International Journal of Automotive Engineering
Online ISSN : 2185-0992
Print ISSN : 2185-0984
ISSN-L : 2185-0992
3 巻, 3 号
選択された号の論文の3件中1~3を表示しています
Research Paper
  • Jaber Nizar, Manabu Mukai, Ryoji Kagawa, Haruki Nakakura, Osamu Moriue ...
    2012 年 3 巻 3 号 p. 81-88
    発行日: 2012年
    公開日: 2016/03/25
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス
    Hydrogen rotary engines are promising power sources for the future hydrogen society, and improving their thermal efficiency helps propel tomorrow's car farther. This research looked into the combustion process to reduce fuel consumption. Primary studies of combustion duration and location showed that increasing the local mass burning rate in the L-side of the combustion chamber by generating turbulence was beneficial. Experiments with optical and real rotary engines proved that turbulence effectively increased mass burning rate in L-side and consequently engine's thermal efficiency and its lean limit.
  • Yohei Iwashita, Motonori Ishibashi, Yasuhiko Miura, Masashi Yamamoto
    2012 年 3 巻 3 号 p. 89-95
    発行日: 2012年
    公開日: 2016/03/25
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス
    Changes of driver behavior by the rear-end collision prevention support system with road-to-vehicle communication, was evaluated on a public road. From a viewpoint of safety, “normative behavior” which the system certainly requires to a driver was defined as “deceleration behavior in a poor visibility section”, and it was compared between with-system and without-system conditions. As a result, behavioral changes of gas pedal release or speed decrease were observed in a part of participants. By analysis of driver’s individual characteristics, the result of behavioral changes could be interpreted as being due to driver’s situation awareness for the risk of “invisible objects”.
  • S Fontanesi, E Severi, F Bozza, A Gimelli
    2012 年 3 巻 3 号 p. 97-105
    発行日: 2012年
    公開日: 2016/03/25
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス
    The paper reports a combined experimental and numerical investigation of a small unit displacement two-stroke SI engine operated with either Gasoline and Natural Gas (CNG). It is widely recognized that for two-stroke, crankcase scavenged, carbureted engines the scavenging patterns (fuel short-circuiting, residual gas distribution, point wise lambda field, etc.) plays a fundamental role on both engine performance and tailpipe emissions. To properly characterize the engine behavior in terms of scavenging patterns and combustion, a detailed multi-cycle 3D-CFD analysis of the scavenging process is at first performed starting from preliminary 1D computed boundary conditions provided by a in-house developed 1D model of the whole engine. In order to assess the accuracy of the adopted numerical approach, comparisons between numerical forecasts and experimental measurements of the instantaneous in-cylinder pressure history for steady-state operations of the engine are at first performed and shown in the paper. Subsequently, the activity is focused on the investigation of knock occurrence. In order to limit the computational cost of the simulations, calculations are at first carried out within the 1D modeling framework, where customized quasi-dimensional combustion and knock models are used. In particular, the 1D model is used to compute a numerical knock index which can be useful to address the tuning of the spark advance, given a prescribed and controlled percentage of knock released heat. At the end of the simulation process, the 1D knock index is qualitatively compared to results obtained from full 3D knocking analyses for different in-cylinder compositions and spark timings. The intrinsic knock-resistance of the CNG fuel is finally numerically exploited, through variations of both compression ratio and spark advance.
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