A combined experimental (PIV) and numerical (LES) study of the tumble formation during the intake stroke of an experimental single-cylinder optical engine

Author(s):  
Alexandros Katsinos ◽  
Vasileios D. Tsiogkas ◽  
Dimitrios Kolokotronis ◽  
Antonios Tourlidakis ◽  
Ananias Tomboulides
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018.93 (0) ◽  
pp. 1017
Author(s):  
Kenta EGOSHI ◽  
Tomoki TAGUCHI ◽  
Naoto HORIBE ◽  
Hiroshi KAWANABE ◽  
Takuji ISHIYAMA

2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 2392-2413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory Roberts ◽  
Christine Mounaim Rousselle ◽  
Mark Musculus ◽  
Martin Wissink ◽  
Scott Curran ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Michael R. Buchman ◽  
W. Brett Johnson ◽  
Amos G. Winter

Turbocharging can provide a cost effective means for increasing the power output and fuel economy of an internal combustion engine. A turbocharger added to an internal combustion engine consists of a coupled turbine and compressor. Currently, turbocharging is common in multi-cylinder engines, but it is not commonly used on single-cylinder engines due to the phase mismatch between the exhaust stroke (when the turbocharger is powered) and the intake stroke (when the engine intakes the compressed air). The proposed method adds an air capacitor, an additional volume in series with the intake manifold, between the turbocharger compressor and the engine intake, to buffer the output from the turbocharger compressor and deliver pressurized air during the intake stroke. This research builds on previous work where it was shown experimentally that a power gain of 29% was achievable and that analytically a power gain of 40–60% was possible using a turbocharger and air capacitor system. The goal of this study is to further analyze the commercial viability of this technology by analyzing the effect of air capacitor turbocharging on emissions, fuel economy, and power density. An experiment was built and conducted that looked at how air capacitor sizing affected emissions, fuel economy, and the equivalence ratio. The experimental data was then used to calibrate a computational model built in Ricardo Wave. Finally this model was used to evaluate strategies to further improve the performance of a single cylinder diesel turbocharged engine with an air capacitor.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-31
Author(s):  
Cengizhan Cengiz ◽  
Aydın Ayyıldız ◽  
Serenat Karagöz ◽  
Arda Coşkun ◽  
Seyfullah Berk

Author(s):  
P. K. Senecal ◽  
E. Pomraning ◽  
J. W. Anders ◽  
M. R. Weber ◽  
C. R. Gehrke ◽  
...  

A state-of-the-art, grid-convergent simulation methodology was applied to three-dimensional calculations of a single-cylinder optical engine. A mesh resolution study on a sector-based version of the engine geometry further verified the RANS-based cell size recommendations previously presented by Senecal et al. [1]. Convergence of cylinder pressure, flame lift-off length and emissions was achieved for an adaptive mesh refinement cell size of 0.35 mm. Full geometry simulations, using mesh settings derived from the grid convergence study, resulted in excellent agreement with measurements of cylinder pressure, heat release rate and NOx emissions. On the other hand, the full geometry simulations indicated that the flame lift-off length is not converged at 0.35 mm for jets not aligned with the computational mesh. Further simulations suggested that the flame lift-off lengths for both the non-aligned and aligned jets appear to be converged at 0.175 mm. With this increased mesh resolution, both the trends and magnitudes in flame lift-off length were well predicted with the current simulation methodology. Good agreement between the overall predicted flame behavior and the available chemiluminescence measurements was also achieved. The present study indicates that cell-size requirements for accurate prediction of full geometry flame lift-off lengths may be stricter than those for global combustion behavior. This may be important when accurate soot predictions are required.


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