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Technical Paper

A Novel Method for Urea Concentration Deterioration Detection in BSVI Heavy Duty Engine

2024-01-16
2024-26-0154
Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) concentration monitoring is done to detect the concentration at which the emission thresholds are exceeded in BSVI engines [1]. This paper introduces a novel method to model the fault monitoring system with enable conditions designed to detect deterioration in DEF concentration, while reducing misdetection. This eliminates the need for dedicated sensor, reduces complexity, cost, and potential sensor-related failure modes. Traditionally, Diesel Exhaust Fluid quality sensors have been employed to measure the absolute concentration of Diesel Exhaust Fluid in the aqueous solution of urea [2]. This information is used to detect usage of poor quality DEF which results in increase in NOx emission beyond legal limits.
Technical Paper

Performance Prediction of Ethanol Powered Engine Using 1D Thermodynamic Simulation

2017-07-10
2017-28-1958
Bio-fuels potentially represent a more environmentally friendly alternative to fossil fuels as they produce fewer greenhouse gas emissions when burned. Ethanol is one such bio-fuel alternative to the conventional fossil fuels. Towards the initiative of sustainable transportation using alternative fuels, it is attempted to develop an ethanol powered engine for commercial vehicles and this paper attempts to explain the 1D thermodynamic simulation carried out for predicting the engine performance and combustion characteristics, as a part of the engine development program. Engine simulation is becoming an increasingly important engineering tool for reducing the development cost and time and also helps in carrying out various DOE iterations which are rather difficult to be conducted experimentally in any internal combustion engine development program. AVL Boost software is used for modeling and simulation.
Journal Article

Initial Development of a E85 Fueled, Multi Cylinder, Turbocharged, Spark Ignited, Heavy Duty Engine

2017-01-10
2017-26-0075
E85 (85% Ethanol + 15% Gasoline), as an alternative fuel has been widely used in spark ignited engines used in light duty vehicles. However, they are rarely used in spark ignited heavy duty engines. In this study, we used E85 in a 5.8 litre, multi cylinder, turbocharged, multi point - port injected, spark ignited heavy duty engine, to analyze the performance capability. As E85 has higher octane rating, the compression ratio was increased to 11.5:1. Experimental investigation of In-cylinder pressure was done and the engine’s ignition timing and injection duration was calibrated to operate the engine below peak firing pressure limits, without knocking. The experimental results showed that exhaust gas recirculation resulted in lower peak firing pressure and rate of heat release. The results of the engine test showed that E85 can be used in heavy duty spark ignited engines. The scope for future work is on addressing the higher BSFC and cold start from subzero temperature levels.
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