TY - JOUR
T1 - Testing of a Modern Wankel Rotary Engine - Part III
T2 - SAE 2022 Annual World Congress Experience, WCX 2022
AU - Vorraro, Giovanni
AU - Turner, James W.G.
AU - Akehurst, Sam
N1 - Funding Information:
Thanks go to Innovate UK and the UK’s Advanced Propulsion Centre for funding this work. Thanks is also due to all of the ADAPT project partners: Westfield Technology Group, Advanced Innovative Engineering, GEMS and Saietta in addition to colleagues at the University of Bath.
Funding Information:
The scientific community is moving its interest towards the development of new and improved decarbonised fuels (e-fuels) or the implementation of technologies based on hydrogen (H ICEs and fuel cells) together with innovative engine architectures and powertrains. Innovate UK and the Advanced Propulsion Centre predicted this trend and funded the ADAPT Intelligent Powertrain project, led by Westfield Sports Cars Limited in partnership with Advanced Innovative Engineering (AIE) UK, Saietta, General Engine Management System (GEMS) and the University of Bath. The project aimed to develop an innovative hybrid powertrain for automotive applications. Within the University of Bath, the Institute for Advanced Automotive Propulsion Systems (IAAPS) established a fruitful co-operation with AIE UK where their 225CS rotary engine [] has been experimentally tested and modelled through kinematic and computational fluid dynamics codes to make this machine Euro 6 complaint. Within the project, much effort was spent on innovative fuel control strategies to reduce the rotary’s well-known appetite for fuel [, ]. In addition, the several theoretical investigations supported by numerical activities proved that is possible to improve the emissions of Wankel rotary engines and successfully employ them as range extenders [, ]. Furthermore, the Wankel configuration demonstrated the capability to be coupled with a rotary expander of the same geometric family and so improve the overall system efficiency and fuel consumption while further reducing its emissions []. 2
PY - 2022/3/29
Y1 - 2022/3/29
N2 - This work represents a further contribution to reporting experimental activities carried out on a modern Wankel rotary engine. Specifically, in this study, the firing performance of the Advanced Innovative Engineering 225CS engine is analysed. Preliminary presentations of the experimental and measurement setup and a motoring analysis were extensively covered in Part I and II of this suite of papers while the current work presents the combustion analysis of the firing indicated pressure cycles collected through the bespoke combustion analyser software developed within the project. With the Wankel rotary engine gaining popularity again due to its potential as a range extender for battery electric vehicles, the aim of this work was mainly to analyse the fuel consumption together with the overall efficiency and the emissions at different engine speeds and loads as per classic steady-state engine testing. The characteristic curves of power and torque thus derived from the experimental measurements are reported while further deductions on combustion phenomena are then drawn from an analysis of the indicated pressure cycles. Specifically, parameters such as the rate of heat release, the net heat release, the IMEP and the indicated instantaneous torque are assessed. Further considerations are drawn on the overall mechanical efficiency relying on the IMEP computed from the indicated pressure cycles and the BMEP inferred from the torqued measured experimentally under steady-state conditions. Furthermore, the effects of the combustion on the internal pressure of the Self-Pressurizing Air-Rotor-Cooling System employed are evaluated in addition to parameters such as the Coefficient of Variation of the IMEP for the evaluation of the cycle-to-cycle combustion quality and engine regularity. Finally, the post-processed data represent an update to the historical literature on Wankel rotary engines. In addition, it can be used for the development and validation of numerical models for such engines hence allowing investigation by means of simulations of the effect on efficiency and performance of the rotary engine when employing alternative fuels such as hydrogen in the future.
AB - This work represents a further contribution to reporting experimental activities carried out on a modern Wankel rotary engine. Specifically, in this study, the firing performance of the Advanced Innovative Engineering 225CS engine is analysed. Preliminary presentations of the experimental and measurement setup and a motoring analysis were extensively covered in Part I and II of this suite of papers while the current work presents the combustion analysis of the firing indicated pressure cycles collected through the bespoke combustion analyser software developed within the project. With the Wankel rotary engine gaining popularity again due to its potential as a range extender for battery electric vehicles, the aim of this work was mainly to analyse the fuel consumption together with the overall efficiency and the emissions at different engine speeds and loads as per classic steady-state engine testing. The characteristic curves of power and torque thus derived from the experimental measurements are reported while further deductions on combustion phenomena are then drawn from an analysis of the indicated pressure cycles. Specifically, parameters such as the rate of heat release, the net heat release, the IMEP and the indicated instantaneous torque are assessed. Further considerations are drawn on the overall mechanical efficiency relying on the IMEP computed from the indicated pressure cycles and the BMEP inferred from the torqued measured experimentally under steady-state conditions. Furthermore, the effects of the combustion on the internal pressure of the Self-Pressurizing Air-Rotor-Cooling System employed are evaluated in addition to parameters such as the Coefficient of Variation of the IMEP for the evaluation of the cycle-to-cycle combustion quality and engine regularity. Finally, the post-processed data represent an update to the historical literature on Wankel rotary engines. In addition, it can be used for the development and validation of numerical models for such engines hence allowing investigation by means of simulations of the effect on efficiency and performance of the rotary engine when employing alternative fuels such as hydrogen in the future.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85137168944&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4271/2022-01-0591
DO - 10.4271/2022-01-0591
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85137168944
SN - 0148-7191
JO - SAE Technical Papers
JF - SAE Technical Papers
Y2 - 5 April 2022 through 7 April 2022
ER -