Internal Combustion Optical Sensor (ICOS)

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Internal Combustion Optical Sensor (ICOS) Optical Engine Indication

The ICOS System In-Cylinder Optical Indication 4air/fuel ratio 4exhaust gas concentration and EGR 4gas temperature 4analysis of highly dynamic engine conditions 4crank angle and cycle resolved 4no engine modification needed 4for spark ignition and compression ignition engines Optical engine indication synchronized with standard pressure indication allows a much more detailed characterization of the in-cylinder charge formation process. 2

Optical Engine Indication Internal Combustion Optical Sensor LaVision s Internal Combustion Optical Sensors (ICOS) measure crank angle resolved air/fuel ratio, exhaust gas concentration and gas temperature locally at the spark plug, glow plug or at any other in-cylinder location using optical probes. The ICOS systems provide highly time resolved data of the relevant engine parameters at the tip of the probe. Single cycle parameter profiles as well as variations over many cycles are recorded. Measurement Principle of Optical Engine Indication rel. exhaust density fuel density [mol/m³] pressure [bar] 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 8 6 4 2 0 40 30 20 10 0 The ICOS measurement systems are based on infrared absorption spectroscopy of the relevant molecules like water, CO 2 or hydrocarbons. The in-situ absorption technique is instantaneous and needs no gas extraction. A single probe can measure multiple parameters simultaneously. 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 cycle # Tip-in of an engine from coasting to load operation measured with ICOS system. The crank angle resolved fuel and exhaust density profiles together with cylinder pressure are shown for six consecutive engine cycles. 3

ICOS-Fuel Cycle-to-Cycle Variations cycle 401 r fuel The ICOS-Fuel system offers the possibility to examine hundreds of consecutive cycles with crank angle resolution to analyze stability and combustion effects. In the upper diagram the fuel density profiles of a catalytic converter heating point recorded at the spark plug is shown over 500 consecutive cycles. After the dual injection (-200 and -180 CA atdc), the fuel density rises during compression to TDC and decreases again due to the beginning of expansion afterwards. When ignition takes place at 30 to 40 CA atdc, the fuel disappears. Abnormal combustion in individual cycles is resolved such as the delayed ignition in the marked cycle 401. The drop in the fuel density at 100 CA atdc marks the appearance of the flame front locally at the probe tip. The timing is significantly later than the ignition point. For this individual cycle, the fuel density and the corresponding l-value curve are also shown in the bottom diagram. The l-value curve is calculated from the fuel density using a thermodynamic model. rel. fuel density [-] 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 double injection crank angle [ atdc] IGN cycle # 1.4 fuel λ-value 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 local lambda-value [-] Transient Conditions - Speed Change 0-240 -180-120 -60 0 60 120 crank angle [ atdc] 0 2000 rpm 1000 rpm 2000 rpm -300-200 -100 0 100 200 300 crank angle [ atdc] The diagram shows the transient behavior of the local fuel density over 500 consecutive engine cycles. Each line represents one engine cycle, the fuel density is color coded. The engine speed was at first slowed down from 2000 rpm to 1000 rpm and after releasing the break the speed returned to 2000 rpm. During the breaking the injection and the ignition timings were shifted forward in the cycle by the engine electronics. The amount of injected fuel rises due to the increased load during breaking. References A. Grosch, V. Beushausen, O. Thiele, and R. Grzeszik, Crank angle resolved determination of fuel concentration and air/fuel ratio in a SI-internal combustion engine using a modified optical spark plug, SAE Technical Papers (2007), Nr. 2007-01-0644 S. Liebsch, A. Zboralski, J. Maass, M. Guenther, et al., Cold Start Simulation and Test on DISI Engines Utilizing a Multi-Zone Vaporization Approach, SAE Technical Paper 2012-01-0402, 2012 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 cycle # 4

