Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Paul Freeland February 2015 1 © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Contents 2 Motivation State of the Art Technology for Further Improvements Engine Technology vs Electrical Technology Conclusions MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Contents 3 Motivation State of the Art Technology for Further Improvements Engine Technology vs Electrical Technology Conclusions MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Fuel Consumption / CO2 Targets Globally, Fuel Consumption targets ever decreasing Annual reductions of ~2% required on top of already mature & developed technology Converging towards 95g/km from 2020 (...& shortly afterwards for America!) ...and ever onwards 4 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Contents 5 Motivation State of the Art Technology for Further Improvements Engine Technology vs Electrical Technology Conclusions MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Current Situation in Europe 6 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 Survey of EU gasoline vehicles from the MAHLE database Clear gradient of vehicle mass effects Empirical “Best-in-class” gradient = 0.1 gCO2 / kg © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Fuel Consumption Legislation - EU 7 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 Gradient shallower than actual trends for vehicle weight 2020 Limit Value gradient = 0.27 gCO2 / kg © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Benchmark case – Audi De-throttling & hybridisation A3 1.4 TFSI DVVT 50% deac 7-speed Start-stop Regen + Smart charging A4 1.8 TFSI DVVT Wide gear A6 range 2.0 TDI Start-stop 6 speed Regen + Start-stop Smart smart charging charging A6 2.0 TFSI Profile switching 8 speed Start-stop 40kW hybrid Regen + smart charging A8 2.0 TFSI Profile switching 8 speed Start-stop 40kW hybrid Regen + smart charging 2014 vehicle examples Technology for 2015 target Cam Profile switching Stop-start 8 speed Aggressive regeneration Smart charging 1.4 TFSI – 50% deac. 2.0 TFSI only used as Hybrid (A6-A8) – 8 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 40kW electric motor + HV Li battery © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Benchmark case – Mercedes Benz Lean combustion & EGR C-200 2.0 GDI A-B 180 Profile 1.6 GDIswitching ProfileStop-start switching Stratified Stop-start Lean StratifiedCooled Lean EGR Cooled Smart EGR charging Smart charging 9 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 E-Class 2.0 GDI Profile switching Stop-start Stratified Lean Cooled EGR Smart charging 2014 vehicle examples Technology aimed at 2015 target 1.6 / 2.0 M270 / M274 – Cam Profile switching – Stop-start – Lean burn & NSC – Cooled HP EGR – Smart charging © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Benchmark case – MAHLE Concept Engine Downsizing Downsizing example: Technology demonstrator in 2006 1.2 litre I3, 120kW, 286Nm MAHLE DI3 1.2 DVVT Aggressive downsizing 6 speed 10 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 – 50% downsized – 30 bar BMEP – DVVT Upgrade potential – Gear optimisation – Increased CR – Friction reduction – Miller cycle / EGR © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Benchmark case – Ford Fiesta 1.0 Ecoboost Engine Downsizing Fiesta with 0.998cc Ecoboost engine Moderate downsizing Start-Stop Smart Charging 11 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 2014 vehicle examples: 998cc I3 – 30% downsized – 24 bar BMEP – DVVT © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Benchmark case – Peugeot 308 Downsizing & Lightweighting 308 Moderate downsizing 140kg weight reduction Start-Stop Smart Charging e-PAS 12 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 2015 vehicle examples: 1199cc I3 “PureTech” – 25% downsized – 16 bar BMEP – GDI – DVVT © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Benchmark case – Suzuki Swift lightweight, “Dualjet” & revised gearing Swift SZ4 Dualjet Reduced friction & weight Start-Stop Taller gearing Re-tuned for torque 2015 vehicle examples: 1242cc I4 “Dualjet” – 12 bar BMEP (NA) – PFI* (best combination of PFI & GDI) 13 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 – Reduced friction – Reduced weight – Re-tuned for torque – Taller gearing © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Current State of the Art - Conclusions Typical Technology Level Required 14 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 Limit value curves don’t match gradient of vehicle trends Increased vehicle weight = greater technology effort Hybridisation likely to be needed to meet 2020 targets above ~1550kg Cost-benefits depend on vehicle, market sector & weight © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Contents 15 Motivation State of the Art Technology for Improved Efficiency Engine Technology vs Electrical Technology Conclusions MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Technology for Further Improvements Further Improvements can come from: Potential benefit seen on NEDC (over DVVT N/A baseline) Reduced Pumping • Variable Valve Control Reduced Friction • Oil Circuit optimisation • • Thermodynamics • • 16 • • • • • • Improved MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 Downsizing / Deactivation External EGR Lean Combustion (de-throttling) -6% -12% -3% -12% - Large benefit at light load - Can only de-throttle once - Reduced significance for downsized engines -5% Fast warm-up -3% Mechanical component design -3% Advanced tribology -1% - Smaller benefits available - Detail design studies - Most significant at lighter load GDI / HP PFI Increased / variable CR Miller cycle Lean combustion (gamma & heat) - Small improvements available - More significant at highload - Lean combustion needs EGATS & low sulphur fuel -3% -6% -3% © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Contents 17 Motivation State of the Art Technology for Further Improvements Engine Technology vs Electrical Technology Conclusions MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Development Direction Typical “C” class vehicle Grams CO2 / km (NEDC) Reduced engine operating region Electric drive Electrical Technology “Green Energy” supplement (Rule 101) 75 Plug-In 48 V systems & Energy Storage increase Stop-Start & smart charging 100 125 150 Cost & Weight Penalty Larger Vehicles >1500 kg Energy Recovery Reduced losses Switching Miller Inlet Dual GDI / VVT VVT HP EGR cam cycle / profile / Lean PFI FVVL Burn Small Vehicles <1350 kg Engine Technology 18 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Contents 19 Motivation State of the Art Technology for Further Improvements Engine Technology vs Electrical Technology Conclusions MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Conclusions Gasoline Engine technology is very mature – 20 Inefficiencies are well understood Complete de-throttling technology exists Law of diminishing returns is dominant Main engine focus: efficient downsizing – Maintaining high-load efficiency (combustion phasing) – Efficient boosting – Improved transient response Ubiquitous focus on: – Weight reduction – Friction reduction – Increased compression (expansion) ratio MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 © MAHLE Future Opportunities for Gasoline Engine Development Thank You Danke sehr Muchas Gracias Mille grazie Merci Beaucoup 有り難う 谢谢 21 MAHLE Powertrain Ltd., Paul Freeland, 24-January-2014 © MAHLE
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