Misfire detection on internal combustion engines using exhaust gas temperature with low sampling rate

2011 ◽  
Vol 31 (17-18) ◽  
pp. 4125-4131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masayuki Tamura ◽  
Hitoshi Saito ◽  
Yukimaro Murata ◽  
Kunihiro Kokubu ◽  
Satoshi Morimoto
2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zbigniew Korczewski

Abstract The article discusses the problem of diagnostic informativeness of exhaust gas temperature measurements in turbocharged marine internal combustion engines. Theoretical principles of the process of exhaust gas flow in turbocharger inlet channels are analysed in its dynamic and energetic aspects. Diagnostic parameters are defined which enable to formulate general evaluation of technical condition of the engine based on standard online measurements of the exhaust gas temperature. A proposal is made to extend the parametric methods of diagnosing workspaces in turbocharged marine engines by analysing time-histories of enthalpy changes of the exhaust gas flowing to the turbocompressor turbine. Such a time-history can be worked out based on dynamic measurements of the exhaust gas temperature, performed using a specially designed sheathed thermocouple. The first part of the article discusses possibilities to perform diagnostic inference about technical condition of a marine engine with pulse turbocharging system based on standard measurements of exhaust gas temperature in characteristic control cross-sections of its thermal and flow system. Selected metrological issues of online exhaust gas temperature measurements in those engines are discusses in detail, with special attention being focused on the observed disturbances and thermodynamic interpretation of the recorded measuring signal. Diagnostic informativeness of the exhaust gas temperature measurements performed in steady-state conditions of engine operation is analysed in the context of possible evaluations of technical condition of the engine workspaces, the injection system, and the fuel delivery process.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nick Papaioannou ◽  
Felix Leach ◽  
Martin Davy

Abstract Accurate measurement of exhaust gas temperature (EGT) in internal combustion engines (ICEs) is a challenging task. The most common, and also the most practical, method of measurement is to insert a physical probe, for example, a thermocouple or platinum resistance thermometer, directly into the exhaust flow. Historically, consideration of the measurement errors induced by this arrangement has focused on the effects of radiation and the loss of temporal resolution naturally associated with a probe of finite thermal inertia operating within a pulsating flow with a time-varying heat input. However, a recent numerical and experimental study has shown that conduction errors may also have a significant effect on the measured EGT, with errors approaching ∼80 K depending on engine operating conditions. In this work, the authors introduce a new temperature compensation method that can correct for the combined radiation, conduction, and dynamic response errors introduced during the measurement and thereby reconstruct the “true” crank-angle resolved EGT to an estimated accuracy of ±1.5%. The significance of this result is demonstrated by consideration of a first law energy balance on an engine. It is shown that the exhaust gas enthalpy term is underestimated by 15–18% when calculated using conventional time-averaged data as opposed to using the mass-average exhaust enthalpy that is obtained by combining the reconstructed temperature data with crank angle-resolved exhaust flow rates predicted by a well-validated one-dimensional (1D) simulation.


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