Abstract

Fuel-efficient aftertreatment thermal management in modern diesel engines is a difficult challenge, especially during low-load operation. This study explores the performance of cylinder deactivation in a diesel engine during low-load operation following highway cruise through experimental evaluation of two drive cycles, specifically extended idle and repeated heavy heavy-duty diesel truck creep cycles. Cylinder deactivation operations are shown to maintain comparable aftertreatment thermal management performance to conventional thermal management operation while reducing fuel up to 40% during extended idle operation. This fuel efficiency improvement coincides with engine-out emission reductions of 72% for soot and 52% for NOx. Cylinder deactivation also shows improved thermal management compared to a more fuel-efficient conventional operation.

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