MultiAir

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Fiat 875 cc two cylinder TwinAir engine featuring Multiair technology

MultiAir is a hydraulically-actuated variable valve timing and variable valve lift engine technology enabling "cylinder by cylinder, stroke by stroke"[1] control of intake air directly via a gasoline engine's inlet valves. Developed by Fiat Powertrain Technologies, the technology bypasses a primary engine inefficiency: pumping losses caused by restriction of the intake passage by the throttle plate, used to regulate air feeding the cylinders.[2]

MultiAir was licensed to the Schaeffler Group in 2011, which also markets the system as Uniair.[3] Schaeffler began supplying Uniair systems in 2017 to Jaguar Land Rover, branded as Ingenium technology.[4]

Fiat S.p.A., now Stellantis, launched MultiAir in 2009 employing a proprietary electro-hydraulic system to precisely control air intake without a throttle valve,[5] in order to increase engine power and torque, reduce fuel consumption, reduce emissions — and improve engine operation — offering "a more controllable flow of air during the combustion cycle in comparison with mechanical VVT systems."[6] The technology allows engines to be lighter and smaller while reducing pumping losses — and can be adapted to existing engines by replacing the camshaft with the MultiAir system, thus requiring a new head only.

Compatible with both naturally aspirated and forced-induction engines, MultiAir technology was patented by Fiat in 2002 and was launched at the 2009 Geneva Motor Show in the Alfa Romeo MiTo.[7] Launched in Fiat's FIRE 1.4 units, e.g., in the Fiat 500 (2007), 1.4 MultiAir engines for global markets are manufactured in Termoli, Italy at the Fiat Powertrain Technologies factory and at the FCA's Dundee Engine Plant (formerly of Global Engine Alliance's GEMA manufacturing branch), with critical systems manufactured and assembled by Schaeffler Group.[3]

In 2010, the 1.4L MultiAir engine won the International Engine of the Year[8] as well as Popular Science's Best of What's New.[1] In the same year, the Fiat SGE engine (0.9 turbocharged and 1.0 naturally aspirated TwinAir units), also using MultiAir technology, was launched in the Fiat 500. It is produced in Bielsko-Biała, Poland. It was named Best New Engine of 2011.[9]

Both FIRE and SGE units equipped with MultiAir use indirect fuel injection.

MultiAir II, using direct fuel injection, was made available in the GME (Hurricane) and GSE (FireFly) units, starting from 2016.

Technology[]

How it works
"The MultiAir system is elegantly simple. An electrohydraulic actuator—a high-response, electronically activated solenoid—controls the pressure applied to hydraulic fluid (engine oil drawn from the sump) that fills a thin passageway that connects the intake valves and the camshaft. The solenoid valve regulates the amount of oil that is pumped by the cam action either to the valve or a bypass reservoir.

When pressurized, the hydraulic line behaves like a solid body and transmits the lift schedule imparted by intake cam directly to the intake valve. When the solenoid is disengaged a spring takes over valve actuation duties.

This electrohydraulic link allows independent operation of the two components, which enables near real-time control over the valve lift profiles, said Bernard. Whereas a closed solenoid transmits the pressure generated by the camshaft’s intake profile to the valve in the normal fashion, an open solenoid breaks the hydraulic link between cam and valve, decoupling their operations."[10]
Society of Automotive Engineering, 2010

For variable valve timing, competing technologies (e.g., Honda's VTEC and BMW's VANOS) use electromechanical concepts, achieving valve lift variation via dedicated mechanisms, usually combined with camshaft phasers to allow control of both valve lift and phase. In contrast, Multiair uses managed hydraulic fluid to provide variable valve control.

Control of a MultiAir engine's intake valves works via a valve tappet (cam follower), moved by a mechanical intake cam, which is connected to the intake valve through a hydraulic chamber, controlled by a normally open on/off solenoid valve.[11] The system allows optimum timing of intake valve operation.

