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Quantum Racing and The Physics of Racing 4 2 BGSU Society of Physics Students [ [ Department of Physics and Astronomy Bowling Green State University

Quantum Racing

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42. Quantum Racing. and The Physics of Racing. [. [. Department of Physics and Astronomy Bowling Green State University. BGSU Society of Physics Students. Outline. Grand Prix of BGSU Quantum Racing Why? 2005 Team Kart Construction Testing Race Day - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Quantum      Racing

Quantum

Racingand

The Physics of Racing

42

BGSU Society of Physics Students[

[

Department of Physics and Astronomy

Bowling Green State University

Page 2: Quantum      Racing

Outline• Grand Prix of BGSU• Quantum Racing

– Why?– 2005 Team– Kart

• Construction• Testing• Race Day

• Physics of Racing– Center of Mass/Weight Shift– Tires– Steering– Corners– Engine– Gears

Page 3: Quantum      Racing

• Kart race– Bring motorsports to BGSU Campus– Promote clean Energy (E85)

Grand Prix of BGSU

Page 4: Quantum      Racing

Why should SPS go racing?

• Real life application of Physics– Hands on experience– Brings the physics to life

HAVE FUN WITH PHYSICS!!

Page 5: Quantum      Racing

Quantum Racing Team

Crew ChiefMatt Hodek

DriverJen Bradley

Crew MembersRyan HendersonBilly Schmidt

ScorerRyan Loreck

Track WorkerIan Nemitz

Page 6: Quantum      Racing

Kart ConstructionPurchased a base racing chassis

Page 7: Quantum      Racing

Build a safety cageKart Construction

Page 8: Quantum      Racing

Engine and Clutch

Kart Construction

Page 9: Quantum      Racing

Kart Testing

• Several Driver training and kart testing sessions.– Improve driver skill

and familiarity with kart

– Adjust kart to provide best kart for the driver.

Page 10: Quantum      Racing

Data Acquisition

• Alfano – Records:

RPM

Head Temp

Wheel Speed

G-force

Lap times

– 10 hz ~90 min– 24-40 hrs (lap only)

Page 11: Quantum      Racing
Page 12: Quantum      Racing

Laptimes

20

24

28

32

0 10 20 30 40 50 60

lap

tim

e (s

)

Page 13: Quantum      Racing

velocity

30

35

40

45

50

13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22

seconds

ft/s

ec

acceleration

-1

-0.8

-0.6

-0.4

-0.2

0

0.2

0.4

13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22

sec

ft/s

ec^

2

Page 14: Quantum      Racing

The Physics of RacingAn Introduction

Page 15: Quantum      Racing

How the kart moves

What makes it move

Page 16: Quantum      Racing

COM and Weight Shift

• COM (Center of Mass)– Very important

• Where it is• How to change it

• Weight Shift– Effects handling of car

• (de)acceleration• Cornering

Accelerating

Grip

De-accelerating

Page 17: Quantum      Racing

Tires!• FRICTION!!

• Traction Circle– Limited traction

available

• Slip Angle

• Relies heavily on weight transfer

Accel

brake

left right

Right Front Tire

Page 18: Quantum      Racing

Steering Casterforward

Kingpin

Inclination

Scrub Radius

Turn

Raiselower

Lifted off the ground

COM Shift

Page 19: Quantum      Racing

Steering

Page 20: Quantum      Racing

SteeringTurn

Raiselower

Lifted off the ground

Ackerman Steering

Page 21: Quantum      Racing

Chassis setup and Tires• Determines how the weight is transferred

to each wheel under different conditions

Understeer Oversteer

Front Grip

Rear GripFront Grip

Rear Grip

More grip:Decrease tire pressureStiffen Chassis sectionsMove weight towards wheel

Less grip:Increase tire pressureFlexable Chassis sectionsMove weight away from wheel

Page 22: Quantum      Racing

Corners

Goals: • widest arc possible• Keep speed up• Retain as much

momentum as possible

Outside - worst

Inside - better

Apex - Best

R

vmF

2

Page 23: Quantum      Racing

Corners

Page 24: Quantum      Racing

How the kart moves

What makes it move

Page 25: Quantum      Racing

Engine

• Fluid Mechanics– Air flow – Volumetric efficiency

• Mechanical Engineering– Converting combustion

Into mechanical force

•Thermodynamics–Compression –Combustion

Page 26: Quantum      Racing

axel_rpm

clutch_rpm

thclutch_tee

axel_teethgear_ratio

Gears

Higher Ratiomore torqueless top end speed

Lower Ratioless torquemore top end speed

32 teeth

16 teeth2:1 gear ratio

Page 27: Quantum      Racing

On going StudiesThe Advanced Physics of Racing

Page 28: Quantum      Racing

Topics of Study• Thermodynamic model of the engine

• Air cycle• Fuel-air cycle• Air capacity• Ambient conditions

• Dynamical model of the Chassis• Chassis flex• Harmonic Oscillation

Page 29: Quantum      Racing

Measured Hp/torque curves

•Comparison to Experimental data

•Smoothing Data

•Clutch issue

rpm vs torque/(hp)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000

rpm

ft lb

s (h

p)

tormaxhpmax

rpm vs torque (hp) delta=20

y = -7E-10x3 + 5E-06x2 - 0.0073x + 1.954

R2 = 0.8577

y = -5E-10x3 + 3E-06x2 - 0.0054x + 1.5618

R2 = 0.8122

01

23

45

67

89

10

0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000

rpm

ft lb

s (

hp

) tormax

hpmax

Poly. (tormax)

Poly. (hpmax)

Page 30: Quantum      Racing

Simple Air Cycle Model

• Assumptions– Air is an ideal gas, fuel is not part of the charge– Each cycle draws full charge regardless of rpm – The combustion is complete

ηfQMΚ

JH.P. ca

p

T

PtdisplacmenrpmM a

3.532

60

Page 31: Quantum      Racing

Predicted HP (air cycle w/gasoline)

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

0 2000 4000 6000

rpm

HP

50% eff - 18.25 ft lbs

40% eff 14.6 ft lbs

30% eff 10.95 ft lbs

20% eff 7.3 ft lbs

21% eff 7.7 ft lbs

actual - 8 ft lbs @ 2500 rpm

Page 32: Quantum      Racing

HP vs RPM

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000

rpm

HP

calculated hp 22% eff f=.11

recorded hp delta=20

Page 33: Quantum      Racing

Fuel-Air Cycle

• “An idealized process using as its working medium real gasses that closely resembling those used in the corresponding engine.“

• Not a ‘thermodynamic cycle’• Assumptions

– No chemical change before or after combustion– After combustion, the charge is in chemical

equilibrium– All processes are adiabatic– Velocities of the charge are negligable

Page 34: Quantum      Racing

Thank You

Any Questions?

SourcesTaylor, Charles F. The Internal-Combustion

Engine in Theory and Practice. 2nd ed. Vol. 1. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The M.I.T. P, 1985.

Beckman, Brian. "The Physics of Racing." SCCA CalClub Newsletter.

Quantum

Racing42