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Introduction
1. Mechanisms and Physical Effects of Thermal Stress
Thermal Expansion and Material Limitations
Thermal Fatigue and Micro-Damage
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2. Thermal Stress Damage Cases in Core Components
Engine System: Cylinder Head and Piston
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Cylinder Head Cracks: In diesel engines, local temperatures at the cylinder head can reach 300–400°C during operation. The bottom surface heats up while the cooling surface remains relatively cooler, generating significant thermal stress. Poor cooling or frequent rapid acceleration worsens the temperature differential and stress, potentially causing cracks propagating from the combustion chamber towards the water jacket -
Piston Seizure: Aluminum alloy pistons have a higher thermal expansion coefficient than cast iron cylinders. Expansion differences at high temperatures can eliminate piston-to-cylinder clearance. Cases exist where track driving caused piston expansion leading to seizure, requiring engine overhaul
Braking System: Thermal Fade and Cracking
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Thermoelastic Instability (TEI): Incomplete contact between brake pads and discs during braking creates localized hot spots (up to 550°C) and cooler areas, generating tensile stress due to temperature gradients. The root of vent channel fillets, where geometry changes abruptly, often becomes the initiation point for cracks that can grow into full fractures -
Risks of Water Cooling: Pouring water on overheated brakes causes rapid localized cooling, inducing a quenching effect. Experiments show crack risk increases by 300% when the brake disc surface temperature gradient exceeds 200°C/cm
Turbocharger: Housing Fracture
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Insufficient Heat Resistance: Turbo housings endure prolonged exposure to 1050°C exhaust gases. If made from inferior cast iron or containing casting defects like porosity, thermal stress can initiate cracks at these weak points -
Structural Design Flaws: Failure analysis of models like the Trumpchi M8 indicated that unreasonable housing structural design exacerbates thermal stress concentration, leading to batch cracking incidents
3. Chain Reactions: Performance Degradation Linked to Thermal Stress
Reduced Air Intake Efficiency
Lubrication and Cooling System Failures
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Oil Coking: Above 150°C, engine oil viscosity breaks down, forming carbon deposits that accelerate wear. -
Coolant Boiling: "Coolant boiling over" indicates loss of coolant boiling point control. Vapor lock can impede circulation, accelerating pump cavitation
4. Protection Strategies: A Holistic Approach from Design to Maintenance
Design-Level Optimizations
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Material Upgrades: Use high-nickel cast iron for turbo housings and high-carbon alloys for brake discs to improve heat resistance -
Structural Improvements: CAE analysis can optimize brake disc ventilation vane length and fillets. One vehicle model reduced maximum thermal stress from 292MPa to 169MPa (a 42% decrease) through such optimization
Essential Owner Maintenance Tips
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Cooling System Maintenance: -
Regularly check coolant level, ensuring it's between the MIN and MAX marks in the expansion tank -
Clean radiator surfaces of insects and debris to ensure airflow
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Driving Habits Optimization: -
Use engine braking on long descents to reduce brake frequency -
Allow the turbocharger to idle for 2-3 minutes after spirited driving for gradual, even cooling
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Component Selection Advice: -
Prioritize ventilated brake discs and metallic formula brake pads (e.g., Brembo Prime series) for vehicles driven in mountainous areas. -
Choose high-boiling-point coolant (e.g., ≥50% ethylene glycol ratio) when replacing fluid.
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