scholarly journals On the spray pulsations of the effervescent atomizers

2018 ◽  
Vol 180 ◽  
pp. 02069 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marek Mlkvik ◽  
Branislav Knizat

The presented paper focuses on the comparison of the two effervescent atomizer configurations—the outside-in-gas (OIG) and the outside-in-liquid (OIL). The comparison was based on the spray pulsation assessment by different methods. The atomizers were tested under the same operating conditions given by the constant injection pressure (0.14 MPa) and the gas to the liquid mass ratio (GLR) varying from 2.5 to 5%. The aqueous maltodextrin solution was used as the working liquid (μ = 60 and 146 mPa·s). We found that the time-averaging method does not provide sufficient spray quality description. Based on the cumulative distribution function (CDF) we found that the OIG atomizer generated the spray with non-uniform droplet size distribution at all investigated GLRs. Exceptionally large droplets were present even in the spray which appeared stable when was analyzed by the time-averaging method.

2012 ◽  
Vol 166-169 ◽  
pp. 3056-3059 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fang Xu ◽  
Wei Dong ◽  
Liang Qiang

A new multi-orifice effervescent atomizer used for fire fighting was developed. The droplet size distribution of the spray produced by the nozzle was measured by laser Doppler particle analyzer. And the influence of liquid injection pressure, water flow rate and atomizer internal geometry was studied.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 1479
Author(s):  
Tianbo Wang ◽  
Lanchun Zhang ◽  
Qian Chen

The steady-state injection characteristic of gas fuel injector is one of the key factors that affects the performance of gas fuel engine. The influences of different injection strategies, such as different injection angles and different injection positions, on the mixing performance in gas-fueled engine have been emphasized in previous literatures. However, the research on the injection characteristics of the gas fuel injector itself are insufficient. The three-dimensional steady-state computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models of two kinds of injectors, in different opening manners, and the other two kinds of injectors, in different sealing methods, were established in this paper. The core region speed, stagnation pressure loss and mass flow rate were compared. Additionally, the effective injection pressure (EIP) concept was also used to evaluate the injection efficiency of gas fuel injector. The simulation results show that the jet speed of the pull-open injector is higher than the push-open injector under the same operating conditions. The injection efficiency of the pull-open valve is about 56.0%, while the push-open valve is 50.3%. In general, the steady-flow characteristic of the pull-open injector is better than that of the push-open one. The injection efficiency of the flat sealing injector is 55.2%, slightly lower than the conical sealing method.


Author(s):  
Sungjun Yoon ◽  
Hongsuk Kim ◽  
Daesik Kim ◽  
Sungwook Park

Stringent emission regulations (e.g., Euro-6) have forced automotive manufacturers to equip a diesel particulate filter (DPF) on diesel cars. Generally, postinjection is used as a method to regenerate the DPF. However, it is known that postinjection deteriorates the specific fuel consumption and causes oil dilution for some operating conditions. Thus, an injection strategy for regeneration is one of the key technologies for diesel powertrains equipped with a DPF. This paper presents correlations between the fuel injection strategy and exhaust gas temperature for DPF regeneration. The experimental apparatus consists of a single-cylinder diesel engine, a DC dynamometer, an emission test bench, and an engine control system. In the present study, the postinjection timing was in the range of 40 deg aTDC to 110 deg aTDC and double postinjection was considered. In addition, the effects of the injection pressure were investigated. The engine load was varied among low load to midload conditions, and the amount of fuel of postinjection was increased up to 10 mg/stk. The oil dilution during the fuel injection and combustion processes was estimated by the diesel loss measured by comparing two global equivalences ratios: one measured from a lambda sensor installed at the exhaust port and one estimated from the intake air mass and injected fuel mass. In the present study, the differences of the global equivalence ratios were mainly caused by the oil dilution during postinjection. The experimental results of the present study suggest optimal engine operating conditions including the fuel injection strategy to obtain an appropriate exhaust gas temperature for DPF regeneration. The experimental results of the exhaust gas temperature distributions for various engine operating conditions are discussed. In addition, it was revealed that the amount of oil dilution was reduced by splitting the postinjection (i.e., double postinjection). The effects of the injection pressure on the exhaust gas temperature were dependent on the combustion phasing and injection strategies.


