gruntguru wrote:Clearly the advantage is thermal - aluminium softens at fairly low temperatures and they want to operate with a hotter piston crown.
Peak combustion temperatures and pressures are very high in these engines and one path to higher TE (power) is higher pressure and temperature hence the search for increased temperature tolerance at the piston crown. Steel is great but its strength/mass ratio works against it - especially in thin sections under pressure loading like the piston crown. Honeycombed steel allows the crown to be thicker (resisting bending) without the extra weight.
If they can make a steel piston with the same mass and strength as an aluminium piston there will be a huge advantage in temperature tolerance.
steel or part-steel was predicted by Gilles Simon of P.U.R.E.
with the rather modest rpm and stroke combination dictated by the rules a somewhat heavier piston than usual seems to have no real disbenefit
the prime reason for replacement by Al alloy (of steel pistons ie in performance engines) was lower crown temperature rather than slightly lower weight
Al's far thicker crown etc and far greater thermal conductivity giving much lower crown temperature
lower crown temperature allowing higher CR and so more power and efficiency - eg in UK aviation during WW1 (after Bentley's racecar use pre WW1)
Heron made the UK small car Hotchkiss V twin have Al pistons in 1921 (as essential in an aircooled engine) and Al was general by eg 1926 Austin 20/6
the F1 engine has per cycle multiple small episodes of DI
presumably better able to manage/contain detonation despite the higher crown temperatures
also maybe the tailored fuel helps here
a good read (thanks due to Mr Taulbut) .....
http://www.grandprixengines.co.uk/Note_14.pdf