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Article

The Non-Uniformity Control Strategy of a Marine High-Speed Diesel Engine Based on Each Cylinder’s Exhaust Temperature

School of Naval Architecture, Ocean and Energy Power Engineering, Wuhan University of Technology, Wuhan 430063, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Processes 2023, 11(4), 1068; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11041068
Submission received: 7 March 2023 / Revised: 25 March 2023 / Accepted: 30 March 2023 / Published: 2 April 2023

Abstract

:
To improve the non-uniformity of a multi-cylinder marine diesel engine caused by manufacturing assembly errors and performance degradation of the fuel injection system, with the instantaneous speed applied as the control target, the feedback variable of each cylinder’s exhaust temperature was used to obtain the non-uniformity information and the injection quantity of each cylinder was applied as the control variable; the inhomogeneity control was accomplished by modifying the injection pulse spectrum. The model of AVL Cruise M was established and validated by bench test data. The non-uniformity control strategy based on the instantaneous speed and the exhaust temperature of each cylinder was developed in SIMULINK, and the control effect was compared with the closed-loop control of cylinder pressure by software in-loop simulation. The results showed that the non-uniformity control strategy based on exhaust temperature could significantly improve the uniformity of each cylinder; although the improvement effect was not as great as the non-uniformity control strategy based on cylinder pressure, the cost was significantly reduced, and the practicality and reliability were better. With the closed-loop control of exhaust temperature and instantaneous speed, the CV (Coefficient of Variation) of IMEP (indicated effective pressure) was close to the closed-loop control of cylinder pressure; the maximum occurred at 25% load when it was 0.199%. This co-simulation provided a theoretical basis for the subsequent hardware-in-the-loop simulation and actual engine tests.