Ultra-Fast In-Cylinder Gas Analysis 4air/fuel ratio - lambda value - transients 4investigation of highly dynamic engine conditions 4verification of injection strategies and systems The ignitibility quality of in-cylinder charge cannot be determined by pressure indication alone. Additional optical engine indication of fuel density and local air/fuel ratio at the spark plug position reveals a quantification of the ignitibility of the mixture at the exact ignition position. The crank angle resolved measurement of the fuel density distinguishes the ICOS-Fuel system from other techniques, like gas extraction. In contrast to conventional Flame Ionization Detectors (FIDs) ICOS measures directly inside the cylinder without any time delay. Variations within many consecutive cycles can be visualized in real-time. In combination with the cylinder pressure the local air/fuel ratio (l-value) is derived from the fuel concentration. Taking advantage of these capabilities, investigations and comparisons of injection strategies and systems are carried out in great detail. Specifications Measuring principle IR absorption Indicated quantities fuel density, air/fuel ratio Measurement error < 2% Sampling rate 30 khz Data acquisition crank angle resolved multiple cycles 5

ICOS-EGR Variation of external EGR measured in-cylinder CO 2 concentration [%] For in-cylinder CO 2 measurements the ICOS probe was placed into a glow plug adapter of a Diesel engine. The diagram shows the different in-cylinder CO 2 -concentrations for changing applied external EGR rates. The absolute amount of CO 2 in the cylinder is determined with crank angle resolution over single cycles. Internal EGR The correlation between the applied external EGR rate and the measured EGR rate for two different engine speeds in a truck Diesel engine is demonstrated here. The error bars show the EGR fluctuations over 100 cycles. The offset between the measured and applied EGR-values (dashed line) is the internal EGR rate at a given condition. The results show a higher standard deviation of the EGR rate at higher engine speeds. The amount of internal EGR rate changes with engine speed and applied external EGR rate, proving the strong influence of these engine parameters on the internal flow management. detected EGR 40% 35% 1500 rpm 30% 1200 rpm 25% 20% 15% internal EGR-rate 10% 5% 0% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% applied external EGR Reference R. Vanhaelst,O. Thiele, T. Berg, B. Hahne, H.-P. Stellet, F. Wildhagen, W. Hentschel, C. Jördens, J. Czajka, K. Wislocki, Development of an in-cylinder-optical infrared sensor for the determination of EGR and residual gas rates inside SI and diesel engines, 11th Congress Engine Combustion Processes 2013 6

Ultra-Fast In-Cylinder Gas Analysis 4internal and external EGR-rates 4analysis of EGR-stability 4synchronous multi cylinder measurements Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) is part of the strategy for the development of more efficient and cleaner IC-engines. The fast cycle resolved detection of the EGR-rate is essential to evaluate stable engine conditions. LaVision s ICOS-EGR is a fast optical indication system for measuring the incylinder EGR-rate based on the detection of CO 2 and water. While conventional gas sampling probes need averaging over multiple cycles, the ICOS system allows single cycle resolved measurements. The EGR distribution over multiple cylinders is measured with a multi-probe ICOS system. This setup reveals differences in the CO 2 loading among cylinders caused by the intake flow management. Specifications Measuring principle Indicated quantities Measurement error Sampling rate Data acquisition IR absorption CO 2 concentration, exhaust gas recirculation rate (EGR) < 0.2 vol% CO 2 (5-30 bar) 30 khz crank angle resolved multiple cycles 7

ICOS-Temperature Temperature during Compression temperature [K] pressure [bar] 1700 1400 1100 800 500 200 15 12 9 6 3 Focus on compression stroke ICOS Indicated temperature Indicated pressure 0-360 -300-240 -180-120 -60 0 60 120 180 240 300 360 crank angle [ atdc] Indicated in-cylinder gas temperature in a fired 4-stroke DISI engine is shown in the top diagram, the simultaneously recorded pressure is shown in the bottom diagram. The local gas temperature is determined at the spark plug position using a standard ICOS spark plug probe. Cross cylinder line-of-sight probes are also available to measure integral cross-cylinder temperatures. Transient Temperatures during Tip-in The in-cylinder gas temperature was measured in a near production SI engine using a spark plug probe. The diagram shows the transient behaviour of the temperature during a tip-in (load change) operation for 15 engine cycles. The engine is coasting over the first 5 cycles. After this the accelerator pedal is pushed down resulting in a load step and transient firing behaviour over 7 cycles. The combustion process then stabilizes in the following cycles. The shown temperature profiles are averaged over 10 repeated tip-ins. gas temperature [K] cycle # crank angle [ atdc] 8

