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Advanced diesel engine component development program, tasks 4-14This report summarizes the Advanced Diesel Engine Component Development (ADECD) Program to develop and demonstrate critical technology needed to advance the heavy-duty low heat rejection engine concept. Major development activities reported are the design, analysis, and fabrication of monolithic ceramic components; vapor phase and solid film lubrication; electrohydraulic valve actuation; and high pressure common rail injection. An advanced single cylinder test bed was fabricated as a laboratory tool in studying these advanced technologies. This test bed simulates the reciprocator for a system having no cooling system, turbo compounding, Rankine bottoming cycle, common rail injection, and variable valve actuation to achieve fuel consumption of 160 g/kW-hr (.26 lb/hp-hr). The advanced concepts were successfully integrated into the test engine. All ceramic components met their functional and reliability requirements. The firedeck, cast-in-place ports, valves, valve guides, piston cap, and piston ring were made from silicon nitride. Breakthroughs required to implement a 'ceramic' engine included the fabrication of air-gap cylinder heads, elimination of compression gaskets, machining of ceramic valve seats within the ceramic firedeck, fabrication of cast-in-place ceramic port liners, implementation of vapor phase lubrication, and elimination of the engine coolant system. Silicon nitride valves were successfully developed to meet several production abuse test requirements and incorporated into the test bed with a ceramic valve guide and solid film lubrication. The ADECD cylinder head features ceramic port shields to increase insulation and exhaust energy recovery. The combustion chamber includes a ceramic firedeck and piston cap. The tribological challenge posed by top ring reversal temperatures of 550 C was met through the development of vapor phase lubrication using tricresyl phosphate at the ring-liner interface. A solenoid-controlled, variable valve actuation system that eliminated the conventional camshaft was demonstrated on the test bed. High pressure fuel injection via a common rail system was also developed to reduce particulate emissions.
Document ID
19950011626
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Kaushal, Tony S.
(Detroit Diesel Allison MI, United States)
Weber, Karen E.
(Detroit Diesel Allison MI, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
November 1, 1994
Subject Category
Mechanical Engineering
Report/Patent Number
DDC-RO1-ADECD-NAS
NAS 1.26:191203
E-8198
DOE/NASA/0329-2
NASA-CR-191203
Accession Number
95N18041
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: DEN3-329
PROJECT: RTOP 778-34-2A
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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