Navigation
Secondary menu
Content
Footer
en
fr
Nous vous invitons à découvrir le rapport d'activité 2022 de Centrale Nantes / Read the 2022 Annual Report for Centrale Nantes
menu
close
About us
About us
Vision and values
Governance
2023 in numbers
Awards and distinctions in 2023
Alumni
Social Audit
Year in Review
Year in Review
Equality, diversity and inclusion in the school's DNA
A strong commitment to CSR
Training and employability
Research and Innovation
Research and Innovation
Research Institutes
Research and Innovation in 2023
Incubator
Awards for research
Internationalisation
Archives
Archives
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
English version
Archives
Archives
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
Chair
,
Energy transition
,
Industry of the future - Manufacturing
,
Stellantis and Centrale Nantes working together on digital simulation
Stellantis (formerly Groupe PSA) and Centrale Nantes launch a €4-million R&D programme on digital simulation techniques for powertrain design. The programme aims to bring low-emission vehicles to market faster.
on
May 17, 2018
Stellantis and Centrale Nantes today announced the launch of an R&D partnership to optimise powertrain design processes for the group’s future vehicles.
Aim of the partnership: accelerate the roll-out of digital simulation
The aim of the partnership is to accelerate the use of digital simulation techniques in powertrain design, development and testing, and increase model predictability. In the long term, it could be possible to develop a new engine using virtual testing only, without the need for laboratory tests and prototypes.
Digital simulation offers numerous benefits:
development
time saved
: due to the speed at which digital models can be configured versus the process of building and testing multiple iterations of prototypes
cost reductions
: Digital simulation as a design method is less expensive than prototyping, which requires substantial tooling costs. The goal is to reduce the number of prototypes required by more than 70% versus the conventional design approach.
higher quality and more robust
: digitally simulated designs can be tested against a greater number of customer scenarios.
A comprehensive programme
Centrale Nantes combines simulation and testing capabilities within a single team of teaching and research staff specialising in modelling and state-of-the-art experimental resources, including
engine and vehicle test benches
equipped with the most powerful
supercomputer
available on a university campus in France.
€4M cofinanced by the two parties
5 years
project scope: all types of internal combustion engines for the development of hybrid vehicles and may also be extended to electric vehicles
a team of around ten people focussing on:
digital modelling of petrol engines,
“smart” automatic calibration processes to shorten the testing phase
electric powertrain design.
A pioneering partnership
Stellantis/Groupe PSA is already pioneering the digital design approach. Plans for limiting the quantity of prototypes produced for design purposes were put in place back in 2015 for the development of the 1.5l BlueHDi engine, shrinking the number required by around 40%. Through this new partnership, prototyping and testing requirements can be further reduced.
At Centrale Nantes, the partnership will be coordinated by
Alain Maiboom, lecturer and research supervisor
at the Research Laboratory in Hydrodynamics, Energetics and Atmospheric Environment (
LHEEA
), a CNRS research unit. His research activities focus primarily on combustion and the reduction of pollutant emissions from internal combustion engines at source, as well as heat transfers in the engine and throughout the powertrain (experimental characterisation using test benches and phenomenological modelling).
Commenting on the partnership, Mr Maiboom said:
Our objective is to enhance the ability of the models to simulate the different physical phenomena at play and the various situations encountered over the lifetime of a powertrain, as well as to develop calibration methodologies. In a way, we’re developing a digital test bench capable of replacing a physical bench, at least in part
.
Alain Raposo, Senior Vice President, Powertrain and Chassis Engineering at Groupe PSA, said:
Through our partnership with Centrale Nantes, we aim to boost the development of digital simulation processes with a view to permanently reducing CO2 emissions. The key innovation lies in decreasing industrial design turnaround time. For a manufacturing group and a leading school of engineering to be working together on this type of R&D project is a real boon for the growth of French industry around the world.
Arnaud Poitou, Director of Ecole Centrale de Nantes, said:
At Centrale Nantes, we’re very proud to be partnering with a major name in French manufacturing like Groupe PSA. This partnership is a testament to the unique positioning of Centrale Nantes, which combines outstanding digital expertise with large-scale experimental platforms, including vehicle and engine test benches and a supercomputer.
Published on May 17, 2018
Updated on June 17, 2022
Share :
Facebook
X
Linkedin
More news
Centrale Nantes and Naval Group maintain their strategic collaboration within their joint research laboratory - the Joint Laboratory of Marine Technology
Conference - The ecological commitment of scientists: knowing and not taking action means not taking action
Centrale Nantes and MoldTecs SAS join forces to improve the thermal and energy management of electric vehicles
https://rapport-activite.ec-nantes.fr/english-version/groupe-psa-and-centrale-nantes-working-together-on-digital-simulation