Author(s):  
Marcus Grochowina ◽  
Daniel Hertel ◽  
Simon Tartsch ◽  
Thomas Sattelmayer

Dual-fuel (DF) engines offer great fuel flexibility combined with low emissions in gas mode. The main source of energy in this mode is provided by gaseous fuel, while the diesel fuel acts only as an ignition source. For this reason, the reliable autoignition of the pilot fuel is of utmost importance for combustion in DF engines. However, the autoignition of the pilot fuel suffers from low compression temperatures caused by Miller valve timings. These valve timings are applied to increase efficiency and reduce nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions. Previous studies have investigated the influence of injection parameters and operating conditions on ignition and combustion in DF engines using a unique periodically chargeable combustion cell. Direct light high-speed images and pressure traces clearly revealed the effects of injection parameters and operating conditions on ignition and combustion. However, these measurement techniques are only capable of observing processes after ignition. In order to overcome this drawback, a high-speed shadowgraph technique was applied in this study to examine the processes prior to ignition. Measurements were conducted to investigate the influence of compression temperature and injection pressure on spray formation and ignition. Results showed that the autoignition of diesel pilot fuel strongly depends on the fuel concentration within the spray. The high-speed shadowgraph images revealed that in the case of very low fuel concentration within the pilot spray, only the first stage of the two-stage ignition occurs. This leads to large cycle-to-cycle variations and misfiring. However, it was found that a reduced number of injection holes counteract these effects. The comparison of a diesel injector with ten-holes and a modified injector with five-holes showed shorter ignition delays, more stable ignition and a higher number of ignited sprays on a percentage basis for the five-hole nozzle.


2019 ◽  
Vol 142 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikhil Sharma ◽  
Avinash Kumar Agarwal

Abstract Fuel availability, global warming, and energy security are the three main driving forces, which determine suitability and long-term implementation potential of a renewable fuel for internal combustion engines for a variety of applications. Comprehensive engine experiments were conducted in a single-cylinder gasoline direct injection (GDI) engine prototype having a compression ratio of 10.5, for gaining insights into application of mixtures of gasoline and primary alcohols. Performance, emissions, combustion, and particulate characteristics were determined at different engine speeds (1500, 2000, 2500, 3000 rpm), different fuel injection pressures (FIP: 40, 80, 120, 160 bars) and different test fuel blends namely 15% (v/v) butanol, ethanol, and methanol blended with gasoline, respectively (Bu15, E15, and M15) and baseline gasoline at a fixed (optimum) spark timing of 24 deg before top dead center (bTDC). For a majority of operating conditions, gasohols exhibited superior characteristics except minor engine performance penalty. Gasohols therefore emerged as serious candidate as a transitional renewable fuel for utilization in the existing GDI engines, without requirement of any major hardware changes.


Author(s):  
Lorenzo Nocivelli ◽  
Anqi Zhang ◽  
Brandon A. Sforzo ◽  
Aniket Tekawade ◽  
Alexander K. Voice ◽  
...  

Abstract The differences between a center-mounted and a side-mounted injector for gasoline direct injection (GDI) applications are analyzed through computational fluid dynamics (CFD). The Engine Combustion Network’s (ECN) axisymmetric 8-hole Spray G injector is compared to a 6-hole injector designed to be side-mounted in an engine. Nozzle-flow simulations are carried out with the commercial CFD software CONVERGE, injecting Euro 5 certification gasoline into a constant volume chamber. Low-load operating conditions are targeted, setting the injection pressure at 50 bar and the ambient pressure to be representative of very early pilot injections. The phase change is handled with the Homogeneous Relaxation Model (HRM), which is assessed and adapted to gasoline flash-boiling conditions. The simulation domains are generated leveraging real injector internal geometries obtained by micron-resolution X-ray tomographic measurements, which introduce manufacturing tolerances and surface roughness in the computational study. Steady needle lift conditions are analyzed. The near-field fuel density distributions and plume morphologies are evaluated, validated and compared to X-ray radiography measurements. A computational best practice is defined and single plume characteristics and variability trends are highlighted as functions of the geometry of the orifices. The plume-plume interaction dynamics are identified and assessed, underlining differences from center- to side-mounted injectors at strong flashing conditions. The obtained numerical framework allows the identification of near-nozzle injection characteristics such as single plume direction, cone angle, spray initial velocity and spatial fuel density distribution. The presented results represent a unique dataset for the initialization of more-affordable Lagrangian spray models, which differentiate the behavior of side-mounted and center-mounted injectors.


