Experimental study on dynamic injection behaviors of biodiesel and its blends in a common-rail injection system

Author(s):  
Junxing Hou ◽  
Huayang Zhang ◽  
Xiaodong An ◽  
Guoqiang Tian ◽  
Xuewei Yan

The dynamic injection behaviors of pure biodiesel, high-proportioned biodiesel blends, and low-proportioned biodiesel blends in a common-rail injection system are researched. The effects of biodiesel ratio in the blended fuel and injection condition on the injection rate, cycle injection quantity, and fuel line pressure at the injector inlet are determined. The findings show that the injection duration is extended with the decrease in biodiesel ratio in the blended fuel, and fluctuation amplitude of injection rate in the stable injection stage increases. The first four pressure peaks for pure biodiesel decrease rapidly, while for blends, they decrease slowly, which results in an increasing difference of four pressure peaks between pure biodiesel and blends. With the decrease in biodiesel ratio, the mean volume injection quantity for three fuels gradually increases in the same injection condition. The coefficient of variation of the cycle injection quantity value for biodiesel and its blends with 30 cycles increases. The coefficient of variation value for biodiesel is between 0.4% and 0.7%. Compared with pure biodiesel, the mean volume injection quantity for BD70 increases by about 20–32%, and the coefficient of variation value is between 0.7% and 1.7% for high-proportioned biodiesel blends. The mean volume injection quantity increases by about 36–43% for low-proportioned biodiesel blends and the coefficient of variation value is between 1.1% and 2.1%.

2005 ◽  
Vol 127 (6) ◽  
pp. 1102-1110 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Benajes ◽  
R. Payri ◽  
S. Molina ◽  
V. Soare

The quality of the mixing process of fuel and air in a direct injection diesel engine relies heavily on the way the spray develops when injected into the combustion chamber. Among other factors, the spray development depends on the injection rate of the fuel delivered by the injector. The paper presents a study, at both a macroscopic and microscopic level, of a Diesel spray generated by a common-rail injection system featuring a piston pressure amplifier. By modifying the timing and the duration of the injector and amplifier piston actuation, it is possible to obtain high injection pressures up to 180MPa, and different shapes for the injection rate, which would not be achievable with a regular common rail injection system. The spray evolution produced by three different injection rate shapes (square, ramp, and boot) has been investigated in an injection test rig, by means of visualization and PDPA techniques, at different injection conditions. The main conclusions are the important effect on spray penetration of the initial injection rate evolution and the small influence of the maximum injection pressure attained at the end of the injection event. Smaller or even negligible effects have been found on the spray cone angle and on the droplet Sauter mean diameter.


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