4.6 Article

Using combustion net torque for estimation of combustion properties from measurements of crankshaft torque

Journal

CONTROL ENGINEERING PRACTICE
Volume 26, Issue -, Pages 233-244

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.conengprac.2014.01.014

Keywords

Internal combustion engines; Engine control; Engine management; Estimation algorithms

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Two methods, both based on the concept of combustion net torque, for estimation of combustion properties using measurements of crankshaft torque data are investigated in this work. The first of the proposed methods estimates entire burned mass fraction traces from corresponding combustion net torque traces. This is done by solving a convex optimization problem that is based on a derived analytical relation between the two quantities. The other proposed estimation method estimates the well established combustion phasing measure referred to as 50% burned mass fraction directly from combustion net torque using a nonlinear black-box mapping. The methods are assessed using both simulations and experimental data gathered from a 5-cylinder light-duty diesel engine equipped with a crankshaft torque sensor and cylinder pressure sensors that are used for reference measurements. The results indicate that both methods work well but the method that estimates entire burned mass fraction traces is more sensitive to torque data quality. Based on the experimental crankshaft torque data, the direct combustion phasing estimation method delivers estimates with a bias of less than I CAD and a cycle-to-cycle standard deviation of less than 2.7 CAD for all cylinders. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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