18-19 November 2010
IFP Energies nouvelles/Rueil-Malmaison
The LES4ICE conference provides a forum for exchange concerning recent advances in Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) research applied to internal combustion engine (ICE) flows and related experimental techniques. By this way, engine designers and research scientists working in the field of ICE, coming from Europe and the USA, gathered to debate the state of the art in LES applied to ICEs and examine advanced experimental techniques capable of supporting and validating its development.
A major factor driving R&D in the automotive industry is an increasing demand on the part of our society to reduce CO2 and pollutant emissions from road vehicles. Although alternative solutions are emerging, the ICE can be expected to remain the dominant energy converter, and it is therefore crucial to further improve its environmental performance. The key to this is being able to move beyond the present state of the art in order to reliably predict and control individual engine cycles under realistic operating conditions, rather than being limited to a cycle-averaged understanding.
Today's state of the art in the field of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) applied to ICE flows is based on the Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) approach. This technique has proven its ability to address cycle-averaged phenomena, making it possible to characterize the dependency of combustion efficiency and emission levels on engine geometry and operating parameters. In terms of the future, however, RANS is limited to steady engine operation, with low levels of cyclic variability.
Due to its inherent principle of explicitly resolving large flow scales, which depend of the geometry studied, and of only modelling small scales, which can be assumed to be universal, the use of LES opens up new avenues for extending the scope of application of CFD for ICEs.
A major impetus for this is the continuous development of High Performance Computing (HPC) centers, and their support of LES research and application. The availability of ever better computational power will enable LES to resolve a significant part of the flow kinetic energy, thus potentially improving the prediction of engine aerodynamics and local turbulence conditions. In turn, this will lead to better prediction of liquid injection, mixing, combustion and pollutants, although related phenomena will hardly be resolved on meshes of practical interest, and thus require models that need experimental validation.
One of the expected benefits of LES is that it will offer a deeper and more detailed insight into complex coupled phenomena inside the engine, by predicting local instantaneous flow features in spatially filtered, individual engine cycles. This also gives unprecedented access to non-cyclic engine phenomena, such as cyclic variability, knock, cold starts or transients.
A central requirement for industrial use of LES in the future will be the availability of dedicated engine experiments capable of supporting the development of LES methodologies by providing reliable data of sufficient quality for validation. In particular, conventional experiments are aimed at providing a cycle-averaged view, while access to a more detailed understanding as envisaged with LES requires cycle-resolved, local and quantitative data. The ability to correlate local measurements with global engine characteristics on a cycle basis is also vital to understanding non-cyclic phenomena.
A number of questions still need to be answered before LES can be used on an industrial scale. These include basic modelling issues, appropriate numerical methods, methodology and CPU time issues. It will also be necessary to have access to advanced experimental data for validation. The LES4ICE conference provides its participants with a unique opportunity to keep up with the relevant R&D being conducted worldwide.
Now available:
- the webcasts of the LES4ICE conference (depending on authors authorization) including the animations
- the extended abstracts of the oral presentations
Register on-line through http://ifp.illipack.com to take advantage of the talks, the Q&A sessions and download the documents given out on site to all participants.
Presentation files in PDF format can be downloaded from the links on the following final program:
Chairmen: Gilles Bruneaux (IFP Energies nouvelles, France) and Lyle Pickett (Sandia, USA)
Chairmen: Sébastien Candel (École Centrale Paris, France) and Dan Haworth (Pennsylvania State Univ., USA)
Chairmen: Bizhan Befrui (Delphi, Luxemburg) and Chawki Habchi (IFP Energies nouvelles, France)
Chairmen: Chris Rutland (Univ. of Wisconsin, USA)
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Dr. Christian Angelberger
IFP, Rueil-Malmaison, France
Tel: +33 1 47 52 57 45
Fax: +33 1 47 52 70 68
E-mail: christian.angelberger@ifpenergiesnouvelles.fr
- Dr. P. Adomeit (FEV Motorentechnik, Germany)
- Dr. T. Baritaud (Ferrari, Italy)
- Pr. K. Boulouchos (ETH Zürich, Switzerland)
- Pr. S. Candel (École Centrale Paris, France)
- Pr. A. D. Gosman (Imperial College London, UK)
- Dr. C. Habchi (IFP Energies nouvelles, France)
- Pr. D. Haworth (Pennsylvania State Univ., USA)
- Pr. J. Janicka (TU Darmstadt, Germany)
- Dr. C. Krüger (Daimler, Germany)
- Dr. T. W. Kuo (GM Global R&D, USA)
- Pr. N. Peters (RWTH Aachen, Germany)
- Pr. T. J. Poinsot (Institut de Mécanique des Fluides de Toulouse, France)
- Dr. F. Ravet (Renault, France)
- Pr. C. Rutland (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA)
- Pr. D. Thévenin (University Magdeburg, Germany)
- Dr. P. Trouillet (PSA Peugeot Citroën, France)
- Dr.-Ing. T. Unger (Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, Germany)
Conference organization |
Administrative secretariat |
|
Sabine Lalanne |
Claire Langlois |