A Critical Review of Approaches to the Design of Floating-Liner Apparatus for Instantaneous Piston Assembly Friction Measurement
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Development of Instantaneous Piston-Friction Measurement
3. Main Design Challenges in the Floating-Liner Method
- Methods of sealing the cylinder/crankcase interface.
- Balancing of forces acting on the cylinder.
- Approaches to cylinder restraint.
- Sensor requirements.
3.1. Methods of Sealing the Cylinder Crankcase Interface
3.1.1. O-Ring Seals
3.1.2. Hydrostatic Seals
3.1.3. Gas-Restriction Seals
3.1.4. Annular/Force Balancing Seals
3.2. Force Balancing of the Floating-Liner
3.2.1. Liner Geometry Force Balancing
3.2.2. Electronic Chamber Pressure Balancing
3.2.3. Gas Chamber Pressure Balancing
4. Design Challenges Associated with Firing Operation of the Floating-Liner Method
4.1. Correction of Friction Data for Engine Vibrations
4.2. Protection of Polymer Seals
4.3. Choosing Firing Floating-Liner Instrumentation
4.4. Force Transducer Issues
4.4.1. Measurement Range
4.4.2. Frequency Response
4.4.3. Zero Offset
5. Discussion: Major Configurations of Floating-Liner Techniques
5.1. Alpha
5.1.1. Applications
5.1.2. Advantages
- Simple design.
- Easy access to the liner and the piston, so it could be used effectively with interchangeable liners, pistons and piston rings.
- Inexpensive when compared with the other designs.
- Able to be based on a wide range of reciprocating engines due to its simplicity, as a cranking mechanism and a liner are only the main components needed from an engine to build this type of floating-liner.
5.1.3. Disadvantages
- Cannot be pressurized.
- Cannot be fired.
5.2. Beta
5.2.1. Applications
5.2.2. Advantages
- The arrangement can be used in firing conditions.
- Due to the sensors being placed at the base of the liner, the arrangement offers space to modify the head for sealing.
- Motoring of the system is possible.
- Motoring can involve pressurization and heated lubricants and/or external liner heaters.
5.2.3. Disadvantages
- The arrangement requires a high level of modification of the engine, especially the engine block and cylinder head for sealing gas pressure.
- The system requires lateral restriction of the motion of the liner.
- The arrangement is relatively difficult to assemble and disassemble to change the liner, piston rings, etc.
5.3. Gamma
5.3.1. Applications
5.3.2. Advantages
- The arrangement does not require lateral support.
- The system can be used in motoring and firing condition.
- The arrangement can be pressurized and heated using lubrication oil and/or external liner heaters.
5.3.3. Disadvantages
- The approach requires manufacturing or modification of both the liner and cylinder block.
- Harder to be used in firing condition as the liner and the cylinder block are manufactured.
- It is less convenient to use the approach with pre-manufactured cylinder liners.
6. Conclusions
- With the advancement in today’s machining precision, annular/force balancing sealing is a promising method of sealing the combustion chamber.
- Gas chamber pressure balancing can be an intuitive way to avoid modifying piston crown, leading to using many stock pistons for research without modifying them.
- Designing of floating-liner system mainly depends on the nature of the study required to be conducted.
- Non-pressurized (such as Alpha) floating-liner systems are simple to build and operate. However, they do not replicate the full range of behavior of the mechanical and fluid components in the piston assembly or the effects resulting from combustion and, therefore, represent the behavior of operating engines in a limited way.
- Pressurized systems (such as Beta and Gamma) are becoming increasingly common, but their design remains challenging. They have the potential to replicate the full spectrum of phenomena that arise in firing engines during service.
- Firing floating-liners are the most challenging in design and operation, especially regarding excessive engine vibrations, sealing the combustion chamber, and the instrumentation used. However, it gives the most realistic results if it is built properly.
- Pressurized and heated floating-liners are good alternatives and have fewer issues than the firing ones, yet can give a good simulation to the firing conditions.
- A range of standardized approaches, reviewed in this paper, can be adopted to develop effective designs of both pressurized and non-pressurized floating-liner arrangements.
7. Proposals for Further Work
- It will be of value to compare the output of established piston assembly lubrication models with detailed data collected from floating-liner systems to test the level of compatibility between accurate experimental friction measurements and well established (industry standard) simulation tools.
- It may be of more value to evaluate power loss from friction data, rather than to present friction data in its own right, as power loss data is more meaningful in a broader context.
- It is clearly possible to incorporate other types of tribological sensor in floating-liner systems, to evaluate oil consumption, lubricating film thickness, cylinder temperature distributions, etc. Such multi-sensor systems will have considerable value in commercial settings.
- Design improvements can only be reliably detected at different sites if the same test equipment is used for all evaluations, so it may make sense to identify a standardized design of floating-liner systems so that direct comparisons can be made between data collected by different organizations.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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Ref. | Cylinder Capacity (L) | Engine Load | Engine Speed (rev min−1) | Natural Frequency (Hz) | Maximum Friction (N) | Instrumentation Used |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[55] | 0.11 0.11 0.11 | 300 kPa (IMEP) 500 kPa (IMEP) 900 kPa (IMEP) | 3000 3000 3000 | - | 50 100 130 | Load washers, crankcase pressure sensor, thermocouple near the cylinder bore surface |
[45] | 0.449 0.449 | 30 Nm 72 Nm | 2500 2500 | - | 125 370 | Quartz piezoelectric miniature force transducers model 9131B, Kistler Holding AG, 4 accelerometers |
[56] | 0.496 | 200 kPa (IMEP) | 1500 | - | 35 | piezoelectric sensors, thermocouple on the liner |
[57] | 0.500 | 600 kPa (IMEP) | 2000 | - | 65 | - |
[54] | 0.619 0.619 0.619 | No Load No Load No Load | 1000 1500 2000 | 25 25 25 | 280 270 260 | Strain gauge M-M, WK-06-125-AD-350, Pizeo-accelerometer (Brul & kjaer 4393) sensor |
[54] | 0.619 0.619 0.619 | 100% Load 100% Load 100% Load | 1000 1500 2000 | 25 25 25 | 320 250 270 | Strain gauge M-M, WK-06-125-AD-350, Piezo-accelerometer (Brul & kjaer 4393) sensor |
[35] | 1.052 | 50% load | 2000 | - | 280 | Load washer |
[58] | 1.052 | 75% load | 1200 | - | 280 | Load washer |
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Youssef, A.M.; Calderbank, G.; Sherrington, I.; Smith, E.H.; Rahnejat, H. A Critical Review of Approaches to the Design of Floating-Liner Apparatus for Instantaneous Piston Assembly Friction Measurement. Lubricants 2021, 9, 10. https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants9010010
Youssef AM, Calderbank G, Sherrington I, Smith EH, Rahnejat H. A Critical Review of Approaches to the Design of Floating-Liner Apparatus for Instantaneous Piston Assembly Friction Measurement. Lubricants. 2021; 9(1):10. https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants9010010
Chicago/Turabian StyleYoussef, Abdelrahman M., Graham Calderbank, Ian Sherrington, Edward H. Smith, and Homer Rahnejat. 2021. "A Critical Review of Approaches to the Design of Floating-Liner Apparatus for Instantaneous Piston Assembly Friction Measurement" Lubricants 9, no. 1: 10. https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants9010010
APA StyleYoussef, A. M., Calderbank, G., Sherrington, I., Smith, E. H., & Rahnejat, H. (2021). A Critical Review of Approaches to the Design of Floating-Liner Apparatus for Instantaneous Piston Assembly Friction Measurement. Lubricants, 9(1), 10. https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants9010010