Author(s):  
Badih A. Jawad ◽  
Chris H. Riedel ◽  
Ahmad Bazzari

Understanding the disintegration mechanism, spray penetration, and spray motion is of great importance in the design of a high quality diesel engine. The atomization process that a liquid would undergo as it is injected into a high-temperature, high-pressure air, is investigated in this work. The purpose of this study is to gain further insight into the atomization mechanism, the variation over time in droplet size distribution and spray penetration. This is done based on effect of chamber pressure, injection pressure, and type of fuel. A laser diffraction method is used to determine droplet mean diameters, single injection with synchronized time mechanism allowed the time dependent studies. Obscuration signals are obtained through a digital oscilloscope from which arrival time of spray can be measured. The spray penetration correlation obtained is compared to other correlation’s obtained from different other techniques used in the literature.


Author(s):  
Khanh Cung ◽  
Toby Rockstroh ◽  
Stephen Ciatti ◽  
William Cannella ◽  
S. Scott Goldsborough

Unlike homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) that has the complexity in controlling the start of combustion event, partially premixed combustion (PPC) provides the flexibility of defining the ignition timing and combustion phasing with respect to the time of injection. In PPC, the stratification of the charge can be influenced by a variety of methods such as number of injections (single or multiple injections), injection pressure, injection timing (early to near TDC injection), intake boost pressure, or combination of several factors. The current study investigates the effect of these factors when testing two gasoline-like fuels of different reactivity (defined by Research Octane Number or RON) in a 1.9-L inline 4-cylinder diesel engine. From the collection of engine data, a full factorial analysis was created in order to identify the factors that most influence the outcomes such as the location of ignition, combustion phasing, combustion stability, and emissions. Furthermore, the interaction effect of combinations of two factors or more was discussed with the implication of fuel reactivity under current operating conditions. The analysis was done at both low (1000 RPM) and high speed (2000 RPM). It was found that the boost pressure and air/fuel ratio have strong impact on ignition and combustion phasing. Finally, injection-timing sweeps were conducted whereby the ignition (CA10) of the two fuels with significantly different reactivity were matched by controlling the boost pressure while maintaining a constant lambda (air/fuel equivalence ratio).


Author(s):  
S. Ramkumar ◽  
M. Parthasarathy ◽  
S. Padmanabhan

The energy crisis is increasing every day. The energy source for the automobile is from petroleum, which is a non-renewable form of energy source. The use of biodiesel in CI engine is not a novel research work, and it has certain advantages and disadvantages. The main disadvantages were higher smoke and NOx emission. The simultaneous reduction of smoke and NOx emissions is a challenging job because NOx increases with an increase in combustion temperature while smoke emission decreases with the increase of the same. The usage of Tamanu methyl ester (TME) in the HCCI engine has dual advantages such that there is a reduction not only in the dependency of non-renewable fuel but also in pollution. In this research, performance analysis of HCCI is done with TME fuel. Furthermore, to improve the performance and emission characteristics, the engine is operated at various operating conditions such as inlet air temperature (IAT) and injection pressure (IP) varying within the range from 100°C to 140°C and from 10 bar to 14 bar, respectively. From the results, it was found that the optimum IAT and IP are 120°C and 12bar, respectively. While optimizing the IP and IAT of HCCI engine, it produced a BTE which is almost equal to that of the conventional engine, and the emission of NOx and smoke was found to be lesser.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document