A modified oil lubrication system with flow control to reduce crankshaft bearing friction in a litre 4 cylinder diesel engine

The oil distribution system of an automotive light duty engine typically has an oil pump mechanically driven through the front-endancillaries-drive or directly off the crankshaft. Delivery pressure is regulated by a relief valve to provide an oil gallery pressure of typically 3 to 4 bar absolute at...

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Main Authors: Shayler, Paul J., Cheng, Li, Li, Qile, Wahab, Emad
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36081/
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author Shayler, Paul J.
Cheng, Li
Li, Qile
Wahab, Emad
author_facet Shayler, Paul J.
Cheng, Li
Li, Qile
Wahab, Emad
author_sort Shayler, Paul J.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The oil distribution system of an automotive light duty engine typically has an oil pump mechanically driven through the front-endancillaries-drive or directly off the crankshaft. Delivery pressure is regulated by a relief valve to provide an oil gallery pressure of typically 3 to 4 bar absolute at fully-warm engine running conditions. Electrification of the oil pump drive is one way to decouple pump delivery from engine speed, but this does not alter the flow distribution between parts of the engine requiring lubrication. Here, the behaviour and benefits of a system with an electrically driven, fixed displacement pump and a distributor providing control over flow to crankshaft main bearings and big end bearings is examined. The aim has been to demonstrate that by controlling flow to these bearings, without changing flow to other parts of the engine, significant reductions in engine friction can be achieved. The study has been conducted on a 1.5litre, 4 cylinder turbocharged diesel engine. By reducing the feed pressure to the bearings from a baseline pressure of 3bar absolute to 1.5 bar absolute, reductions in engine rubbing friction mean effective pressure of up to 14% has been achieved at light load. Similar reductions in friction were recorded across a speed range of 1000-2000 rev/min and net indicated mean effective pressures up to 3.5 bar. The ranges were conservatively limited to protect against bearing damage. The paper reports details of the oil system modifications and the test results. The fuel economy benefit due solely to the friction reduction, not including any benefit from a reduction in oil pump work, is around 1½ % over the New European Drive Cycle (NEDC). The reduction in friction is demonstrably significant and represents an area with great potential to improve engine efficiency.
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format Conference or Workshop Item
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:28:36Z
publishDate 2016
recordtype eprints
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spelling nottingham-360812020-05-04T17:47:50Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36081/ A modified oil lubrication system with flow control to reduce crankshaft bearing friction in a litre 4 cylinder diesel engine Shayler, Paul J. Cheng, Li Li, Qile Wahab, Emad The oil distribution system of an automotive light duty engine typically has an oil pump mechanically driven through the front-endancillaries-drive or directly off the crankshaft. Delivery pressure is regulated by a relief valve to provide an oil gallery pressure of typically 3 to 4 bar absolute at fully-warm engine running conditions. Electrification of the oil pump drive is one way to decouple pump delivery from engine speed, but this does not alter the flow distribution between parts of the engine requiring lubrication. Here, the behaviour and benefits of a system with an electrically driven, fixed displacement pump and a distributor providing control over flow to crankshaft main bearings and big end bearings is examined. The aim has been to demonstrate that by controlling flow to these bearings, without changing flow to other parts of the engine, significant reductions in engine friction can be achieved. The study has been conducted on a 1.5litre, 4 cylinder turbocharged diesel engine. By reducing the feed pressure to the bearings from a baseline pressure of 3bar absolute to 1.5 bar absolute, reductions in engine rubbing friction mean effective pressure of up to 14% has been achieved at light load. Similar reductions in friction were recorded across a speed range of 1000-2000 rev/min and net indicated mean effective pressures up to 3.5 bar. The ranges were conservatively limited to protect against bearing damage. The paper reports details of the oil system modifications and the test results. The fuel economy benefit due solely to the friction reduction, not including any benefit from a reduction in oil pump work, is around 1½ % over the New European Drive Cycle (NEDC). The reduction in friction is demonstrably significant and represents an area with great potential to improve engine efficiency. 2016-04-05 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed Shayler, Paul J., Cheng, Li, Li, Qile and Wahab, Emad (2016) A modified oil lubrication system with flow control to reduce crankshaft bearing friction in a litre 4 cylinder diesel engine. In: SAE 2016 World Congress & Exhibition, 12-14 Apr 2016, Detroit, Michigan, USA. Engine Lubricants Crankshafts Diesel/Compression Ignition Engines http://papers.sae.org/2016-01-1045/ 10.4271/2016-01-1045 10.4271/2016-01-1045 10.4271/2016-01-1045
spellingShingle Engine Lubricants
Crankshafts
Diesel/Compression Ignition Engines
Shayler, Paul J.
Cheng, Li
Li, Qile
Wahab, Emad
A modified oil lubrication system with flow control to reduce crankshaft bearing friction in a litre 4 cylinder diesel engine
title A modified oil lubrication system with flow control to reduce crankshaft bearing friction in a litre 4 cylinder diesel engine
title_full A modified oil lubrication system with flow control to reduce crankshaft bearing friction in a litre 4 cylinder diesel engine
title_fullStr A modified oil lubrication system with flow control to reduce crankshaft bearing friction in a litre 4 cylinder diesel engine
title_full_unstemmed A modified oil lubrication system with flow control to reduce crankshaft bearing friction in a litre 4 cylinder diesel engine
title_short A modified oil lubrication system with flow control to reduce crankshaft bearing friction in a litre 4 cylinder diesel engine
title_sort modified oil lubrication system with flow control to reduce crankshaft bearing friction in a litre 4 cylinder diesel engine
topic Engine Lubricants
Crankshafts
Diesel/Compression Ignition Engines
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36081/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36081/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36081/