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Purdue scientists claim 'major leap' in engine design

Researchers have created the first computational model to track engine performance from one combustion cycle to the next for a new type of engine that could dramatically reduce oil consumption and the emission of global-warming pollutants.

"We're talking about a major leap in engine technology that could be used in hybrid cars to make vehicles much more environmentally friendly and fuel stingy," said Gregory M. Shaver, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University.

A key portion of his research, based at Purdue's Ray W. Herrick Laboratories, hinges on designing engines so that their intake and exhaust valves are no longer driven by mechanisms connected to the pistons. The innovation would be a departure from the way automotive engines have worked since they were commercialized more than a century ago.

In today's internal combustion engines, the pistons turn a crankshaft, which is linked to a camshaft that opens and closes the valves, directing the flow of air and exhaust into and out of the cylinders. The new method would eliminate the mechanism linking the crankshaft to the camshaft, providing an independent control system for the valves.

Because the valves' timing would no longer be restricted by the pistons' movement, they could be more finely tuned to allow more efficient combustion of diesel, gasoline and alternative fuels, such as ethanol and biodiesel, Shaver said.

The concept, known as variable valve actuation, would enable significant improvements in conventional gasoline and diesel engines used in cars and trucks and for applications such as generators, he said. The technique also enables the introduction of an advanced method called homogeneous charge compression ignition, or HCCI, which would allow the United States to drastically reduce its dependence on foreign oil and the production of harmful exhaust emissions.

The homogeneous charge compression ignition technique would make it possible to improve the efficiency of gasoline engines by 15 percent to 20 percent, making them as efficient as diesel engines while nearly eliminating smog-generating nitrogen oxides, Shaver said.

This improved combustion efficiency also would reduce emission of two other harmful gases contained in exhaust: global-warming carbon dioxide and unburned hydrocarbons. The method allows for the more precise control of the fuel-air mixture and combustion inside each cylinder, eliminating "fuel rich" pockets seen in conventional diesel engines, resulting in little or no emission of pollutants called particulates, a common environmental drawback of diesels.

The variable valve actuation system makes it possible to "reinduct," or reroute a portion of the exhaust back into the cylinders to improve combustion efficiency and reduce emissions. The system also makes it possible to alter the amount of compression in the cylinders of both conventional and HCCI engines and to adjust the mixing and combustion timing, allowing for more efficient combustion.

"Variable valve actuation and HCCI would help to significantly reduce our dependence on oil by enabling engines to work better with ethanol and biodiesel and other alternative fuels," Shaver said. "But accomplishing this is going to require a strong effort in several research areas - a commitment of funding, people power, industrial involvement and academic involvement."

In HCCI, the "charge," or fuel-air mixture, is homogeneous, meaning it is uniform. Adding the reinducted exhaust both dilutes and increases the temperature of this air-fuel mixture before compression. The process also allows for a uniform "auto ignition," or combustion without the need of a spark, at a lower compression than normally required for diesel engines, reducing engine wear and tear.

Inside the cylinders of ordinary internal combustion engines, there is a large temperature difference, or gradient, between portions of the air-fuel mixture that have been ignited and portions that are still not burned. The homogeneous fuel-air mixture and reinducted exhaust work together to eliminate this temperature gradient during the auto-ignition, which decreases the overall combustion temperature. Decreasing the combustion temperature is a key step in dramatically reducing nitrogen oxides.

A major challenge will be learning how to automatically adjust valve motions and fuel injection to match changes in operating conditions dictated by factors such as a vehicle's varying speed, how much weight it is carrying and what type of fuel is being used.

Engines incorporating HCCI will use sensors to monitor an engine's performance, providing crucial data needed to dynamically alter the valves' timing. Controlling the combustion process via variable valve actuation will require specialized software algorithms being developed by the Purdue researchers.

"We will use feedback control, where you have sensors that provide data from the engine and an algorithm to precisely control the valves," Shaver said.

Shaver, his colleagues and students are in the process of building a one-of-a-kind multicylinder engine design with "fully-flexible variable valve actuation," which will allow the study of HCCI and alternative fuel combustion, he said.

He was the lead author of a research paper honored with the 2006 Rudolf Kalman Paper Award for the best paper published in the Journal of Dynamic Systems, Measurement, and Control. The award was issued last year during the International Mechanical Engineering Conference and Exposition in Chicago. The paper detailed findings related to a new mathematical model to help develop the homogeneous charge compression ignition system.

In order for the system to work, it is critical to track changing engine performance from one combustion cycle to the next. The mathematical model Shaver has developed is the first of its kind to precisely track this dynamic cycle-to-cycle performance and other data.

The highest efficiency would be realized by combining HCCI technologies in hybrid vehicles that use an electric motor in addition to an internal combustion engine.

"It's essential to continue research on multiple fronts, including work to tackle problems associated with fuel cells and hybrid systems and understanding how to incorporate the advanced combustion engines on hybrid powertrains," he said.

U.S. petroleum imports are predicted to increase about 35 percent by 2030. At the same time, the transportation-related emission of carbon dioxide is expected to rise by about 35 percent in the United States.

