Dr. Joshua A. Bittle
Associate Professor, Associate Director of Center for Advanced Vehicle Technologies
Contact
- 3072-A SERC
- phone (205) 348-9278
Education
- Ph.D., mechanical engineering, Texas A&M University, 2014
- M.S., mechanical engineering, Texas A&M University, 2010
- B.S., mechanical engineering, Oklahoma State University, 2008
Dr. Joshua Bittle’s on-going research activities include:
• High-speed spatially resolved two-color pyrometry, rainbow schlieren deflectometry, and chemiluminescence imaging both individually and simultaneously to study high pressure diesel-like fuel spray mixing, ignition, and combustion for diesel and automotive applications. These fundamental studies – enabled with a custom experimental apparatus – explore the impact of ambient and injection conditions, and candidate biofuel blends on fuel-air mixing, including thermodynamics and chemical processes.
• Experimental and computational analysis of fuel-air mixing under supercritical conditions. As fuel-air mixing under diesel-like conditions has the potential to experience purely supercritical mixing this work explores the differences in spray mixing both experimentally and through CFD modeling that includes real-gas, real-mixture effects.
• Advanced real-time control-based emissions mitigation of heavy-duty diesel engines. These applied studies aim to enable stable ultra-lean combustion modes that have been proven to reduce in-cylinder emissions formation and thereby reduce demand on after-treatment systems of these critical heavy-duty engines used for long-haul freight transit.
• Impact of connected vehicles and infrastructure on network wide fuel economy and emissions generation. Using near real-time traffic volume and vehicle classification this work aims to quantify impacts to regional fuel consumption and emissions and through connectivity reduce the penalties to individuals and the region during congested driving.
Affiliated Areas
Center for Advanced Vehicle Technologies, Mechanical Engineering
Dr. Bittle's Impact
Federal Grant Powers UA’s Autonomous Bus Safety Research
With a grant from the Federal Transit Administration and the United States Department of Transportation, The University of Alabama is gearing up for a $3 million project to develop advanced driver assistance systems for large transit buses.
Two UA Students Win Prestigious Goldwater Scholarship
The Barry Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Program has selected two University of Alabama students as Goldwater Scholars for 2021-2022. The selections bring the number of UA students who...
University of Alabama researchers to design next-gen transportation system in west central Alabama
Researchers at the University of Alabama are embarking on a $16.8 million project to transform the roads and highways in the Tuscaloosa area into a smart transportation network that is...