MultiAir technology can increase power (up to 10%) and torque (up to 15%), as well as reduce consumption levels (up to 10%) and emissions of CO2 (up to 10%), particulates (up to 40%) and NOx (up to 60%)[5][7] when compared to a traditional petrol engine. The system also provides smoother cold weather operation, more even torque delivery and no engine shake at shut-off.[12]

An example of the gains offered by the MultiAir technology can be seen in the current Alfa Romeo MiTo: the 1.4 TB engine, without MultiAir, can produce 105 PS (77 kW; 104 hp) and 160 N⋅m (120 lb⋅ft) whilst using 6.5 litres per 100 kilometres (43 mpg‑imp; 36 mpg‑US). With MultiAir, the same engine develops 170 PS (125 kW; 168 hp) and 250 N⋅m (180 lb⋅ft), while consuming 6.0 L/100 km (47 mpg‑imp; 39 mpg‑US).

Development[]

Research on critical related technologies started in the ’80s, when engine electronic control reached market maturity. Multiair was developed over a ten-year period at Fiat's Centro Ricerche Fiat (CRF) in Orbassano, outside Turin,[13] after a five year delay during Fiat's 2000-2005 partnership with General Motors.[14] The vice president of Fiat Powertrain Research & Development Rinaldo Rinolfi led the team who developed the technology at a cost of over $100 million.[15]

Other systems[]

More advanced, fully camless valvetrain systems are under development, but are not yet production-ready.[16] The Valvetronic system used by BMW allows the valve timing and lift to be varied, but not the cam profile. The ability to vary the latter is characteristic of camless and the Multiair systems.

Applications[]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ a b "Fiat's Multiair engine wins Popular Science award". Popular Science via Allpar.com. November 17, 2010. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved May 31, 2016.
  2. ^ Mark Gillies (October 2009). "Fiat's Multiair Valve-Lift System Explained". Car and Driver.
  3. ^ a b David Zoia (March 7, 2011). "Schaeffler Expects Other Takers for MultiAir Technology". Wards Automotive. Archived from the original on August 6, 2016. Retrieved May 30, 2016.
  4. ^ springerprofessional.de: Drivetrain | UniAir Valve Control for Ingenium Petrol Engine | springerprofessional.de, accessdate: 27. January 2018
  5. ^ a b "Best new engine 2010". "International Engine of the Year". Archived from the original on 2012-06-30. Retrieved 2010-09-15.
  6. ^ Mike Hanlon (March 7, 2009). "Fiat releases MultiAir engine technology – is this a fundamental breakthrough in internal combustion engine design?". Gizmag.
  7. ^ a b "「MultiAir」 is launched on the Alfa Romeo MiTo". alfaromeopress.com. Retrieved 2009-06-18.
  8. ^ "Fiat's 1.4-liter turbocharged Multiair powerplant wins "Best New Engine of 2010" award". green.autoblog.com. Retrieved 2011-01-22.
  9. ^ "Fiat 875cc TwinAir". ukipme.com. Archived from the original on 2013-02-05. Retrieved 2012-01-03.
  10. ^ Steven Ashley (October 7, 2010). "Inside Fiat's innovative MultiAir system". Society of Automotive Engineers.
  11. ^ "The Fiat Multiair Technology: how it works". fiatgroupautomobilespress.com. Retrieved 2014-07-28.
  12. ^ "Multiair". fiatgroup.com. Retrieved 2009-06-29.
  13. ^ WebCite query result: WebCite query result, accessdate: 16. June 2016
  14. ^ The Boston Globe: Fiat hopes tech will make Chrysler deal work - The Boston Globe, accessdate: 16. June 2016
  15. ^ "Fiat retrofits Chrysler engine, shelves dinosaurs to save gas". pittsburghlive.com. Retrieved 2009-06-29.
  16. ^ "Valeo has customers for camless engine with "smart valve actuation"". autobloggreen.com. Retrieved 2009-06-29.

External links[]

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