Potentials of cooled EGR and water injection for knock resistance and fuel consumption improvements of gasoline engines

2016 ◽  
Vol 169 ◽  
pp. 112-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fabio Bozza ◽  
Vincenzo De Bellis ◽  
Luigi Teodosio
Author(s):  
Thilo Wagner ◽  
Hermann Rottengruber ◽  
Frank Beyrau ◽  
Plamen Dragomirov ◽  
Maximilian Schaub

The investigation focus for combustion engines is on reduction of emissions as well as fuel consumption. By introducing the gasoline direct injection combined with downsizing the efficiency and the fuel consumption of gasoline engines has been optimized. An additional potential to the previous solutions provides the water injection. The article include the results of the fundamental research of water injection for combustion engines, it shows the influence of the amount of water in a water-gasoline-emulsion on the spray in a high pressure injection chamber. Therefor the spray of a gasoline direct injection injector is visualized by a high speed camera using the shadowgraph technique.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/ILASS2017.2017.4753


2017 ◽  
pp. 338-359 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias Hunger ◽  
Tobias Böcking ◽  
Ulrich Walther ◽  
Michael Günther ◽  
Normann Freisinger ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 317-319 ◽  
pp. 1999-2006
Author(s):  
Yu Wan ◽  
Ai Min Du ◽  
Da Shao ◽  
Guo Qiang Li

According to the boost mathematical model verified by experiments, the valve train of traditional gasoline engine is optimized and improved to achieve extended expansion cycle. The simulation results of extended expansion gasoline engine shows that the extended expansion gasoline engine has a better economic performance, compared to traditional gasoline engines. The average brake special fuel consumption (BSFC) can reduce 22.78 g / kW•h by LIVC, but the negative impacts of extended expansion gasoline engine restrict the potential of extended expansion gasoline engine. This paper analyzes the extended expansion gasoline engine performance under the influence of LIVC, discusses the way to further improve extended expansion gasoline engine performance.


Author(s):  
Ingo Hermann ◽  
Claus Glahn ◽  
Martin Paroll ◽  
Werner Gumprich

Author(s):  
Marc Gugau ◽  
Harald Roclawski

With emission legislation becoming more stringent within the next years, almost all future internal combustion gasoline engines need to reduce specific fuel consumption, most of them by using turbochargers. Additionally, car manufactures attach high importance to a good drivability, which usually is being quantified as a target torque already available at low engine speeds—reached in transient response operation as fast as possible. These engine requirements result in a challenging turbocharger compressor and turbine design task, since for both not one single operating point needs to be aerodynamically optimized but the components have to provide for the optimum overall compromise for maximum thermodynamic performance. The component design targets are closely related and actually controlled by the matching procedure that fits turbine and compressor to the engine. Inaccuracies in matching a turbine to the engine full load are largely due to the pulsating engine flow characteristic and arise from the necessity of arbitrary turbine map extrapolation toward low turbine blade speed ratios and the deficient estimation of turbine efficiency for low engine speed operating points. This paper addresses the above described standard problems, presenting a methodology that covers almost all aspects of thermodynamic turbine design based on a comparison of radial and mixed-flow turbines. Wheel geometry definition with respect to contrary design objectives is done using computational fluid dynamics (CFD), finite element analysis (FEA), and optimization software. Parametrical turbine models, composed of wheel, volute, and standard piping allow for fast map calculation similar to steady hot gas tests but covering the complete range of engine pulsating mass flow. These extended turbine maps are then used for a particular assessment of turbine power output under unsteady flow admission resulting in an improved steady-state matching quality. Additionally, the effect of various design parameters like either volute sizing or the choice of compressor to turbine diameter ratio on turbine blade speed ratio operating range as well as well as turbine inertia effect is analyzed. Finally, this method enables the designer to comparatively evaluate the ability of a turbine design to accelerate the turbocharger speed for transient engine response while still offering a map characteristic that keeps fuel consumption low at all engine speeds.


2015 ◽  
Vol 163 (4) ◽  
pp. 67-78
Author(s):  
Michał OLCZYK ◽  
Bartosz HEJNY ◽  
Piotr BIELACZYC

The main advantages of using direct injection in an SI engine, such as lower fuel consumption and higher thermal efficiency, implicate a new problem concerning gasoline engines: the emission of particulate matter. The observed issue has been a significant direction of development of the contemporary DISI engine over the last decade. This paper contains an overview of the results of PN emission, which were obtained from experiments conducted at BOSMAL and from the literature. Current and future legal regulations regarding PN emissions were collated to the test results.


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