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Technical Paper

Modeling and Parameterization Study of Fuel Consumption and Emissions for Light Commercial Vehicles

2014-03-24
2014-01-2020
This paper describes the effects of diverse driving modes and vehicle component characteristics impact on fuel efficiency and emissions of light commercial vehicles. The AVL's vehicle and powertrain system level simulation tool (CRUISE) was adopted in this study. The main input data such as the fuel consumption & emission map were based on the experimental value and vehicle components characteristic data (full load characteristic curves, gear shifting position curves, torque conversion curve etc.) and basic specifications (gross weight, gear ratio, tire radius etc.) were used based on the database or suggested value. The test database for two diesel vehicles adopted whether prediction accuracy of simulation data were converged in acceptable range. These data had been acquired from the portable emission measurement system, the exhaust emission and operating conditions (engine speed, vehicle speed, pedal position etc.) were acquired at each time step.
Technical Paper

Two-stage Combustion Strategy for Reducing NOx Emissions in a Compression Ignition Engine

2011-11-08
2011-32-0659
This paper describes the effects of two stage combustion strategy on the engine performance and the exhaust emission characteristics in a compression ignition engine. The two-stage combustion strategy targets reduction of NOx emissions by decreasing oxygen concentration for second stage combustion. Thus, the first injection was provided in order to consume in-cylinder oxygen, rather than generate power. A multi-dimensional CFD code was utilized to predict engine performance and emission characteristics. For the accurate and efficient computational calculation of ignition and combustion characteristics of diesel fuel, the reduced n-heptane mechanism was used in this study. The calculation for two-stage combustion was performed after validating against the experimental result. The KH-RT breakup model and gas-jet model was applied for the prediction of spray behavior and characteristics. To calculate the ignition and combustion process, CHEMKIN II [1] code was used.
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