Impact of Engine Design on Vehicle Heating System Performance

971839

05/19/1997

Event
1995 Vehicle Thermal Management Systems Conference and Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
A global thermal model of a vehicle powertrain is used to quantify how different engine design and powertrain calibration strategies influence the performance of a vehicle heating system. Each strategy is evaluated on its ability to improve the warm-up and heat rejection characteristics of a small-displacement, spark-ignition engine while minimizing any adverse effect on fuel consumption or emissions. An energy audit analysis shows that the two strategies having the greatest impact on heating system performance are advancing the spark and forcing the transmission to operate in a lower gear. Changes in head mass, exhaust port diameter, and coolant flow rate influence the coolant warm-up rate but have relatively little effect on steady state heat transfer at the heater core.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/971839
Pages
16
Citation
Mandrusiak, G., and Alkidas, A., "Impact of Engine Design on Vehicle Heating System Performance," SAE Technical Paper 971839, 1997, https://doi.org/10.4271/971839.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
May 19, 1997
Product Code
971839
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English