Fuel Assisted Idle Speed Control for Lean Burn Gasoline Engines

2006-32-0009

11/13/2006

Event
Small Engine Technology Conference & Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Reduced engine idle speed reduces fuel consumption but requires active idle speed control (ISC) to avoid stalls due to accessory load disturbances. For gasoline engines, spark advance is used in conjunction with air flow for the idle speed control. However, for spark control to be effective the nominal spark timing has to be retarded from the optimal timing to allow spark to increase torque. This offsets the fuel consumption benefit from lower speeds. During lean homogenous operating modes, Fuel Assisted ISC (FA-ISC) uses fuel to increase torque (similar to diesel and gasoline stratified charge) eliminating the need for the retarded nominal spark. The engine then operates close to optimal spark and the lean air fuel limit for optimal fuel economy.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2006-32-0009
Pages
7
Citation
Kerns, J., and Surnilla, G., "Fuel Assisted Idle Speed Control for Lean Burn Gasoline Engines," SAE Technical Paper 2006-32-0009, 2006, https://doi.org/10.4271/2006-32-0009.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Nov 13, 2006
Product Code
2006-32-0009
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English