1. Introduction

Marine diesel engines are widely used as power sources and generator sets for large ships with their advantages of high power, low fuel consumption rate, and high reliability [1,2,3]. Intelligence represents the development trend of marine diesel engines; traditional electronically controlled diesel engines are based on open-loop control test calibration data, and diesel engine processing and manufacturing process errors and the wear and aging of parts easily make the diesel engine work unevenly in each cylinder. As such, there is room for performance optimization [4,5,6]. Diesel engine inhomogeneity will intensify each cylinder’s mechanical load and thermal load fluctuations, severely damaging the diesel engine.
The number of marine high-powered high-speed HPCR (high-pressure common rail) diesel engine cylinders can reach 20; because of variations in the production and manufacturing of electronically controlled injectors, the actual injection quantity of each cylinder with the same solenoid actuation signal is not consistent. Meanwhile, there may be installation errors such as eccentricity in the cam mechanism of the diesel engine, resulting in deviation angles in the TDC (top dead center) signal of each cylinder, thus affecting the consistency of the injection timing; ultimately, the actual combustion and working principle of each cylinder are different [7,8,9]. The CUC (Cylinder Uniformity Control) of each cylinder is a basic requirement to ensure diesel engine operation remains steady, and is a key technology for the improvement of the overall performance of diesel engines [10,11,12,13,14]. Conventional diesel engine control systems are generally based on the test calibration data of the pulse spectrum for fuel injection control. The control parameters cannot be modified in response to the changes in the operating conditions of a single cylinder.
At present, the research on the non-uniformity of each cylinder mainly focuses on the instantaneous speed and cylinder pressure [14,15,16]. Zheng used the burst pressure, the IMEP, and the exhaust temperature of each cylinder as control variables to correct the gas injection pulse width of each cylinder for the multi-cylinder unbalance problem of marine micro-ignition dual-fuel engines. The burst pressure equilibrium was less than 1.2%, the IMEP equilibrium was less than 0.8%, and the exhaust temperature equilibrium was within 11 °C [17]. Ou proposed an anomaly identification and reconstruction method for combustion analysis systems. The effectiveness of the anomaly identification and reconstruction algorithm in locating the abnormal cylinder pressure on a crank-angle basis, and in reconstructing the cylinder pressure by rejecting measurement noise without losing valuable sensing information was determined [18]. Yu performed a study of the combustion stability and uniformity of marine low-speed and medium-speed diesel engines; a closed-loop control strategy for cylinder pressure was developed, and the in-cylinder combustion state indicators such as the IMEP and MFB50 (50% of the mass fraction burned) were calculated to adjust the injection parameters, which had an improvement effect on the combustion imbalance between each cylinder and cycle [19,20]. Yang presented a dynamic model for simulating the instantaneous angular speed, and the instantaneous angular speed waveforms both in the fuel leakage condition and in the normal condition were measured under various engine speeds and loads in laboratory conditions. The characteristic parameters for detecting the faults relating to the gas pressure in the cylinder were obtained successfully [21]. Wang used a TBD314V8 diesel engine as a research object to improve the unevenness of each cylinder. The IMEP and MFB50 of each cylinder based on the cylinder pressure calculation were used as the feedback variables, and the injection quantity and injection advance angle of each cylinder were used as the control variables to establish a joint simulation model of GT-Power and Simulink [5].
The closed-loop control technique based on cylinder pressure is not suitable for multi-cylinder diesel engines because of the high cost of cylinder pressure sensors and the large amount required [14]. The cylinder uniformity control of marine diesel engines based on exhaust temperature has the advantages of low-cost sensors, straightforward operation, and suitability for long-term online measurement, despite the disadvantage of at least one operating cycle deferral. Moreover, the in-cylinder method is more accurate than the exhaust temperature method; the in-cylinder method is therefore suitable for engines with fewer cylinders. The CUC of diesel engines based on instantaneous speed has the advantages of economic performance, straightforward operation, and suitability for long-term online measurement, therein being able to monitor and diagnose the condition of each cylinder in real time [15]. Currently, this method is mainly applied to diesel engines with small numbers of cylinders and large firing interval angles. For multi-cylinder diesel engines with overlapping firing intervals and bad work balances, the general waveform characteristic parameters cannot easily be used to perform an accurate diagnosis of the extent of the fault and the location of the faulty cylinder because of the strong inter-cylinder coupling [22].
Exhaust temperature sensors are applied in the CUC of marine diesel engines because of their easy installation and low price, despite the disadvantage of at least one operating cycle deferral. To improve the uniformity of each cylinder caused by the fuel injection system, a closed-loop control strategy based on the exhaust gas temperature was adopted to improve the uniformity of each cylinder caused by the fuel injection system. The effect of the uniformity control strategy of each cylinder and the overall performance of the marine high-speed diesel engine was investigated, providing a theoretical basis for hardware-in-the-loop simulation and real engine tests. Combining the characteristics of instantaneous speed with exhaust temperature in the CUC, the instantaneous speed and exhaust temperature of each cylinder were utilized to control non-uniformity. By measuring the instantaneous angular acceleration of each cylinder in a cycle, the operating differences between cylinders can be determined. If this variation was out of range, the pulse spectrum was modified by a strategy that combines the magnitude of the variation with the exhaust temperature to modify the fuel quantity so that the instantaneous speed was kept consistent. The exhaust temperature was utilized as a measure of non-uniformity for each cylinder, and the closed-loop control regulated the fuel injection quantity to complete the CUC.

2. Modeling and Verification

As illustrated in the software in-loop simulation process in Figure 1, the model mainly consists of modules such as the diesel engine block, turbocharger, fuel system, and gas-exchanging system. The CHD622V20 marine high-speed engine was studied and a real-time simulation model was established in AVL Cruise M. The accuracy and real-time of the model were verified by bench test data. A CUC strategy based on the instantaneous speed and exhaust temperature of each cylinder was developed in SIMULINK, and the marine high-speed engine model was integrated into the loop. The CUC of the marine high-speed diesel engine was investigated and compared with the cylinder-pressure-based control strategy to provide a theoretical basis for subsequent hardware-in-the-loop and tests.

2.1. The Test Benches

The basic technical parameters of the CHD622V20 high-speed marine engine (high-speed engine) are shown in Table 1. The layout of the CHD622V20 test bench is shown in Figure 2.

2.2. Modeling

2.2.1. Heat Transfer Model

To calculate the heat between the working medium in the cylinder and the thermal system boundary, radiation heat transfer is usually neglected, the working medium in the cylinder is regarded as a uniform field, and an empirical formula is used to establish a heat conduction model.
Q w i = A i α w ( T c T w i )
where Qwi is the heat between the working substance and the thermal system boundary (J); Ai is the surface area of the thermal system boundary (m2); αw is the heat transfer coefficient (W/m2·K); Tc is the working substance temperature in the cylinder (°C); and Twi is the temperature of the thermal system boundary (°C).