The authors of the paper published last year in the Journal of Dynamic Systems, Measurement, and Control were Shaver; J. Christian Gerdes, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Stanford University; Matthew J. Roelle, a graduate student at Stanford; Patrick A. Caton, an assistant professor at the U.S. Naval Academy; and Christopher F. Edwards, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Stanford.

Shaver's research team at Purdue includes graduate students David Snyder, Gayatri Adi and Anup Kulkarni, undergraduate students Armando Indrajuana, Elena Washington, Justin Ervin and Matt Carroll.

Purdue University

May 10, 2007

Comments

Pneumatic Automobile Engine

March 25, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 14 weeks ago
Comment id: 28312

I have a plan for an all pneumatically operated engine.Who would be the experts in this field whi would listen to this idea?
C.Lee Pierson
cpierson2002@comcast.net

There are other engines than

June 3, 2007 by darksun93, 2 years 4 weeks ago
Comment id: 23843

There are other engines than the internal combustion piston engine, Laer. It is just that however you get around it, the problem of transfering mechanical energy to electricity, or heat into mechnical energy, has to obey the laws of Thermodynamics. Until human technology drastically increases via superconductors, better material science, and more advanced bio/chemistry derivatives, humans are stuck with the internal combustion engine and all its variations and modifications. Because in the end, you don't really get ahead in this universe if you shelve a hundred years of development in favor of a "new tech". That's just dumping all your research in your current project and starting something new. Sure, that something new might be fancy and smancy, but it still takes time. And in this universe of ours, who knows how much time we really have? Can we afford to be wasting it by listening to the Greenies? When the real Greenies come, Laer, will Global Warmies protect us from them with their environmental policemen?

- - - - - -
don't buy World of Warcraft Gold, make'em....

EVIC engines, VVT and HCCI

June 3, 2007 by Dave Bowes (not verified), 2 years 4 weeks ago
Comment id: 23841

While it is true that I have developed a "successful" small engine VVT system with solenoid operated, micro computer controlled, valves I am a long, long way from haveing a control system capable of HCCI.
Controling valves with solenoids has some special challenges that makes applying this type of VVT to automotive engines much more challenging than most realize. Because the cylinder pressure when you want to open the exhaust valve isn't constant, it is very difficult to precisely control valve opening. There is a significant response time for the valve solenoid assemblies. For my small EVIC engines it is in the 2 millisecond range. But it varies with, among other things, cylinder pressure and solenoid temperature. When you try to compensate for these you soon discover that it isn't easy and the control algorithms become very complex. You would like to have temperature, pressure and position sensors. They will be in a very harsh environment so reliability is going to be a challenge. Sure it can be done, but is it going to be more reliable and more cost effective that BMWs Valvetronic system? And is it going to give the precise control that will be needed for HCCI? These are, from my experience, still open questions.
I encourage anyone who thinks it is going to be easy to get my Student Guide CD and use it as a guide to design and build a solenoid operated valve system for a larger engine. When you get it working with automotive reliability you will better understand what I am saying. Dave Bowes, EVIC designer.

This isn't new, and has already been done

May 12, 2007 by I hate to break the News (not verified), 2 years 7 weeks ago
Comment id: 23613

If you go online and google "evic" engine, Dave Bowes has already done this, granted it's on a small engine, there's no reason why It couldn't be replicated on a larger scale. They are now bringing out these technologies because it's being realized that we are going to start running out of Oil, it's just now companies are taking it seriously.

This is enraging

May 11, 2007 by Hyeronimous (not verified), 2 years 7 weeks ago
Comment id: 23607

I jsut wanted to comment that most of what is being discussed here has already been invented before and neglected by the car industry. It is really a shame and makes one wonder deeply about the true motivations of the car industry. What strikes me more is that the increases of efficiency and fuel combustion mentioned in this article have been deemed imposible before when independent inventors have made claims about that.

But what enrages me more is that since the advent of computerized and electronic fuel injection for cars, the possibility of independent control of the valve timing has been just a matter of engineering, and have to wait more than a decade to see it being claimed as a breaktrough, I have no words for calling this. They are laughing in our faces!!!

Not new

May 11, 2007 by Michael Tiller (not verified), 2 years 7 weeks ago
Comment id: 23606

As C. Russ pointed out, variable valve actuation is nothing new. Furthermore, HCCI is nothing new and the combination of them together is nothing new. Finally, cycle simulation models to of HCCI are also not new.

Now HCCI is a fascinating approach and it does hold lots of potential but also lots of technical challenges. I just don't think calling this a "major leap" is accurate.

Engines that dont use

May 10, 2007 by C. Russ (not verified), 2 years 7 weeks ago
Comment id: 23603

Engines that dont use camshafts are not at all new. Many F1 teams have used pnuematic valves for years.

Can't wait!

May 10, 2007 by Dave Narby (not verified), 2 years 8 weeks ago
Comment id: 23598

It's about time... The ICE has been in need of an overhaul for a long time now.

Unfortunately, what it will take for auto manufactures to implement some of the advanced design principles remains to be seen...

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