scholarly journals Two-phase mixture formation in transport diesel engine: the control algorithm and the devise for its implementation

2021 ◽  
Vol 808 (1) ◽  
pp. 012039
Author(s):  
M V Ryblov ◽  
M D Dubin ◽  
A P Ukhanov
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
М.V. Ryblov ◽  
◽  
М.D. Dubin ◽  

The article presents an algorithm of automatic control of injection of fuel activator supplied at the intake stroke into the intake manifold at two-phase mixture formation in the diesel engine. The algorithm represents a command set written in the microcontroller program of electronic control unit of the system performing the injection of fuel activator at the first phase of two-phase mixture formation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
М.D. Dubin ◽  
◽  
М.V. Ryblov ◽  

The article offers the method of improving of the automotive diesel engine power capacity, fuel economy and ecological parameters by two-phase mixture formation. In this way, the first phase is performed by means of the fuel activator supply (dose 10-20 %) into the intake manifold. The second phase is performed by means of the main fuel dose by the standard fuel system. The design of the developed system for the implementation of the first phase of two-phase mixture formation is described.


Author(s):  
Arash Mohammadi ◽  
Hossein Hashemi ◽  
Ali Jazayeri ◽  
Mahdi Ahmadi

Basic understanding of the process of coolant heat transfer inside an engine is an indispensable prerequisite to devise an infallible cooling strategy. Coolant flow and its heat transfer affect the cooling efficiency, thermal load of heated components, and thermal efficiency of a diesel engine. An efficient approach to study cooling system for diesel engine is a 3D computational fluid dynamics (CFD) calculation for coolant jacket. Therefore, computer simulation can analyze and consequently optimize cooling system performance, including complex cooling jacket. In this paper a computational model for boiling heat transfer based on two-phase Mixture model flow is established. Furthermore, the phenomenon of nucleate boiling, its mathematical modeling, and its effect on heat transfer is discussed. Besides, the static, total and absolute pressure, velocity and stream lines of the flow field, heat flux, heat transfer coefficient and volume fraction of vapor distribution in the coolant jacket of a four-cylinder diesel engine is computed. Also, comparison between experimental equation (Pflaum/Mollenhauer) and two-phase Mixture model for boiling hat transfer coefficient is done and good agreement is seen. In conclusion, it is observed that at high operating temperatures, nucleate boiling occurs in regions around the exhaust port. Numerical simulation of boiling heat transfer process of cooling water jacket and temperature field in the cylinder head of the diesel engine is compared with the data measured on the engine test bench. The calculated results indicate that this method can reflect the impact of boiling heat transfer on water jacket rather accurate. Therefore, this method is benefit to improve the computational precision in the temperature field computation of a cylinder head.


Author(s):  
F Bakhtar ◽  
M R Mahpeykar

During the course of expansion in turbines, steam first supercools and then nucleates to become a two-phase mixture. Formation and subsequent behaviour of the liquid lower the performance of turbine wet stages. This is an area where greater understanding can lead to improved design. This paper describes the theoretical part of an investigation into nucleating flows of steam in a cascade of turbine rotor tip section blading. The main flow field is regarded as inviscid and treated by the time-marching technique modified to allow for two-phase effects. The viscous effects are assumed to be concentrated in boundary layers which are treated by the integral method. Comparisons are carried out with the experimental measurements presented in the earlier parts of the paper and the agreement obtained is good.


Author(s):  
F Bakhtar ◽  
M Ebrahimi ◽  
R A Webb

During the course of expansion in turbines, steam first supercools and then nucleates to become a two-phase mixture. Formation and subsequent behaviour of the liquid lower the performance of turbine wet stages. To reproduce turbine nucleating and wet flow conditions requires a supply of supercooled steam which can be achieved under blow-down conditions by the equipment employed. The performance of a cascade of rotor tip section blading in nucleating steam has been studied. The results of the surface pressure measurements are described in the paper.


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