues with a detailed description of the different steps used to reach the complete optimization of the mixture preparation system (both the fuel injectors and the intake manifold).
Technical Paper

Presentation of the new third Generation “Green” injector Family, PICO-ECOlogical, developed for further Improvement of Flex-fuel Engine Performance.

2007-11-28
2007-01-2749
The paper presents a description of the development phases of the new third generation of “green” fuel injectors. The development objective for the new PICO-ECOlogical injector was to define a layout, which enables an optimal parameter configuration for both the mixture preparation (high flexibility to adapt different atomizer plate structures) and the manufacturing processes. It is demonstrated in which way the use of high-level numerical simulation and visualization techniques have become an integrated part of the development process. A detailed description is given of the new layout with respect to earlier versions and the advantageous new features obtained are discussed. Test results obtained by the new 3rd-generation injector layout are presented. The impact of the improved dynamic response capability is explained and experimental data at both engine test rig and vehicle FTP-cycle conditions are reported and discussed.
Technical Paper

Reduction of Spray Momentum for GDI High-Pressure Injectors - A Necessary Step to Accomplish Series Production of Super-Charged DI-Engines

2005-04-11
2005-01-0104
The first part of the present paper describes the means by which the spray momentum can be decreased. The objective can be obtained either by injector-internal geometrical design changes, which very often lead to a highly non-uniform spray density/droplet distribution or by a new injector-external process, called the colliding jet (CJ) approach. The paper continues with a detailed description of the physics of the controlled secondary breakup process provided by the CJ-approach, which enables a very uniform density/droplet distribution on the downstream side of the collision zone as well as an approximately 40 % decrease in spray penetration depth. The knowledge of the physics of the CJ-approach enables the introduction of a new spray model in the 3-D numerical simulation code NCF-3D.
Technical Paper

Study of the Impact on the Combustion Process of Injector Nozzle Layout creating Enhanced Secondary Spray Break-up

2003-03-03
2003-01-0706
The paper presents a study of a key-element in the mixture preparation process. A typical common-rail (CR) high-pressure fuel injector was fitted with a prototype injector nozzle with atomizer bores of a particular conical layout. It is demonstrated within certain layout limits, that a considerable enhancement can be obtained for the secondary break-up of the hard-core fluid sprays produced by the nozzle. The impact on the combustion process is examined in terms of pressure and heat release as well as of the engine-out pollutant emission. The results are compared to those of an earlier developed CR high-pressure injector nozzle. The atomization behavior of the prototype nozzle is illustrated through experimental results in terms of engine-out emissions from a 1.3-liter turbo-charged passenger car diesel engine. The detailed spray behavior is visualized on a component test rig by use of specially developed optical visualization techniques.
Technical Paper

Technologies and Components for Power Train Distributed Structures - An Opportunity for Optimizing In-Vehicle EE-Architecture

2004-10-18
2004-21-0026
The paper presents the today’s power train systems, which largely reflect a one to one mapping of physical units into a dedicated electronic control system. A new approach is suggested for a breakdown strategy with an ECU centered structure linked to a surrounding harness of sensors and actuators. Like body electronics did first, automotive graded combination of semiconductor and packaging technologies are used to develop a network of mechatronic components. This allows an easy and effective separation between the SW development at the vehicle level and an off-line optimization and calibration of components. A development project is shown for a gasoline direct injected engine, where mechatronic components (e.g. cylinder, fuel pump and injectors, valve train) are networked and controlled by a master digital core, which is the application SW restricted area of the car manufacturer.
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