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A typical electronic
fuel injector
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In trying to keep up with emissions and fuel efficiency laws, the
fuel system used in modern cars has changed a lot over the years.
The 1990 Subaru Justy was the last car sold in the United States to
have a carburetor; the following model year, the Justy had fuel
injection. But fuel injection has been around since the 1950s, and
electronic fuel injection was used widely on European cars starting
around 1980. Now, all cars sold in the United States have fuel
injection systems.
:You will learn how the fuel gets into the cylinder
of the engine, and what terms like "multi-port fuel injection" and
"throttle body fuel injection" mean. You will also find out how
performance chips can give your engine more power.
The Fall of the
Carburetor
For most of the existence of the internal combustion engine, the
carburetor has been the device that supplied fuel to the engine. On
many other machines, such as lawnmowers and chainsaws, it still is.
But as the automobile evolved, the carburetor got more and more
complicated trying to handle all of the operating requirements. For
instance, to handle some of these tasks, carburetors had five
different circuits:
- Main circuit - Provides just enough fuel for
fuel-efficient cruising
- Idle circuit - Provides just enough fuel to keep the
engine idling
- Accelerator pump - Provides an extra burst of fuel when
the accelerator pedal is first depressed, reducing hesitation
before the engine speeds up
- Power enrichment circuit - Provides extra fuel when the
car is going up a hill or towing a trailer
- Choke - Provides extra fuel when the engine is cold so
that it will start
In order to meet stricter emissions requirements, catalytic
converters were introduced. Very careful control of the air-to-fuel
ratio was required for the catalytic converter to be effective.
Oxygen sensors monitor the amount of oxygen in the exhaust, and the
engine control unit (ECU) uses this information to adjust the
air-to-fuel ratio in real-time. This is called closed loop
control -- it was not feasible to achieve this control with
carburetors. There was a brief period of electrically controlled
carburetors before fuel injection systems took over, but these
electrical carbs were even more complicated than the purely
mechanical ones.
At first, carburetors were replaced with throttle body fuel
injection systems (also known as single point or
central fuel injection systems) that incorporated electrically
controlled fuel-injector valves into the throttle body. These were
almost a bolt-in replacement for the carburetor, so the automakers
didn't have to make any drastic changes to their engine designs.
Gradually, as new engines were designed, throttle body fuel
injection was replaced by multi-port fuel injection (also
known as port, multi-point or sequential fuel
injection). These systems have a fuel injector for each cylinder,
usually located so that they spray right at the intake valve. These
systems provide more accurate fuel metering and quicker response.
When You Step on
the Gas
The gas pedal in your car is connected to the throttle valve
-- this is the valve that regulates how much air enters the engine.
So the gas pedal is really the air pedal.
When you step on the gas pedal, the throttle valve opens up more,
letting in more air. The engine control unit (ECU, the computer that
controls all of the electronic components on your engine) "sees" the
throttle valve open and increases the fuel rate in anticipation of
more air entering the engine. It is important to increase the fuel
rate as soon as the throttle valve opens; otherwise, when the gas
pedal is first pressed, there may be a hesitation as some air
reaches the cylinders without enough fuel in it.
Sensors monitor the mass of air entering the engine, as well as
the amount of oxygen in the exhaust. The ECU uses this information
to fine-tune the fuel delivery so that the air-to-fuel ratio is just
right.
The Injector
A fuel injector is nothing but an electronically controlled valve.
It is supplied with pressurized fuel by the fuel pump in your car,
and it is capable of opening and closing many times per second.
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Inside a fuel injector
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When the injector is energized, an electromagnet moves a plunger
that opens the valve, allowing the pressurized fuel to squirt out
through a tiny nozzle. The nozzle is designed to atomize the
fuel -- to make as fine a mist as possible so that it can burn
easily.
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A fuel injector firing
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The amount of fuel supplied to the engine is determined by the
amount of time the fuel injector stays open. This is called the
pulse width, and it is controlled by the ECU.
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Fuel injectors mounted in the intake manifold
of the engine
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The injectors are mounted in the intake manifold so that they
spray fuel directly at the intake valves. A pipe called the fuel
rail supplies pressurized fuel to all of the injectors.
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In this picture, you can see three of the
injectors. The fuel rail is the pipe on the left.
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In order to provide the right amount of fuel, the engine control
unit is equipped with a whole lot of sensors. Let's take a look at
some of them.
