A phenomenological mixture homogenization model for spark-ignition direct-injection engines

2017 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 168-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Frommater ◽  
Jens Neumann ◽  
Christian Hasse

In modern turbocharged direct-injection, spark-ignition engines, proper calibration of the engine control unit is essential to handle the increasing variability of actuators. The physically based simulation of engine processes such as mixture homogenization enables a model-based calibration of the engine control unit to identify an ideal set of actuator settings, for example, for efficient combustion with reduced exhaust emissions. In this work, a zero-dimensional phenomenological model for direct-injection, spark-ignition engines is presented that allows the equivalence ratio distribution function in the combustion chamber to be calculated and its development is tracked over time. The model considers the engine geometry, mixing time, charge motion and spray–charge interaction. Accompanying three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics, simulations are performed to obtain information on homogeneity at different operating conditions and to calibrate the model. The calibrated model matches the three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics reference both for the temporal homogeneity development and for the equivalence ratio distribution at the ignition time, respectively. When the model is validated outside the calibrated operating conditions, this shows satisfying results in terms of mixture homogeneity at the time of ignition. Additionally, only a slight modification of the calibration is shown to be required when transferring the model to a comparable engine. While the model is primarily aimed at target applications such as a direct-injection, spark-ignition soot emission model, its application to other issues, such as gaseous exhaust emissions, engine knock or cyclic fluctuations, is conceivable due to its general structure. The fast calculation enables mixture inhomogeneities to be estimated during driving cycle simulations.

2016 ◽  
Vol 26 (12) ◽  
pp. 1197-1239 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Price ◽  
Arash Hamzehloo ◽  
Pavlos Aleiferis ◽  
David Richardson

2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 606-620 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riccardo Amirante ◽  
Elia Distaso ◽  
Michele Napolitano ◽  
Paolo Tamburrano ◽  
Silvana Di Iorio ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Andrew M. Ickes ◽  
Thomas Wallner

With its high octane number and potentially favorable greenhouse gas and energy balance characteristics, ethanol offers potential to replace portions of gasoline as a transportation fuel. System optimization to utilize the increased knock resistance and evaporative cooling effect of ethanol can increase the performance and efficiency of spark-ignition engines. Though basic engine emissions and performance effects of ethanol fuel blends have been widely reported, limited studies have examined the details of combustion behavior and the interplay between fuel ethanol content and the behavior of the engine control system. This paper quantifies the response of a production engine control unit to ethanol fuel blends, along with the subsequent combustion behavior and resulting engine performance at high-load operating conditions. Steady-state testing is conducted on a modern direct-injection, spark-ignition, four-cylinder engine using a base engine calibration at full-load (wide-open throttle) conditions across a range of engine speeds from 1500 to 4000 rpm. Test fuels include gasoline, neat ethanol, and an intermediate blend of gasoline and ethanol. A combination of low-speed engine measurements and crank angle based cylinder pressure measurements are used to demonstrate the impact of increasing fuel ethanol content on engine control parameters. Ethanol’s increased knock resistance, demonstrated by its higher octane number, compared to gasoline makes combustion less susceptible to knock as ethanol fraction in the fuel increases. Accordingly, less spark retard is required to avoid knock at high engine load, translating to higher fuel conversion efficiency and increased specific power output. This effect is explored within the framework of a production engine calibration which uses active knock-avoidance feedback control. The relative contribution between a more aggressive engine calibration and increased fuel-evaporation charge-cooling to the increased efficiency and power resulting from increasing fuel ethanol percentage is also characterized.


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