Notice of Retraction: Finite element modeling and analysis for key parts of a new type internal combustion engine

Author(s):  
Yongjun Nie
2010 ◽  
Vol 139-141 ◽  
pp. 938-942
Author(s):  
Ji Jing Lin ◽  
Yan Hong Chen

MFPSE, Micro Free Piston Swing Engine, is a new type of miniature internal combustion engine based on the working principle of two-stroke swing engine. The successful development and operation of this type of miniature internal combustion engine provide important significance for the miniaturization of the internal combustion engine, and provide a number of important research theory, computation method and experimental data. In this article, according to the work characteristics and co-ordination requirements of MFPSE (Micro Free Piston Swing Engine), whose strain interference is analyzed using finite element analysis software, the problems and interference of the center pendulum and cylinder is found evidently. The data of analysis provides theory basis for the MFPSE’s structural optimization, and is critical to improve the performance of MFPSE.


Author(s):  
Andreas P. Panayi ◽  
Harold J. Schock

Modeling the thermal and mechanical behavior of a piston is crucial, as it allows for the evaluation of piston performance including piston dynamics and friction. These characteristics directly affect the efficiency, reliability, and lifespan of an internal combustion engine. This work migrates from the conventional parameterized piston modeling approach and uses a full CAD finite element modeling simulation for the evaluation of the piston’s thermal and mechanical behavior as well as the resultant hydrodynamic and contact forces and moments experienced by it. The analysis is performed for two different piston to cylinder bore nominal clearances, and for one of them at two different engine speeds, while assuming the piston is moving at the center of the cylinder bore with no transverse or tilting motion.


Author(s):  
Santosh Shanbhag ◽  
Ian R. Grosse ◽  
Jack C. Wileden ◽  
Alan Kaplan

Abstract With the integration of CAD and FEA software packages, design engineers who are not skilled in finite element analysis are performing finite element modeling and analysis. Furthermore, in the analysis of a system, engineers often make numerous modeling simplifications and analysis assumptions depending on the trade-off between cost, accuracy, precision or other engineering analysis objectives. Thus, reusability or interoperability of engineering analysis models is difficult and often impractical due to the wealth of knowledge involved in the creation of such models and the lack of formal methods to codify and explicitly represent this critical modeling knowledge. Most institutions and organizations have started documenting these simplifications and assumptions, making them understandable for the other engineers within the organization. However, this does not allow a seamless exchange of data or interoperability with other analysis models of similar or dissimilar nature. This plays a very important role in today’s market, which is moving away from the traditional make-to-stock production model to a build-to-demand model. We address these issues in this paper by adopting and extending the computer science concept of meta-object, and applying it in novel ways to the domain of FEA and the representation of finite element modeling knowledge. We present a taxonomy for engineering models that aids in the definition of the various object analysis classes. A simple beam analysis example, followed by a more realistic injection-molded part example. The latter example involves injection-mold filling simulation, thermal cooling, and part ejection analyses which are subclasses for a generic manufacturing analysis meta-object class. Prototype implementations of automated support for this meta-object approach to finite element modeling is in progress.


2014 ◽  
Vol 945-949 ◽  
pp. 2810-2814
Author(s):  
Jing Liu ◽  
Jing Tao Han ◽  
Jin Chun Deng

Turbine Air Powered Engine (TAPE) is a new type engine which has the character of zero emission, no pollution. Mathematical models of TAPE were established by the method of exergy analysis, the overall exergy and the exergy loss after reduced pressure with throttling were simulated in this paper. The results show that the maximum exergy loss of system is 60% during the process of reduced pressure with throttling, so the type of throttling decompression is not suitable for the system of TAPE which has bigger pressure reducing ratio. The results of bench test indicate that output power increases with the increase of inlet pressure within the scope of less pressure, and the regulation is similar to the simulating result. In the hybrid system of pneumatic internal-combustion engine, the measure which the air powered system is used in low-speed stage and the internal combustion engine powered system is adopted in high-speed stage can effectively solve the problem which the fuel consumption of the internal combustion engine is too bigger at low speed.


Author(s):  
A. Ivanov ◽  
A. Kiapour ◽  
N. Ebraheim ◽  
V. K. Goel

The pelvis is a multi-component structure with complex geometry and biomechanical properties. Complex geometry, individual differences between subcomponents and aging create difficulties in analyzing the biomechanical behavior of the pelvis.


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