Method Development and Application of Thermal Encapsulation to Reduce Fuel Consumption of Internal Combustion Powertrains

2019-01-0902

04/02/2019

Event
WCX SAE World Congress Experience
Authors Abstract
Content
Under bonnet thermal encapsulation is a method for retaining the heat generated by a running powertrain after it is turned off. By retaining the heat in the engine bay, the powertrain will be closer to its operating temperatures the next time it is started, reducing the warm up time required. This reduces the period of inefficiency due to high friction losses before the engine reaches it operating temperature, and as a result reduces the vehicles fuel consumption and CO2 emissions. To develop an integrated and efficient encapsulation design, CAE methods can be applied to allow this work stream to start as early in a vehicles development cycle as possible. In this work, the existing test methods are discussed, and a new Thermal CFD method is presented that accurately simulates the fluid temperatures after a customer representative 9 hour park period.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2019-01-0902
Pages
9
Citation
Owen, R., Price, A., Barril Boleto, J., Sivasankaran, S. et al., "Method Development and Application of Thermal Encapsulation to Reduce Fuel Consumption of Internal Combustion Powertrains," SAE Technical Paper 2019-01-0902, 2019, https://doi.org/10.4271/2019-01-0902.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 2, 2019
Product Code
2019-01-0902
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English