2.2.2. MCC (Mixing Controlled Combustion) Model

An MCC combustion model was utilized to simulate the in-cylinder combustion process of a diesel engine. The model can predict the combustion and heat release of a diesel engine based on the changes in the injection parameters and the simulated gas exchange process calculated in real time by the fuel injection model [23].
The MCC model divides the cylinder into two regions: premixed combustion and diffusion combustion, and the reaction rate in the premixed combustion stage was calculated by Equation (2).
d Q p r e d t = C p r e λ A F S T m f , p r e V m i x H u e κ T A T c ( t t i g n ) 2
where Qpre is the heat in the premixed combustion (J); Cpre is the premixed combustion exothermic calibration parameter (−); λ is the excess air coefficient (−); AFST is the stoichiometric air/fuel ratio (−); mf,pre is the fuel mass in the premixed (kg); Vmix is the fuel injection volume (m3); Hu is the low heating value of the fuel (J/kg); κ and TA are the Arrhenius exothermic model constants (−); and ttign is the length of time since fuel ignition (s).
The diffusion combustion stage considers the wall effect and the effect of EGR on combustion, as shown in Equation (3).
d Q d i f f d t = C c o m b F w a l l F e g r H u m f , d i f f , n e t k V c 3
where Qdiff is the heat in the diffusion combustion (J); Ccomb is calibrated experimentally and related to speed (−); Fwall is the function of wall effects during fuel injection; Fegr is the function of residual gas effects; mf,diff,net is the fuel mass during the diffusion combustion (kg); k is the turbulent kinetic energy intensity (J); and Vc is the cylinder volume (m3).

2.2.3. Intake and Exhaust System Model

d ( m c u ) d α = p c d V c y l d α Σ d Q w d α + Σ d m i d α h i Σ d m e d α h e
where mc is the quality of the working substance in the cylinder (kg); u is the ratio of the internal energy (J), Pc is the pressure in the cylinder (MPa), Qw is the heat transfer rate (J), dmi is the quality of the air flowing into the cylinder (kg/s), dme is the quality of the exhaust gas flowing (kg/s), hi is the inflow enthalpy (kJ/kg), and he is the outflow enthalpy (kJ/kg).
T s = T K T w o exp [ C s w ( T K T s + T w i T w o ) / d m w d t c p w ( T w o T w i ) ] + T w i
T w o = T w i + ( d m s d t c p s / d m w d t c p w ) ( T k T s )
where TK is the temperature of the air before intercooling (°C), TS is the temperature of the air after intercooling (°C), and Two is the temperature of the coolant after intercooling (°C). According to the principle of energy conservation, the heat lost by the compressed air dQs/dt, the heat gained by the coolant dQw/dt, and the heat transferred from the compressed air to the coolant dQsw/dt are equal, thus deriving the formula for the temperature of the cooled, compressed air and the coolant at the outlet.

2.2.4. Fuel Injection Model

d P r a i l d t = E V r a i l 1 ρ r a i l ( d m p u m p d t + d m i n j d t )
where Prail is the pressure in the common rail (MPa); E is the volume elastic modulus of the fuel (MPa); Vrail is the volume of the common rail (m3); ρrail is the density of the liquid fuel in the common rail (kg/m3); dmpump is the fuel mass supplied to the high-pressure oil pump (kg/s); and dminj is the fuel mass supplied to the common rail injector (kg/s).
d m i n j d t = 2 ρ f u e l ( P p i p e P c ) ( ξ N S / A N S 2 + ξ N H / A N H 2 ) 1
where ρfuel is the density of fuel (kg/m3); Ppipe is the pressure in the high-pressure oil pipe (MPa); ξNS is the flow coefficient of the needle valve seat; ANS is the flow cross-sectional area of the needle valve seat (m2); ξNH is the flow coefficient of the nozzle; and ANH is the cross-sectional flow area of the nozzle hole (m2).

