Use of IDeS Method to Design an Innovative HYICE Sportscar
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- CI diffusion: A hydrogen CI (compression ignition) ICE (internal combustion engine) engine may perform similarly to a diesel CI ICE, but this is at the expense of further research and development because the hybrid design is still a long way from being ready for mass production. With just few modifications, Westport could convert HPDI (high-pressure direct injection) technology to use hydrogen instead of natural gas. Vehicles and fueling technology using natural gas are currently available. It is possible to convert natural gas cars into cars that run on pure hydrogen or a combination of compressed natural gas and hydrogen. While pure hydrogen DI (direct injection) and hydrogen/CNG (compressed natural gas) mixes were studied in the past by Westport, the findings were largely unreported. The fuel storage, fueling practices, station regulations, rules, and standards are all the same for hydrogen and natural gas [10].
- PI premixed: There has been a report on a hydrogen-powered naturally aspirated PFI (port fuel injected) engine. Turbocharging, numerous fuel injectors per port, and charge dilution control were among the engine changes. Jet Ignition (JI) and high charge dilution through dual independent variable cam timing with no EGR (external exhaust gas recirculation) provide ultra-lean burn and throttle-less control. In experiments, low NO emissions and efficiency close to 38% were observed [11]. Another study considers a cryogenic PFI JI turbocharged engine. The maximum speed range is 7500 rpm. The impacts of air displacement and other drawbacks of PFI with hydrogen are restricted by cryogenic injection. As with a normally aspirated gasoline engine, power densities exist. Running at an ultra-lean λ = 2.32, the engine generates 80 kW per liter of power and 150 Nm per liter of torque, with acceptable levels of knock index and BSNOx. The efficiency rates are expected to be above 40% and over 35% for the majority of the load-speed map, ranging between λ = 2.32–3.57. Energy efficiency decreases as the fuel-to-air equivalency ratio increases; however, even the level of λ = 5.56, in low speed and load circumstances, which are crucial for urban driving, allows for efficiencies of about 30% [12]. The hybrid PI–CI systems produced peak efficiencies at around 42% that were similar to the best diesel ICEs and used surface ignition for diesel combustion. By the time the project was finished, the technology was still in its infancy. A dual fuel diesel–hydrogen engine strategy makes it much simpler to operate CI with hydrogen. As the Westport HPDI solution for diesel and liquefied natural gas (LNG) has been thoroughly tested over many years, this solution does not require any additional research or development [13].
- CI/PI hybrid: By simply adjusting the quantity of hydrogen injected both before and after the diesel injection ignition or spark-initiated JI, CI dual fuel diesel injection ignition ICE may be operated in a variety of combustion modes. It goes without saying that there are also more or less “controlled” homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) modes of combustion, with diesel injection or spark-initiated JI (jet ignition) occurring before the expected start of the HCCI autoignition, to provide stability to the otherwise unstable HCCI system [14]. Using a direct hydrogen fuel injector and a JI pre-chamber, a diesel truck engine that had been adapted to run on hydrogen was given four different modes of injection and combustion for consideration [15].
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Environmental Analysis, Study of the Market Segment
2.2. Benchmarking Analysis
2.2.1. Independence Matrix and Importance Matrix
- A value of 1 for a weak relationship;
- A value of 3 for a medium relationship;
- A value of 9 for strong dependency.
- 0 if the element in the row is less important than the element of the column.
- 1 if they have the same importance.
- 2 if the element in the row is more important than the element in the column.
2.2.2. Benchmarking Analysis and Top–Flop Analysis
2.2.3. What–How Matrix
- 0 means no relation;
- 1 means weak relation;
- 3 means medium relation;
- 9 means strong relation.
- Performance;
- Innovation;
- Driving involvement.
- Power net;
- Torque net;
- Curb weight;
- 0–100(Km/h).
3. Results
3.1. Product Architecture
3.2. Innovation
3.2.1. Materials
- 2D shaping of sheets;
- 3D shaping in mold;
- Resin injection in the press putting together all the pieces (CFRP and Al. parts);
- Removing the monocoque chassis from the press;
- CNC machining to refine and open holes.
3.2.2. Power and Torque
3.2.3. Considerations and Criticisms on the Choice of Hydrogen and HYICE
3.2.4. How to Obtain Hydrogen
- Methane reforming;
- Coal gasification;
- Algae and bacteria;
- Electrolysis.
3.3. Two-Dimensional Architecture and Sketching
3.3.1. Retro
3.3.2. Stone
3.3.3. Natural
3.3.4. Advanced
3.3.5. Blueprints
- Retro: 0.49;
- Stone: 0.39;
- Advanced: 0.50;
- Natural: 0.45.
3.4. Three-Dimensional Architecture
3.5. Three-Dimensional Surface
3.6. CFD Analysis of the Final Model
3.7. Rendering
3.8. Prototyping
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- power development;
- re-design and adjustment of the chassis based on future developments of the propulsion and hydrogen storage system;
- development of vehicle dynamics;
- production strategies;
- any changes based on market trends.
F.E.M. Analysis
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Length (mm) | Width (mm) | Height (mm) | Wheelbase (mm) | Engine (cm3) | Powernet (kW) | Torque (Nm) | Curb Weight (kg) | Price (EUR) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BMW Z4 30i | 4324 | 1864 | 1304 | 2470 | 1998 | 190 | 400 | 1415 | 53,000 |
Audi TT 40 TFSI | 4191 | 1832 | 1355 | 2505 | 1984 | 145 | 320 | 1360 | 44,950 |
Mazda MX-5 RF | 3915 | 1735 | 1236 | 2310 | 1998 | 135 | 205 | 1072 | 34,500 |
Porsche Cayman S | 4397 | 1801 | 1284 | 2475 | 2497 | 257.5 | 420 | 1385 | 75,506 |
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Galiè, G.; Cappelli, M.; Maffei, P.; Robusti, M.; Vasileski, I.; Frizziero, L. Use of IDeS Method to Design an Innovative HYICE Sportscar. Inventions 2023, 8, 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/inventions8030075
Galiè G, Cappelli M, Maffei P, Robusti M, Vasileski I, Frizziero L. Use of IDeS Method to Design an Innovative HYICE Sportscar. Inventions. 2023; 8(3):75. https://doi.org/10.3390/inventions8030075
Chicago/Turabian StyleGaliè, Giulio, Michele Cappelli, Pietro Maffei, Matteo Robusti, Igor Vasileski, and Leonardo Frizziero. 2023. "Use of IDeS Method to Design an Innovative HYICE Sportscar" Inventions 8, no. 3: 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/inventions8030075
APA StyleGaliè, G., Cappelli, M., Maffei, P., Robusti, M., Vasileski, I., & Frizziero, L. (2023). Use of IDeS Method to Design an Innovative HYICE Sportscar. Inventions, 8(3), 75. https://doi.org/10.3390/inventions8030075