godlameroso wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 00:08
Muniix wrote: ↑18 Jul 2018, 19:45
LM10 wrote: ↑18 Jul 2018, 15:04
In pre-season I read an article about Ferrari working on a new cylinder head concept which they wanted to bring any time in season. Obviously it's gonna be on spec 3 then.
Additive Manufacturing used in head, direct AM of the head. This was mentioned in the AM industry news recently with gains in cooling efficiency and weight reduction, honeycomb structuring used to improve cooling galleries with constant diameter reducing coolant volume and improving flow.
As for fuel chemistry with TJI Ferrari now likely have greater knowledge than Mercedes with Bill Attard it's inventor working at FCA while Elisa Toulson, his wife has been performing model development and experimental validation on TJI as associate professor at Michigan State University the two Australians who developed TJI such that it worked with liquid gasoline in prechamber. Bill also worked in the Bishop rotary valve development team for a few years. Now there's two Innovations who's features are screaming to be put together, so complimentary and symbiotic, the next engine regulations should encourage it.
The greater knowledge combined with new fuel chemistry the split battery could allow greater use of energy paths especially MGU-h, maybe different valve timing, turbine bypass.
Reducing the negative effects of the ES deployment being limited by the test
ES.stateOfCharge
Enforcing the 4MJ low to high window limit during race.
It's crazy to think about the fact that hydrogen and oxygen forming bonds with itself and carbon creates all this heat.
Regardless, Ferrari is taking the right approach, the model development and validation is key to getting all the gains out of the combustion concept. The problem is most F1 teams can't afford the hardware needed to study fuel kinetics properly, the large petrochemical companies sponsoring the cars CAN afford it. They also have the brains to not just develop the fuel but the combustion modeling as well, so that their partner F1 team can get the most out of the combustion process.
Shell is as big a petrochemical company as it gets, it's almost self evident Ferrari would make big gains with their fuel. Petronas is big, especially in Asia, however, I don't know if they compare to Shell. BP Castrol is also enormous so I don't know why they're lagging so far behind, same for Exxon Mobil. Maybe their relationship is not as close knit as Ferrari's is with Shell or Mercedes with Petronas.
As for combustion efficiency and chemical kinetics, those three atoms are doing a lot of chemistry. They are referred to as 'the' major combustion reaction, with NTC, the negative temperature coefficient - reactions rates are different.
Last month at the 2018 Princeton CEFRC combustion summer courses and conference we were discussing this reaction with professor William Greene and other researchers.
Research of the NTC low-t reactions using laser diagnostic and imaging of reacting species at Sydney University clean combustion laboratory. Joint volume-velocity shadowgraph imaging of direct injection spray and TJI hot jets.
With the development and analysis of adaptive neural network control of TJI engine operating in multiple combustion regimes.
Using autonomous driving platforms for their ultra high performance, AI, image & signal processing capability proving to be the ideal next generation ECU with 10's of teraflops, Minimising the sensor count with using cylinder pressure sensor and ion sensing indicating radicals.