2.2.5. AVL CRUISE M Model

As shown in Figure 3, the CHD622V20 marine high-speed engine real-time model was established in AVL Cruise M. The model mainly consists of modules such as the heat transfer, MCC, exhaust, and fuel injection.

2.2.6. Simulation of Cyclic Fluctuations

As the combustion parameters of the diesel engine obey Gaussian distribution [24], the Marsaglia–Bray algorithm was applied to Gaussian distribution on the boundary conditions [25], mainly including the fuel injection and gas exchange processes which have an impact on the combustion state, simulating its random fluctuation process during the operation of the diesel engine. The calculation steps are as follows:
(1)
Generate two independents, identically distributed U ( 0 , 1 ) random numbers U 1 and U 2 ;
(2)
V i = 2 U i 1 ( i = 1 , 2 ) , S = V 1 2 + V 2 2 ;
(3)
If S > 1 , return to step (1); conversely, calculate Y = ( ( 2 ) l n S / S ) , output X 1 = V 1 Y .
A pair of mutually independent random sequences of standard normal distribution can be obtained using this algorithm [26]. The algorithm is faster in calculation, simpler in programming language, and requires less storage space, thereby meeting the real-time requirements of the real-time model of the marine high-speed engine. The exhaust temperature of each cylinder is shown in Figure 4. The high-speed engine was simulated with large cyclic fluctuations under different loads.

2.3. Real-Time Model Verification

Figure 5 shows the comparison between the simulated and the tested cylinder pressure at rated speeds and different loads. Except for the test data in the low-pressure part, which have some measurement errors because of the limitation of the sensor, the maximum error between the simulation data and the test data in the high-pressure part did not exceed 5%; therefore, the real-time model can better reflect the performance of the diesel engine.
Figure 6 shows the cylinder pressure curves of twenty cylinders in a high-speed engine under 100% load, and Figure 7 shows the cylinder pressure curves of different cycles of the A1 cylinder under 100% load.
Figure 8 shows a comparison of the IMEP and output power for the high-speed engine. The error between the IMEP and output power was within 5% for each load, with the maximum error occurring at 25% of the operating conditions, i.e., 4.90% for IMEP and 2.37% for output power. The mean error between the simulation and test IMEP was 3.01%, and the mean error between the simulation and test output was 1.79%.
Figure 9 shows the comparison between the simulation data and the test data of exhaust temperature (Tex) of each cylinder. Figure 10 shows the comparison between the simulation data and the test data for each load of the high-speed engine. The error between the simulation data and the test data for each load was within 5%, and the maximum error was 4.20%, which occurred at 100% working condition.
The high-speed engine model needs to operate in real-time while ensuring computational accuracy to meet the commissioning needs of the inhomogeneity control strategy. The real-time factor can be used as a criterion to determine the real-time performance of the model. When the real-time factor is less than 1, it means that the diesel engine model calculates faster than the real diesel engine works. The real-time factor of the high-speed engine model at rated speed is shown in Figure 11; with an Intel 3.2 GHZ CPU (central processing unit) configuration, the maximum value of the real-time factor was 0.89 and the average value was 0.5825, both of which are less than 1, thereby meeting the requirements of debugging and verification of the inhomogeneity control strategy.

3. Non-Uniformity Control Strategy

3.1. Feedback Variable and Control Variable

The performance of each cylinder can be shown by the feedback variable in real time, which should be easily accessible, reliable, and accurate [27]. The fluctuating characteristics of instantaneous speed that depend on factors such as gas pressure and reciprocating inertia forces contain a wealth of information about the performance of each of the engine’s cylinders. Exhaust temperature (Tex) is an essential indicator of the multi-cylinder operation uniformity, which is utilized to visually detect abnormal combustion such as misfires and becomes a feedback variable for closed-loop combustion control. However, the exhaust temperature is a slow-varying and real-time signal and has a certain lag when used as a feedback variable. Hence, it needs to be combined with the instantaneous speed as the feedback variable for closed-loop control.
The injection quantity was taken as the control variable. The fuel injection quantity was adjusted by changing the injection pulse width to modify the work capacity of each cylinder, which in turn determined the exhaust temperature of each cylinder. The variation in operation between the cylinders could be obtained by measuring the instantaneous angular acceleration of each cylinder after one operating cycle [28]. The CV of the instantaneous angular acceleration, i.e., the ratio of the standard variation to the mean value, was utilized as the evaluation index. If the variation was unreasonably out of range, the base fuel quantity of each cylinder was corrected in the next cycle based on the size of the variation combined with the strategy of exhaust temperature so that the instantaneous speed of each cylinder converged.
The instantaneous speed was utilized as the evaluation index of the non-uniformity of the performance of each cylinder, the exhaust temperature signal of each cylinder was utilized as the feedback variable, and the injection quantity was used as the control variable of the non-uniformity control strategy. The strategy flow is shown in Figure 12.

