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Technical Paper

Camless Variable Valve Actuator with Two Discrete Lifts

2015-04-14
2015-01-0324
Camless Variable Valve Actuation (VVA) technologies have been known for improving fuel economy, reducing emissions, and enhancing engine performance. VVA can be divided into electro-magnetic, electro-hydraulic, and electro-pneumatic actuation. This paper presents an electro-hydraulic VVA design (called GD-VVA-2) that offers continuously variable timing and two discrete lifts (low lift S1 and high lift S2). The lift control is achieved through a lift control sleeve, which is hydraulically switched between two mechanically defined positions to provide accurate lifts. The low lift S1 has a wide design range, anywhere between zero and the high lift S2, i.e., 0 < S1 < S2. If S1 ≥ 0.5*S2, engine valves may operate at the low lift during most of a typical drive cycle. Operation at the low lift reduces energy consumption significantly. The GD-VVA-2 design offers compact package size and reasonable energy consumption.
Journal Article

Progress in Camless Variable Valve Actuation with Two-Spring Pendulum and Electrohydraulic Latching

2013-04-08
2013-01-0590
Camless Variable Valve Actuation (VVA) technologies have been known for improving fuel economy, reducing emissions, and enhancing engine performance. VVA can be divided into electro-magnetic, electro-hydraulic, and electro-pneumatic actuation. A family of camless VVA designs (called LGD-VVA or Gongda-VVA) has been presented in an earlier SAE publication (SAE 2007-01-1295) that consists of a two-spring actuation, a bypass passage, and an electrohydraulic latch-release mechanism. The two-spring pendulum system is used to provide efficient conversion between the moving mass kinetic energy and the spring potential energy for reduced energy consumption and to be more robust to the operational temperature than the conventional electrohydraulic actuation; and the electrohydraulic mechanism is intended for latch-release function, energy compensation and seating velocity control.
Technical Paper

Camless Variable Valve Actuation Designs with Two-Spring Pendulum and Electrohydraulic Latching

2007-04-16
2007-01-1295
Camless variable valve actuation (VVA) technologies have been known for improving fuel economy, reducing emissions, and enhancing engine performance. A family of VVA designs from LGD Technology, LLC (called LGD-VVA) has been configured to include a two-spring actuation, a bypass passage, and an electrohydraulic latch-release mechanism. The two-spring pendulum system provides efficient conversion between the moving mass kinetic energy and the spring potential energy and is less influenced, than a hydraulic actuation means, by operating conditions such as temperature. The electrohydraulic mechanism is used primarily for latch-release function, and it is also flexible enough in its design to offer different levels of energy input to overcome engine cylinder pressure, which can be substantial for exhaust valves. The LGD-VVA designs offer better lift variability, higher power density, and lower electrical demand relative to electromagnetic VVA systems.
Technical Paper

A Dynamic Model of Automotive Air Conditioning Systems

2005-04-11
2005-01-1884
A dynamic computer model of automotive air conditioning systems was developed. The model uses simulation software for the coding of 1-D heat transfer, thermodynamics, fluid flow, and control valves. The same software is used to model 3-D solid dynamics associated with mechanical mechanisms of the compressor. The dynamics of the entire AC system is thus simulated within the same software environment. The results will show the models potential applications in component and system design, calibration and control.
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