ANSYS Software Helps DuPont Eliminate Rattle from Porsche Boxster Manifold

A sports car is supposed to sound like one, purring at idle and growling under heavy acceleration. To owners of high-performance cars, this constitutes music. Occasionally, however, a false note is struck. When that happens before a car goes into production, engineers get to work, and quickly.
 
A false note was detected in the new Porsche Boxster, a handsomely styled sports car designed like its ancestors for power, grace, and smooth handling. Porsche engineers in the research and development center in Weissach, near Stuttgart, Germany, discovered a harsh and annoying rattle under the Boxster's hood at around 2,250 rpm.
 
The rattling sounded as if a metal washer had been dropped into the manifold. Weissach engineers soon traced the noise, around 730 Hz, to the plenum of the air intake manifold on top of the engine. At that time, the part was undergoing final pre-production checkout and there were just a few days to solve the problem. One of the companies responsible for development of the product concept and its engineering as well as actual production, Mark IV Automotive Systémes Moteurs, requested the help of its partner, DuPont. DuPont engineers met the challenge with high-speed detective work.

The manifold is made with a DuPont glass fiber-reinforced thermoplastic called Zytel® 70G35 HSL Nylon. As suppliers to Porsche, Mark IV and DuPont accepted considerable engineering responsibility. DuPont and Mark IV shared responsibility for strength calculations around the parts' flanges, mold flow predictions, and interior pressure simulations. Intake manifolds must withstand the force of engine backfires.

By standards of volume in the automotive industry, the Boxster implementation is relatively small, only about 17,000 cars a year with two manifolds on each car. Popular car models are built at rates six to twelve times higher.

"But this was a key win for DuPont and Zytel," said Glenn Philip Sievewright, DuPont's lead engineer on the Porsche Boxster project. "This application shatters forever the myth that automakers must give up sound quality to gain the many advantages of a thermoplastic air-intake manifold." Sievewright works in DuPont's automotive R&D facility in Hemel Hempstead, England.

Porsche went back to DuPont and Mark IV with a noise-vibration-harshness (NVH) problem. Because time was short, the German engineers came well armed with data. Tests at Porsche pinpointed the source as air pulsations in the manifold's plenum chamber. This in turn was traced to an increase in the inlet and exhaust valve overlap, a function of the engine's camshaft timing. Porsche had also eliminated engine vibration in the engine itself as a cause. There were no natural frequencies in the problem area around 730 Hz in the Boxster's 2.5 liter, a flat-head, 6-cylinder engine.

With the intake manifold on the verge of going into production, Mark IV and DuPont engineers wanted every possible assurance that they were indeed on the right track. This required a multiple analysis approach combined with verification by modal finite element analysis (FEA). The software used was ANSYS/Mechanical™ design verification and optimization software from ANSYS, Inc., Canonsburg, PA, USA, plus acoustic holography and laser scanning analysis packages.

"We couldn't just do anything we wanted," Sievewright recalled. "Our range of options was limited by the fact that Porsche engineers had already signed off on all the parts designs, all the under-hood placements, the spacing between components, air flows, cooling flows, and so on.

"Though we had only seven working days to solve the problem, the engineers took the time to do correlations between Porsche's tests and our own," he noted. "Only then did we launch a detailed analysis of the manifold to find out exactly what was happening."

Acoustic holography and laser scanning analysis were used in combination, a well-tested technique at DuPont for identifying sources of unwanted noise and ways to eliminate it. ANSYS was used to correlate the results from acoustic holography and laser scanning analysis. But those techniques are essentially diagnostic instruments, Sievewright pointed out. Modal FEA is needed if their data is to undergo any kind of intensive examination. ANSYS has a long history of success at DuPont. "We have done hundreds of analyses with it, including the original analyses when the Boxster manifold was developed," Sievewright noted.

But those tests were primarily static and dynamic structural. For the NVH analyses, the geometry of the original manifold design was read in as an IGES file. The surfaces were extracted and meshed, and DuPont went at it from there. For hardware, engineers used a SPARCstation from Sun Microsystems Inc., a UNIX machine.

Acoustic holography was used to reveal which areas of the manifold were resonating. The manifold was set up on a shake test rig and vibrated at 730 Hz. Sound pressure levels at 15 points on the plenum's upper surface were scanned and plotted. "The movement was as much as half a millimeter," Sievewright said, or roughly 0.020 inch. "You could actually see it." While still on the shaker rig, the part was laser scanned, too. The extreme accuracy of laser scanning quickly established which sections of the plenum surface vibrated most. The laser scans generated a plot of the mode of the resonant frequencies," he added. "That gave us a modal picture of the vibration. Acoustic holography just gives us vibrations at specific points."

Modal analysis with ANSYS was brought to bear on the problem. DuPont used a constant G-force and analyzed the part at various frequencies across the range to further pinpoint the fix. "The surface velocities from the modal analyses compared very well with those from the laser scanning and were verified with ANSYS," said Sievewright.

The DuPont team found that noise levels were highest at the area of the plenum chamber with the highest surface velocities. "This indicated that the surface vibration energy of the parts at resonance was emitted as that rattling noise," Sievewright said. DuPont also found that noise emitted from the part was directly proportional to the surface velocity.

The tests were run in parallel rather than sequentially. "Any of three analyses probably could have told us what we needed to know," Sievewright noted. "We did all three to make sure we got it right the first time." Some acoustic analyses were performed with a specialized package called Comet/Acoustics from Automated Analysis Corp. (AAC), Ann Arbor, MI. AAC is an ANSYS Enhanced Solutions Partner, as well as an ANSYS Channel Partner.

It turned out that the noise came from that part of the intake manifold right under the letters SCH in PORSCHE. Fixing the problem was straightforward: a quick redesign of the manifold's plenum to thicken the offending surface.

ANSYS was also used to determine how difficult the changes would be to make. "We could not change the curvature of a surface because of the time that would be needed to modify the tooling," Sievewright said. "But adding about one and a half millimeters of material to thicken the plenum surface, was very effective." The mold maker simply machined away some metal from the surface of the tooling.

This led to a 10-decibel (dB) reduction at 730 Hz as well as a 10-dB reduction at a resonating frequency of 890 Hz. "We also got a smoother slope to the frequency spectrum between 600 and 925 Hz resulting in less harshness and lower overall sound levels." This correlated well with the noise curve from the moisture conditioned part and Porsche engineers signed off on the solution.

DuPont and Mark IV quickly produced some prototypes and shipped them to Porsche for final testing. Sievewright said that all the testing and analyses - FEA, acoustic holography, and laser scanning analysis - plus the proposals for change and delivery of the new prototypes were done in just seven days. "Using ANSYS let us be 99 percent sure that we had the right solution," Sievewright said.

 

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