The Reduction of Mechanical and Thermal Loads in a High-Speed HD Diesel Engine Using Miller Cycle with Late Intake Valve Closing

2017-01-0637

03/28/2017

Features
Event
WCX™ 17: SAE World Congress Experience
Authors Abstract
Content
Mechanical load and thermal load are the two main barriers limiting the engine power output of heavy duty (HD) diesel engines. Usually, the peak cylinder pressure could be reduced by retarding combustion phasing while introducing the drawback of higher thermal load and exhaust temperature. In this paper, Miller cycle with late intake valve closing was investigated at high speed high load condition (77 kW/L) on a single cylinder HD diesel engine. The results showed the simultaneous reduction of mechanical and thermal loads. In the meanwhile, higher boosting pressure was required to compensate the Miller loss of the intake charge during intake and compression process. The combustion temperature, cylinder pressure, exhaust temperature and NOx emission were reduced significantly with Miller cycle at the operating condition. Furthermore, the combustion process, smoke number and fuel consumption were analysed.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2017-01-0637
Pages
7
Citation
Zhang, Y., Wang, Z., Bai, H., Guo, C. et al., "The Reduction of Mechanical and Thermal Loads in a High-Speed HD Diesel Engine Using Miller Cycle with Late Intake Valve Closing," SAE Technical Paper 2017-01-0637, 2017, https://doi.org/10.4271/2017-01-0637.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Mar 28, 2017
Product Code
2017-01-0637
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English