Engine Sensors
In order to provide the correct amount of fuel for every operating
condition, the engine control unit (ECU) has to monitor a huge
number of input sensors. Here are just a few:
- Mass airflow sensor - Tells the ECU the mass of air
entering the engine
- Oxygen sensor's - Monitors the amount of oxygen in the
exhaust so the ECU can determine how rich or lean the fuel mixture
is and make adjustments accordingly
- Throttle position sensor - Monitors the throttle valve
position (which determines how much air goes into the engine) so
the ECU can respond quickly to changes, increasing or decreasing
the fuel rate as necessary
- Coolant temperature sensor - Allows the ECU to
determine when the engine has reached its proper operating
temperature
- Voltage sensor - Monitors the system voltage in the car
so the ECU can raise the idle speed if voltage is dropping (which
would indicate a high electrical load)
- Manifold absolute pressure sensor - Monitors the
pressure of the air in the intake manifold
The amount of air being drawn into the engine is a good indication
of how much power it is producing; and the more air that goes into
the engine, the lower the manifold pressure, so this reading is
used to gauge how much power is being produced.
- Engine speed sensor - Monitors engine speed, which is
one of the factors used to calculate the pulse width
There are two main types of control for multi-port
systems: The fuel injectors can all open at the same time, or each
one can open just before the intake valve for its cylinder opens
(this is called sequential multi-port fuel injection).
The advantage of sequential fuel injection is that if the driver
makes a sudden change, the system can respond more quickly because
from the time the change is made, it only has to wait only until the
next intake valve opens, instead of for the next complete revolution
of the engine.
Engine Controls
and Performance Chips
The algorithms that control the engine are quite complicated. The
software has to allow the car to satisfy emissions requirements for
100,000 miles, meet EPA fuel economy requirements and protect
engines against abuse. And there are dozens of other requirements to
meet as well.
The engine control unit uses a formula and a large number of
lookup tables to determine the pulse width for given operating
conditions. The equation will be a series of many factors multiplied
by each other. Many of these factors will come from lookup tables.
We'll go through a simplified calculation of the fuel injector
pulse width. In this example, our equation will only have three
factors, whereas a real control system might have a hundred or more.
Pulse width = (Base pulse width) x (Factor A) x (Factor B)
In order to calculate the pulse width, the ECU first looks up the
base pulse width in a lookup table. Base pulse width is a
function of engine speed (RPM) and load (which can be
calculated from manifold absolute pressure). Let's say the engine
speed is 2,000 RPM and load is 4. We find the number at the
intersection of 2,000 and 4, which is 8 milliseconds.
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RPM
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Load
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1
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2
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3
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4
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5
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1,000
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1
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2
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3
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4
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5
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2,000
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2
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4
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6
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8
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10
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3,000
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3
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6
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9
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12
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15
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4,000
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4
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8
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12
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16
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20
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In the next examples, A and B are parameters that
come from sensors. Let's say that A is coolant temperature
and B is oxygen level. If coolant temperature equals 100 and
oxygen level equals 3, the lookup tables tell us that Factor A = 0.8
and Factor B = 1.0.
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A
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Factor A
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B
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Factor B
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0
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1.2
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0
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1.0
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25
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1.1
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1
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1.0
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50
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1.0
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2
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1.0
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75
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0.9
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3
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1.0
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100
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0.8
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4
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0.75
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So, since we know that base pulse width is a function of
load and RPM, and that pulse width = (base pulse width) x (factor
A) x (factor B), the overall pulse width in our example equals:
8 x 0.8 x 1.0 = 6.4 milliseconds
From this example, you can see how the control system makes
adjustments. With parameter B as the level of oxygen in the exhaust,
the lookup table for B is the point at which there is (according to
engine designers) too much oxygen in the exhaust; and accordingly,
the ECU cuts back on the fuel.
Real control systems may have more than 100 parameters, each with
its own lookup table. Some of the parameters even change over time
in order to compensate for changes in the performance of engine
components like the catalytic converter. And depending on the engine
speed, the ECU may have to do these calculations over a hundred
times per second.
Performance Chips
This leads us to our discussion of performance chips. Now that we
understand a little bit about how the control algorithms in the ECU
work, we can understand what performance-chip makers do to get more
power out of the engine.
Performance chips are made by aftermarket companies, and are used
to boost engine power. There is a chip in the ECU that holds all of
the lookup tables; the performance chip replaces this chip. The
tables in the performance chip will contain values that result in
higher fuel rates during certain driving conditions. For instance,
they may supply more fuel at full throttle at every engine speed.
They may also change the spark timing (there are lookup tables for
that, too). Since the performance-chip makers are not as concerned
with issues like reliability, mileage and emissions controls as the
carmakers are, they use more aggressive settings in the fuel maps of
their performance chips.