GTPower doesn't do any '3D thermodynamics'. It is a 1D unsteady flow solver.johnny comelately wrote: ↑03 Mar 2018, 09:55Thanks for that. All such papers are appreciated.godlameroso wrote: ↑03 Mar 2018, 05:00Predictive modeling, it's what let's you inject different types of fuel at the same time and not destroy the engine.johnny comelately wrote: ↑03 Mar 2018, 04:07
Have to disagree with you there Tommy about throwing away the benefits of DI because of the benefit offset of the reasons I said.
Preheating the fuel, I wish, as its an immense help for combustion, but no because the mixture temperature is very cold prior to compression (probably chemists here that can explain latent heat and all that) even at 12K rpm worth of air speed.
This question of lean FAR, a few people have mentioned it and I suppose they are "considering' that for efficiency/economy reasons, but my view is it just cannot produce the power as well as the other associated problems like knock. What am i missing here?
And regarding non-homogenised areas or a version of stratified chamber mix, from what i know it is very difficult to create and maintain repeatedly, in other words not applicable. What am i missing here?
https://www.sae.org/publications/techni ... 1-01-0363/
We design machine, build dyno and develop different engine types on the smallest (least resources imaginable, hence coming to this forum to learn) and (externally) use GTPower for 3D thermodynamic simulation. But being mechanics and machinists we lack the science, having recognised the limitations of 'suck it and see'.
We are grey hairs and a lot of our thinking is from practical experience starting in the 70's, real skin in the game
Having associates who have some science and big time resources the opinion on stratified charges is not good and seems to be much more theoretical than practical for racing.
But I am regularly wrong
Yes it does have a pre-processor that can discretize 3D geometry into 1D but that's all.
Not really, you'd be hard pressed to find a decent automotive company that does not have a reasonably-sized HPC cluster.Sadly even car manufacturers lack the resources to get this to work on their own. Large petrochemical companies are the only ones with enough super computers to do the type of computer modeling required.