In-Cylinder Gas Temperature 4temperature indication during mixture formation 4effect of EGR-rate 4validation of simulation models 4supercharging, downsizing, HCCI The knowledge of the gas temperature during the mixture formation is becoming increasingly interesting for the development of combustion processes. The high demand on lowering emissions in internal combustion engines has also led to the increased employment of Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR). Particularly when using high internal EGR rates, the gas temperature can only be determined directly in-cylinder with a fast in-situ measurement. LaVision s ICOS-Temperature system indicates the in-cylinder temperature at crank angle resolution over hundreds of consecutive cycles. This ultra-fast (23 khz) sensor system is based on infrared absorption spectroscopy of water molecules. A variety of probes allow local in-cylinder (e.g. at the glow plug location) or integral cross cylinder temperature measurements. The results give valuable information of the behavior of the in-cylinder temperature during the compression stroke, and how it is influenced by varying operating conditions. Specifications Measuring principle IR absorption of water molecules Indicated quantity gas temperature Measurement error < 20 K @ 3 vol% H 2 O (273 K-900 K) Sampling rate 23 khz Data acquisition crank angle resolved multiple cycles 9

ICOS Sensor Probes M12 spark plug probe M12 combination probe, simultaneous fuel / EGR and temperature measurements M5 probe Probe Adapters LaVision provides a variety of adapters to install our incylinder probes into your engine, for example, glow plug adapters for use in Diesel engines, as illustrated in the picture. We have experience in designing custom adapters for almost any application. 10

Solutions for all Types of Engines 4integrated spark plug probes 4non-firing probes for flexible choice of location 4integral line-of-sight probes 4large variety of adapters to suit different applications M14 spark plug probe Firing and non-firing sensor probes are available for the ICOS systems. The in-cylinder probes can be installed in almost any engine with no modification required. This is applicable for research test engines up to near production engines with limited optical access. For example, the spark plug probe directly replaces the standard spark plug in SI engines while maintaining full firing capability. Cooled probe A single probe can measure air/fuel ratio and exhaust gas simultaneously. With the combination probe it is possible to additionally measure gas temperature at the same time. Multiple probes can be installed to measure in different cylinders simultaneously. All probes have a small mirror on the tip to maintain the light absorption path and reflect the light back to the receiver. Measuring over several hours or days using the same mirror is realistic under standard engine operating conditions. The mirrors are exchangeable and supplied as a set of spare parts. Exchanging a mirror only takes a few minutes. Integral Line-of-Sight Probe For certain investigations it is more relevant to obtain global parameters from inside the engine, for example when comparing measurement data to 1D-simulation results. LaVision offers customized line-of-sight probe solutions to measure spatially averaged parameters. The picture shows a schematic installation of a line-of-sight probe in an engine for cross-cylinder temperature measurements. The long absorption path of this configuration also results in a favorable signal to noise ratio without interfering with the combustion chamber geometry and gas flow. 11

ICOS-Fuel, -EGR, -TWIN System ICOS-Fuel, -EGR, -TWIN ICOS-Temperature Indicated quantities Fuel density, air/fuel ratio CO 2 concentration, EGR Gas temperature Acquisition rate 30 khz 23 khz Measurement error < 2% < 0.2 vol% CO 2 (5-30 bar) < 20 K @ 3 vol% H 2 O (273 K-900 K) Sensor probes M12 / M14 spark plug, glow plug adapter, M5 indication probe, cooled indication probe, line-of-sight probe mixture preparation, stability of the combustion process Applications Direct injection Cold start Load changes Ignition behaviour Cycle-resolved internal and external EGR Distribution over multiple cylinders Valve timing Validation Supercharging EGR HCCI ICOS-Temperature LaVisionUK Ltd 2 Minton Place / Victoria Road Bicester / Oxon / OX26 6QB / United Kingdom E-Mail: sales@lavisionuk.com www.lavisionuk.com Phone: +44-(0)-870-997-6532 Fax: +44-(0)-870-762-6252 LaVision GmbH Anna-Vandenhoeck-Ring 19 D-37081 Göttingen / Germany E-Mail: info@lavision.com www.lavision.com Tel.: +49-(0)5 51-9004-0 Fax: +49-(0)551-9004-100 LaVision Inc. 211 W. Michigan Ave. / Suite 100 Ypsilanti, MI 48197 / USA E-Mail: sales@lavisioninc.com www.lavision.com Phone: (734) 485-0913 Fax: (240) 465-4306 05/16