3.2. Exhaust Temperature Signal Analysis

The instantaneous speed was taken as the control target in this control strategy. When performing the initial determination of instantaneous speed for diesel engines, the speed fluctuation rate should not exceed the speed regulation requirement of secondary accuracy. The instantaneous speed decision module is shown in Figure 13. The exhaust temperature was calibrated and analyzed to obtain information that can work as a feedback signal to reflect the non-uniformity of each cylinder. The exhaust temperature signal analysis was conducted as follows: the exhaust temperature signal validity was judged; the exhaust temperature rose slowly during the starting process, and could not be transient. In the validity judgment, the exhaust temperature was measured after a certain period. Signals that exceeded the range of the exhaust gas temperature sensor were judged as invalid signals by the sensor failure judgment module.
The exhaust temperature calculation modules are shown in Figure 14. The calculation of the mean and the mean squared deviation values for exhaust gas temperatures, etc. was performed. The difference between the exhaust temperature of each cylinder and the average was calculated to provide data for subsequent judgments.

3.3. Misfire Detection and Determination

A misfire is an extreme case of non-uniformity of each cylinder where the exhaust temperature is significantly lower than the normal working cylinder. Numerical analysis of the exhaust temperature shows whether there is a misfire.
The misfiring cylinder was identified. According to the exhaust temperature analysis and calculation results, if the exhaust temperature of a certain cylinder or certain cylinders is significantly lower than that of other cylinders, and the difference with other cylinders exceeds a certain limit, it will be judged as a misfire, and the number of misfired cylinders is greater than a certain limit. When the value is set, it will set off an alarm or even stop; if the multi-cylinder misfire flag is determined as the misfired cylinder, the flag signal will be given, and the misfired cylinder will be shielded and the fuel injection quantity will be set to 0. The misfired cylinder will also be shielded when the non-uniformity of each cylinder is calculated. Other cylinders normally perform fuel quantity compensation.

3.4. Closed-Loop Fuel Quantity Compensation

The exhaust temperature compensation calculation modules are shown in Figure 15. Figure 16 shows the fuel quantity compensation ratio calculation module of each cylinder. According to the base fuel quantity injection pulse spectrum, the fuel quantity compensation of each cylinder was adjusted. A compensation ratio of 1 means that no compensation was made for this cylinder’s fuel quantity, 0 means the cylinder did not inject fuel, more than 1 means an increase in the quantity of energy for this cylinder, and more than 0 but less than 1 means the fuel quantity of this cylinder was reduced. The compensation ratio was determined according to the range of the difference between the last exhaust temperature and the average exhaust temperature. A more considerable difference means a more significant discrepancy between the compensation fuel quantity and the base fuel quantity.
Figure 17 shows the flow of fuel compensation and calibration. The fuel compensation count was prepared for identifying the blind spots of the non-uniformity algorithm of each cylinder. When the fuel quantity compensation exceeded the specified frequency and the non-uniformity of each cylinder was not improved in any way, the adjustment of the fuel quantity of each cylinder was stopped. The compensation fuel ratio of 1 represented non-uniformity in each cylinder caused by the fuel injection system.
In the cycle of progressive split-cylinder fuel compensation, the calculated compensation ratio is larger when the difference between the single-cylinder exhaust temperature and the average exhaust temperature is larger. A large difference in fuel quantity causes speed fluctuation. Progressive fuel compensation is adopted to gradually improve the non-uniformity of each cylinder when the difference is above a specific value.
The abovementioned control strategy was used on the SIMULINK platform for the software in-loop regulation of cylinder non-uniformity in MATLAB R2017a. The information was obtained through the calibration and analysis of the feedback signals. Finally, the non-uniformity of each cylinder due to the fuel injection system was achieved by correcting the injection pulse spectrum.

