scholarly journals Performance of a Heavy-Duty Turbocharged Diesel Engine Under the Effect of Air Injection at Intake Manifold During Transient Operations

2019 ◽  
Vol 44 (6) ◽  
pp. 5863-5875
Author(s):  
S. M. Saad ◽  
R. Mishra
Author(s):  
Alok A. Joshi ◽  
Scott James ◽  
Peter Meckl ◽  
Galen King ◽  
Kristofer Jennings

Degradation in the cooling effectiveness of a charge-air cooler (CAC) in a medium-duty turbocharged diesel engine has significant impact on engine performance. This degradation lowers the boost pressure and raises the intake manifold temperature. As a result, the engine provides lower horsepower and higher hydrocarbon levels than the rated values. The objective of this research is to monitor the health of the charge-air cooler by analyzing the intake manifold temperature signal. Experiments were performed on a Cummins ISB series turbocharged diesel engine, a 6-cylinder inline configuration with a 5.9 l displacement volume. Air flowing over the cooler was blocked by varying amounts, while various engine temperatures and pressures were monitored at different torque-speed conditions. Similarly, data were acquired without the introduction of any fault in the engine. For the construction of the manifold temperature trajectory vector, average mutual information estimates and a global false nearest neighbor analysis were used to find the optimal time parameter and embedding dimensions, respectively. The prediction of the healthy temperature vector was done by local linear regression using torque, speed, and their interaction as exogenous variables. Analysis of residuals generated by comparing the predicted healthy temperature vector and the observed temperature vector was successful in detecting the degradation of the charge-air cooler. This degradation was quantified by using box plots and probability density functions of residuals generated by comparing intake manifold temperature of healthy and faulty charge-air coolers. The general applicability of the model was demonstrated by successfully diagnosing a fault in the exhaust gas recirculation cooler of a different engine.


Author(s):  
Yunfan Zhang ◽  
Guoxiang Lu ◽  
Hongming Xu ◽  
Ziyang Li

The air path of a turbocharged diesel engine is a multi-input multi-output (MIMO) system with strong nonlinearity, coupling effect, delay and actuator constraints. This makes the design and tuning of the controller complex. In this paper, a tuneable model predictive control (TMPC) controller for a diesel engine’s air path with dual loop exhaust gas recirculation (DLEGR) is presented. The objective is to regulate the intake manifold pressure and exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) mass flow in each loop to meet the time-varying setpoints through coordinated control of the variable geometry turbocharger (VGT) and EGR valves. The TMPC controller adopts the design framework of an MPC controller. This controller is also able to provide a map-based switching scheme for the local controller and the controller’s weightings. A comparison between the TMPC controller and a conventional PID controller is conducted on a validated real-time engine model. The simulation results show that the TMPC controller achieves lower overshoot, faster response and a shorter settling time on the manipulated objects. These improvements are beneficial for obtaining lower fuel consumption. In order to test the capability of the TMPC controller, it is validated on a hardware in the loop (HIL) platform. The results show that the agreement between the simulation and the actual ECU’s response is good.


2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reza Rahimi ◽  
S. Jafarmadar ◽  
Sh. Khalilarya ◽  
A. Mohebbi

This paper presents the results of numerical and experimental investigations to evaluate the distribution of exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) between cylinders in a DI turbocharged diesel engine. The turbulent three-dimensional flow field was analyzed by the numerical solution of conservation equations with an appropriate turbulence model. EGR was applied to intake manifold with various rates at cooled and non-cooled states. The experiments were conducted on an MT4.244 turbocharged DI diesel engine under full load condition at 1900rpm. The model was validated by experimental data with a good agreement between experimental measurements and numerical predictions. Using this method, it is possible to control EGR distribution so as to reduce emissions formation as well as to improve performance.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document