Browse Publications Technical Papers 1999-01-0556
1999-03-01

A Method of Predicting Brake Specific Fuel Consumption Maps 1999-01-0556

A method of predicting brake specific fuel consumption characteristics from limited specifications of engine design has been investigated. For spark ignition engines operating on homogeneous mixtures, indicated specific fuel consumption based on gross indicated power is related to compression ratio and spark timing relative to optimum values. The influence of burn rate is approximately accounted for by the differences in spark timings required to correctly phase combustion. Data from engines of contemporary design shows that indicated specific fuel consumption can be defined as a generic function of relative spark timing, mixture air/fuel ratio and exhaust gas recirculation rate. The additional information required to generate brake specific performance maps is cylinder volumetric efficiency, rubbing friction, auxiliary loads, and exhaust back pressure characteristics. A closed set of equations is developed and the method solution presented together with illustrative results showing good agreement between predictions and experimental data. The effects of engine design and calibration settings are investigated.

SAE MOBILUS

Subscribers can view annotate, and download all of SAE's content. Learn More »

Access SAE MOBILUS »

Members save up to 16% off list price.
Login to see discount.
Special Offer: Download multiple Technical Papers each year? TechSelect is a cost-effective subscription option to select and download 12-100 full-text Technical Papers per year. Find more information here.
We also recommend:
TECHNICAL PAPER

The Effect of Exhaust Recycle on Knock-Limited SI Engine Performance

750025

View Details

TECHNICAL PAPER

A Quasi-Dimensional Three-Zone Model for Performance and Combustion Noise Evaluation of a Twin-Spark High-EGR Engine

2004-01-0619

View Details

TECHNICAL PAPER

Modeling the Effects of Combustion Variability for Application to Idle Speed Control in SI Engines

2002-01-2734

View Details

X