4. Non-Uniformity Control Co-Simulation

To evaluate the effectiveness of the cylinder exhaust temperature based on the CUC strategy, software-in-the-loop simulations are carried out.

4.1. Simulation Scheme

As shown in Figure 1, the joint simulation of SIMULINK and AVL-Cruise M is based on the compilation of the engine model into a SIMULINK executable Cruise.mdl file using the CMC Interface module in AVL Cruise M. The engine model was loaded into a library of modules in SIMULINK. It was loaded into the module library in SIMULINK and dragged and dropped directly into SIMULINK for direct invocation when building the simulation control model, which was used to provide objects for subsequent controller development. Figure 18 shows the joint simulation on the SIMULINK platform.
The input and output interfaces of the real-time model were defined according to the requirements of the control strategy. The model inputs consisted of 125 signals, including the timing and pulse width of the three injections, starting signals, etc. The model outputs consisted of 56 signals, including the engine speed, supercharger speed and pressure, exhaust temperature and pressure of each cylinder, and output power.

4.2. Verification of the Control Strategy

Figure 19a shows the instantaneous speed and fuel injection curves for the starting and idling conditions. When the speed of the high-speed engine reached 150 r/min, the injector started to inject fuel; when the speed reached 600 r/min, the starting process ended and the idling condition began. Additionally, the transition from the starting condition to the idling condition was smooth, and the fluctuation rate of speed under the idling condition was less than 1%, thereby meeting the secondary accuracy requirements of speed regulation.
Figure 19b shows that the speed of the high-speed engine was stable at 1500 r/min; after experiencing a sudden load reduction, the speed could still be stabilized at 1500 r/min, and the steady-state speed regulation, transient speed regulation, and stabilization time all met the requirements of the classification society for speed control.

4.3. Software-In-The-Loop Simulation Results

To compare the effects of the non-uniformity control strategy based on the exhaust temperature of each cylinder and the control strategy based on the cylinder pressure, a comparison was performed in the software in-loop, as shown in Figure 20; the high-speed engine was under the calibrated speed and 100% load. The comparison charts of IMEP, Pmax (the maximum burst pressure), and Tex are shown in the figure.
IMEP provides a direct indication of the dynamics and economy of combustion, so controlling IMEP reduces the non-uniformity of the work performed by each cylinder [29], and IMEP reduces the effect of random errors and has high data reliability. Pmax indicates the maximum value of cylinder pressure within an operating cycle. Pmax directly reflects the maximum mechanical shock that the engine is subjected to in the current cycle, and is also an important indicator of abnormal in-cylinder combustion [28].
The CV of IMEP, Pmax and Tex were selected as the index of the in-cylinder combustion inhomogeneity. Cylinders A1, A5, A10, B4, B6, and B8 were selected for demonstration in the figure. The indicators IMEP, Pmax and Tex were compared under no closed-loop control, closed-loop control based on the exhaust temperature of each cylinder, and closed-loop control based on the cylinder pressure. The dispersion of IMEP and Pmax for each cylinder was significantly smaller for the high-speed engine when operating in the exhaust temperature inhomogeneity control and cylinder pressure control modes compared with the no closed-loop control. The non-uniformity of each cylinder was significantly improved under both closed-loop controls.
Figure 21 shows a comparison of the CV of the combustion characteristic parameters when the high-speed engine was operated under different loads using closed-loop speed exhaust temperature control and closed-loop cylinder pressure control, respectively. At each load, the CV of IMEP and Pmax for each cylinder was reduced by approximately 99% for both methods, although the use of closed-loop cylinder pressure control reduced the coefficient of variation of IMEP and Pmax for each cylinder slightly more significantly than closed-loop speed and exhaust temperature control, which makes closed-loop speed and exhaust temperature control more feasible when considering the cost of sensors. With the closed-loop control of exhaust temperature and instantaneous speed, the CV of Tex was close to the closed-loop control of cylinder pressure; the maximum error occurred at 25% load, when was 0.114%. The CV of IMEP was close to the closed-loop control of cylinder pressure; the maximum occurred at 25% load, when it is 0.199%. The CV of Pmax was close to the closed-loop control of cylinder pressure up to 0.025% at 100% load.

