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Lotus in the Peak
28th - 30th June 2024

Lotus Wins Award For Engine Research That Delivers 15% Co2 Reduction


Mark H

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Lotus Engineering, the world renowned automotive

consultancy division of Lotus, is celebrating its latest

accolade after triumphing at 'The Engineer Technology +

Innovation Awards 2008' with another environmentally

focused project. The winning project, Project HOTFIRE,

developed a gasoline direct injection (GDI) engine concept

that reduces fuel consumption by 15% and was named the

leading academic collaborative project in the automotive

sector.

Project HOTFIRE was made up of a collaboration of engine specialists from

Lotus Engineering, Continental Powertrain, University College London (UCL)

and Loughborough University, with funding from EPSRC (Engineering and

Physical Sciences Research Council). The project studied the potential

efficiency gains of spraying fuel directly into the cylinders of a petrol-driven

engine, rather than introducing a fuel/air mixture. Due to outstanding early

results, the project progressed further with the delivery of a concept-car engine

which has been the subject of interest from a number of large manufacturers.

Mike Kimberley, Chief Executive Officer of Group Lotus Plc said: "I am

absolutely delighted that our global high technology Lotus engineering division

is continually being recognised for leading the industry across a number of

advanced technologies which are contributing to the reduction of CO2

emissions. Project HOTFIRE is an excellent example of an industry and

academic partnership producing world-class research for the benefit of the

environment and the car buyer."

Kimberley continued: "The most important part of the project is that the

technologies developed are available and affordable and as we have already

shown, can be easily implemented into next generation models to produce

lower emissions."

Geraint Castleton-White, Head of Powertrain at Lotus Engineering said: "The

project studied the benefits of homogeneous, early, direct injection for a spark

ignition engine, using inlet valve events to minimise throttling losses. Being

able to introduce the fuel separately from the air gives you freedom with how

you operate the engine, there is no fuel lost to the exhaust, so hydrocarbon

emissions are reduced, and you get more efficiency from the engine. It is our

dedication to research such as this that keeps Lotus Engineering at the

21 October

forefront of advanced combustion technologies, which ultimately will find their

way into engines of the future."

Two single cylinder research engines were designed and constructed by Lotus

Engineering, one of which was optically accessed. The in-cylinder geometry of

the two engines was identical and features a close spaced direct injection

system with a centrally-mounted injector architecture.

The optical version of the engine incorporated a full length fused silica quartz

cylinder liner with a full view of the pent roof of the combustion chamber and a

sapphire window in the piston crown. This allowed an advanced suite of laser

diagnostics to measure air motion, injection characteristics, air/fuel mixing and

combustion. This engine was based at Loughborough University for detailed

studies of these in-cylinder phenomena.

The second engine was placed at UCL, and was updated to the same engine

architecture as the optical engine, to measure emissions and fuel economy.

The principle of the investigation was to use early inlet valve closing as a

means of controlling the load on the engines, with a minimum amount of

throttle, and so gain significant fuel savings. The emission measurements

were essential, as any fuel savings could not be at the expense of the exhaust

emissions from the engine.

The end application of this project is a direct injection spark ignition engine

architecture that does not require stratified lean burn combustion to achieve

significant, fuel economy savings of approximately 15%. This ensures that the

system can be used over all speed/load ranges and eliminates the need for an

expensive lean NOx trap which is usually required when lean combustion is

employed.

Early results from this project were so successful that the same architecture

was adopted for the Low CO2 project, a collaboration between Lotus

Engineering and Continental Powertrain with funding from the Energy Saving

Trust (EST). This Low CO2 project has successfully delivered a 3-cylinder

mild-hybrid engine incorporating the cylinder head design used by the

research and this engine has been installed in Opel Astra demonstrator

vehicles which demonstrate significant improvements in both performance and

CO2 emissions.

 

Photos here:

http://www.midlandslotus.co.uk/forum/index...=sc&cat=150

 

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