scholarly journals A One-Dimensional Gas Dynamics Code for Turbocharger Turbine Pulsating Flow Performance Modelling

Author(s):  
Adam Feneley ◽  
Apostolos Pesiridis ◽  
Hua Chen

As governments around the world ramp up their efforts to reduce CO2 emissions, downsizing internal combustion engines has become a dominant trend in the automotive industry. Air charging systems are being utilised to increase power density and therefore lower emissions by downsizing internal combustion engines. Turbocharging represents the majority of these air charging systems, which are commonly adopted for commercial and passenger vehicles. The process of matching turbomachinery to an engine during early-stage development is important to achieving maximum engine performance in terms of power output and the reduction of emissions. Despite on-engine conditions providing highly unsteady gas flows, current turbocharger development commonly uses performance maps that are produced from steady state measurements. There are other significant sources of error to be found in early stage turbocharger performance prediction, such as the omission of heat transfer effects, and the use of data extrapolation methods to cover the entire operating range of a device from limited data sets. Realistic engine conditions provide a complex heat transfer scenario, which is dependent upon load history and the component layout of the engine bay. Heat transfer effects are particularly prevalent at low engine loads, whilst pulsating effects are significant at both high and low engine speeds (and therefore exhaust pulse frequency). Compressor maps are often provided by manufacturers with a level of heat transfer corresponding to a gas stand test, not realistic engine conditions. This causes a mismatch when using the aforementioned maps in commercial engine codes. This reduces the quality of overall engine performance predictions, since as the temperature of the exhaust gas on the turbine side rises, the performance prediction increasingly deviates from the usual adiabatic assumption used in simulations. In the present work, a one-dimensional unsteady flow model has been developed to predict the performance of a vaneless turbine under pulsating inlet conditions, with scope to account for heat transfer effects. Flow within the volute is considered to be one-dimensional and unsteady, with mass addition and withdrawal used to simulate the gas flow between the volute and rotor. Rotor passages are also treated as one-dimensional and unsteady, with the equations being solved by the method of characteristics. This model is able to simulate the circumferential feeding of the rotor from the casing, unlike many previous zero and one-dimensional models. Building upon previous work, the basis of this code has been constructed in C++ with future integration with other modern gas dynamics codes in mind. By providing the appropriate instantaneous operating conditions at specified time intervals, a code such as this could theoretically negate the need for maps produced by steady-state data.


Author(s):  
R. Pearson ◽  
M. Bassett ◽  
P. Virr ◽  
S. Lever ◽  
A. Early

The sensitivity of engine performance to gas-dynamic phenomena in the exhaust system has been known for around 100 years but is still relatively poorly understood. The nonlinearity of the wave-propagation behaviour renders simple empirical approaches ineffective, even in a single-cylinder engine. The adoption of analytical tools such as engine-cycle-simulation codes has enabled greater understanding of the tuning mechanisms but for multi-cylinder engines has required the development of accurate models for pipe junctions. The present work examines the propagation of pressure waves through pipe junctions using shock-tube rigs in order to validate a computational model. Following this the effects of exhaust-system gas dynamics on engine performance are discussed using the results from an engine-cycle-simulation program based on the equations of one-dimensional compressible fluid flow.



Author(s):  
M Abidat ◽  
M Hachemi ◽  
M K Hamidou ◽  
N C Baines

This paper describes a method for predicting the performance under both turbine inlet steady state and non-steady state flow conditions of a mixed flow turbine used for turbocharged internal combustion engines. The mixed flow turbine steady state performances computed with the steady state performance prediction method are in good agreement with the experimental results obtained in the Imperial College turbocompressor cold air test rig. The unsteady state performance is computed using a one-dimensional model based on the solution of the unsteady one-dimensional flow equations. These equations are solved in the volute by a finite difference method using a four-step explicit Runge—Kutta scheme. The instantaneous volute exit condition is provided by the steady state rotor performance prediction model with the assumption of a quasi-steady state flow in the rotor. The computed instantaneous performances are in reasonable agreement with published experimental data for the same mixed flow turbine. The unsteady flow model is also used to study the effects of the frequency and the amplitude of the pulse on the performances of the mixed flow turbine.



2009 ◽  
Vol 64 (9) ◽  
pp. 2216-2225 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.S. Falcão ◽  
V.B. Oliveira ◽  
C.M. Rangel ◽  
C. Pinho ◽  
A.M.F.R. Pinto






2014 ◽  
Vol 698 ◽  
pp. 631-636 ◽  
Author(s):  
L.V. Plotnikov ◽  
B.P. Zhilkin ◽  
Y.M. Brodov

The results of experimental research of the influence of high-frequency gas-dynamical nonstationarity on the intensity of heat transfer in the intake and exhaust tract of piston engines are presented in the article. Experimental setup and methods of the experiments are described in the article. Dependences of instantaneous values of flow velocity and the local heat transfer coefficient in the intake and exhaust tract of the engine from the crankshaft rotation angle are presented in the article.





Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document