5. Conclusions

The CHD622V20 marine high-speed engine was studied and a real-time simulation model was established in AVL Cruise M. A CUC strategy based on the instantaneous speed and exhaust temperature of each cylinder was developed in SIMULINK, and the marine high-speed engine model was integrated in the loop. The CUC of the marine high-speed diesel engine was investigated and compared with the cylinder-pressure-based control strategy to provide a theoretical basis for subsequent hardware-in-the-loop and tests.
(1)
For multi-cylinder marine diesel engines, after the closed-loop control, the inhomogeneity of each cylinder caused by the fuel injection system was significantly improved. Although the control effect of using the exhaust temperature of each cylinder as the feedback variable for the marine high-speed engine was not as outstanding as that of using cylinder pressure, it did not require additional expensive cylinder pressure sensors, which significantly reduced the cost and provided better reliability and feasibility;
(2)
With the closed-loop control of exhaust temperature and instantaneous speed, the CV of IMEP was close to the closed-loop control of cylinder pressure, and the maximum occurred at 25% load, when it was 0.199%. The CV of Pmax was close to the closed-loop control of cylinder pressure up to 0.025% at 100% load. The CV of Tex was close to the closed-loop control of cylinder pressure, and the maximum occurred at 25% load, when it was 0.114%.
(3)
This platform was used to study the effect of the control strategy on the uniformity of each cylinder and the overall performance of the marine high-speed diesel engine and provide a theoretical basis for the subsequent hardware-in-the-loop simulation and actual engine tests.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, L.X.; methodology, L.X.; software, L.X. and S.S.; validation, L.X. and F.D.; writing—original draft preparation, L.X. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Data Availability Statement

All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank the editor in chief, associate editor and the anonymous referees for detailed and valuable comments that helped to improve this manuscript.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Nomenclature

Symbols
AFSTthe stoichiometric air-fuel ratio
ANSthe flow cross-sectional area of the needle valve seat
ANHthe flow cross-sectional area of the nozzle
Aithe surface area of the thermal system boundary
αwthe heat transfer coefficient
Cprethe premixed combustion exothermic calibration parameter
Ccombthe calibrated experimentally and related to speed
dmithe quality of the air flowing into the cylinder
dmethe quality of the exhaust gas flowing
dmpumpthe fuel mass supplied to the high-pressure oil pump
dminjthe fuel mass supplied to the common rail injector
dQs/dtthe heat lost by the compressed air
dQw/dtthe heat gained by the coolant
dQsw/dtthe heat transferred from the compressed air to the coolant
Ethe volume elastic modulus of the fuel
Fwallthe function of wall effects during fuel injection
Fegrthe function of residual gas effects
hithe inflow enthalpy
hethe outflow enthalpy
Huthe low heating value of the fuel
kthe turbulent kinetic energy intensity
mcthe quality of the working substance in the cylinder
mf,prethe fuel mass in the premixed
mf,diff,netthe fuel mass during the diffusion combustion
Pcthe pressure in the cylinder
Pmaxthe maximum burst pressure
Prailthe pressure in the common rail
Ppipethe pressure in the high-pressure oil pipe
Qwthe heat transfer rate
Qwithe heat between the working substance and the thermal system boundary
Qprethe heat in the premixed combustion
Qdiffthe heat in the diffusion combustion
t-tignthe length of time since fuel ignition
Texthe exhaust temperature
Tcthe working substance temperature in the cylinder
Twithe temperature of the thermal system boundary
Twothe temperature of the coolant after the intercooler
Tinthe in-cylinder temperature
TKthe temperature of the air before the intercooler
TSthe temperature of the air after the intercooler
uthe ratio of the internal energy
Vmixthe fuel injection volume
Vcthe cylinder volume
Vrailthe volume of the common rail
κ and TAthe Arrhenius exothermic model constants
ρrailthe volume of the fuel in the common rail
ρfuelthe density of fuel
ξNSthe flow coefficient of the needle valve seat
ξNHthe flow coefficient of the nozzle hole
λthe excess air coefficient
Acronyms
CVCoefficient of variation
IMEPIndicated effective pressure
HPCRHigh pressure common rail
TDCTop dead center
CUCCylinder uniformity control
MFB5050% of the mass fraction burned
MCCMixing controlled combustion
CPUCentral processing unit

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Figure 1. Software in-loop simulation process.
Figure 1. Software in-loop simulation process.
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Figure 2. The CHD622V20 test bench layout.
Figure 2. The CHD622V20 test bench layout.
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Figure 3. The CHD622V20 model.
Figure 3. The CHD622V20 model.
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Figure 4. The simulation of the exhaust temperature fluctuation of the engine.
Figure 4. The simulation of the exhaust temperature fluctuation of the engine.
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Figure 5. Comparison of cylinder pressure verification under different loads.
Figure 5. Comparison of cylinder pressure verification under different loads.
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Figure 6. The pressure of twenty cylinders.
Figure 6. The pressure of twenty cylinders.
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Figure 7. The pressure of the A1 cylinder.
Figure 7. The pressure of the A1 cylinder.
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Figure 8. The comparison of the IMEP and output power for the high-speed engine.
Figure 8. The comparison of the IMEP and output power for the high-speed engine.
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Figure 9. Comparison of Tex simulation and test.
Figure 9. Comparison of Tex simulation and test.
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Figure 10. Comparison of Tex for each load.
Figure 10. Comparison of Tex for each load.
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Figure 11. Real-time factors of the real-time model.
Figure 11. Real-time factors of the real-time model.
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Figure 12. The flow of the CUC strategy.
Figure 12. The flow of the CUC strategy.
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Figure 13. Rotational speed modules.
Figure 13. Rotational speed modules.
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Figure 14. Exhaust temperature calculation modules.
Figure 14. Exhaust temperature calculation modules.
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Figure 15. Exhaust temperature compensation calculation modules.
Figure 15. Exhaust temperature compensation calculation modules.
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Figure 16. Fuel quantity compensation ratio calculation modules.
Figure 16. Fuel quantity compensation ratio calculation modules.
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Figure 17. The fuel quantity compensation and calibration process.
Figure 17. The fuel quantity compensation and calibration process.
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Figure 18. Joint simulation model on the SIMULINK platform.
Figure 18. Joint simulation model on the SIMULINK platform.
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Figure 19. Basic control function verification.
Figure 19. Basic control function verification.
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Figure 20. Comparison of the two control modes: IMEP and Pmax and Tex at 100% load.
Figure 20. Comparison of the two control modes: IMEP and Pmax and Tex at 100% load.
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Figure 21. Coefficients of the combustion characteristic parameters of the two closed-loop controls.
Figure 21. Coefficients of the combustion characteristic parameters of the two closed-loop controls.
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Table 1. The basic technical parameters of the high-speed engine.
Table 1. The basic technical parameters of the high-speed engine.
ProjectParameter
Bore/(mm)170
stroke/(mm)215
Number of cylinders20
Compression ratio15
Rated speed/(r/min)1500
Power rating/(kW)3600
Type of fuel systemHPCR
Firing orderA1-B7-A2-B5-A4-B3-A6-B1-A8-B2-A10-B4-A9-B6-A7-B8-A5-B10-A3-B9
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MDPI and ACS Style

Xie, L.; Sun, S.; Dong, F. The Non-Uniformity Control Strategy of a Marine High-Speed Diesel Engine Based on Each Cylinder’s Exhaust Temperature. Processes 2023, 11, 1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11041068

AMA Style

Xie L, Sun S, Dong F. The Non-Uniformity Control Strategy of a Marine High-Speed Diesel Engine Based on Each Cylinder’s Exhaust Temperature. Processes. 2023; 11(4):1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11041068

Chicago/Turabian Style

Xie, Liangtao, Sicong Sun, and Fei Dong. 2023. "The Non-Uniformity Control Strategy of a Marine High-Speed Diesel Engine Based on Each Cylinder’s Exhaust Temperature" Processes 11, no. 4: 1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11041068

APA Style

Xie, L., Sun, S., & Dong, F. (2023). The Non-Uniformity Control Strategy of a Marine High-Speed Diesel Engine Based on Each Cylinder’s Exhaust Temperature. Processes, 11(4), 1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11041068

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