Effects of dwell time of split injection on mixture formation and combustion processes of diesel spray

Author(s):  
Samir Chandra Ray ◽  
Jaeheun Kim ◽  
Scinichi Kakami ◽  
Keiya Nishida ◽  
Youichi Ogata

The effects of dwell time on the mixture formation and combustion processes of diesel spray are investigated experimentally. A commercial multihole injector with a 0.123 mm hole diameter is used to inject the fuel. The injection procedure is either a single or split injection with different dwell times, whereas the total amount of injected fuel mass is 5.0 mg per hole. Three dwell times are selected, that is, 0.12, 0.32 and 0.54 ms, with a split ratio of 7:3 based on previous findings. The vapour phase is observed, and the mixture formation pertaining to the equivalence ratio is analysed using the tracer laser absorption scattering (LAS) technique. A high-speed video camera is used to visualise the spray combustion flame luminosity, whereas a two-colour pyrometer system is used to evaluate the soot concentrations and flame temperature. An analysis of the mixture formation based on the spray evaporating condition reveals a more concentrated area of the rich mixture within a 0.32 ms dwell time. In the shortest dwell time of 0.12 ms, the equivalence ratio distribution decreases uniformly from the rich mixture region to the lean mixture region. In the case involving a shorter dwell time, a suitable position for the second injection around the boundaries of the first injection is obtained by smoothly growing the lean mixture and avoiding the large zone of the rich mixture. Therefore, the shortest dwell time is acceptable for mixture formation, considering the overall distribution of the equivalence ratios. Spray combustion analysis results show that the soot formation rate of the single injection and 0.32 ms dwell time case is high and decreases quickly, implying a rapid reduction in the high amount of soot. Consequently, 0.12 ms can be considered the optimal dwell time due to the ignition delay and relatively low soot emission afforded.

Author(s):  
Kang Yang ◽  
Hirotaka Yamakawa ◽  
Keiya Nishida ◽  
Youichi Ogata ◽  
Yusuke Nishioka

The objective of this study is to obtain an enhanced understanding of the effect of split injection on mixture formation and combustion processes of diesel spray. A two-dimensional (2D) piston cavity of the same shape as that used in a small-bore diesel engine was employed to form the impinging spray flame. The fuel was injected into a high pressure, high temperature constant volume vessel through a single-hole nozzle with a hole diameter of 0.11 mm. The injection process comprised a pre-injection followed by the main injection. The main injection was carried out either as a single injection of injection pressure 100 MPa (Pre+S100), or by two types of split injection of injection pressure 160 MPa. The latter two types were defined by mass fraction ratios 1:1 and 3:1 (Pre+D160_1-1, Pre+D160_3-1). In order to observe the spray mixture formation process, the tracer laser absorption scattering (LAS) techique was adopted. Tracer LAS fuel with 97.5 vol% of n-tridecane and 2.5 vol% of 1-methylnaphthalene (α-MN) was employed. The spatial distributions of the vapor and liquid phases and the spray mixture formation characteristics in the 2D piston cavity for the three injection strategies were investigated. The diesel spray combustion and soot formation processes were studied using a high-speed video camera. The flame structure and soot formation process were examined using two-color pyrometry. The experimental results revealed that the split-injection vapor distribution was significantly more homogeneous than that of the single injection. The main injection fuel caught up with the pre-injection fuel and provided the spray tip with substantial additional momentum, enabling it to advance further. A high soot concentration and low temperatures appeared near the cavity wall region under the three injection strategies. The soot reduction rate for split injection was higher than that for single injection. The second main injection caught up with the previous injection’s flame, which deteriorated the combustion and resulted in higher soot generation. The effect of split injection on the process of soot evolution finished at the same time as that of single injection.


Author(s):  
Samir Chandra Ray ◽  
Jaeheun Kim ◽  
Scinichi Kakami ◽  
Keiya Nishida ◽  
Yoichi Ogata

The effects of the split ratio on the mixture formation and combustion process of a diesel spray in a constant-volume chamber were experimentally investigated. A commercial seven-hole injector was used in this experiment. The effects of the mass-dependent split ratio and dwell time were observed when the total fuel injection was 5.0 mg/hole. Three split ratios were considered: 3:7, 5:5 and 7:3, while the dwell time of 120 µs was fixed for every condition. A laser absorption-scattering technique was adopted to examine the formation of mixtures with regarding to the equivalence ratio. A high-speed video camera was used to observe natural flame luminosity, and a two-colour pyrometer system was employed to evaluate the temperature and soot concentrations in the flame. Among the distribution ratios tested in this study, the 7:3 split ratio exhibited the best performance for the lean mixture formation considering the overall equivalence ratio distribution. The air entrainment wave at the end of injection timing of the first injection caused the fuel near the nozzle to lean at a rapid rate. The soot formation process for the 3:7 and 5:5 split ratios was observed because the second injection fuel caught the flame of the previous injections; this deteriorated the combustion region and influenced soot formation. The result also revealed that for the 7:3 split ratio, accelerated the soot deduction rate to the cycle of soot oxidation during the combustion period.


2011 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 102-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hirokazu Kojima ◽  
Hiroshi Kawanabe ◽  
Takuji Ishiyama

2013 ◽  
Vol 328 ◽  
pp. 975-980
Author(s):  
Juan Xu ◽  
Zhong Hai Zhou ◽  
Zong Rui Hao ◽  
Bo Yan Xu

Low-carbon economy is a necessary requirement for sustainable development. LPG Direct Injection (DI) method can greatly improve the engines power performance, fuel economy and emission characteristics, hence a new wall-guided combustion system with a specially designed piston cavity used to form lean stratified mixture for DI LPG engine was proposed. In this paper, the stratified mixture formation process of a DI LPG engine was simulated. Before this, the model and method used in the simulation was firstly validated by simulating mixture formation process in an optical engine with conventional piston. The simulation results of the stratified mixture formation showed that, the mixture could gradually move upward along the combustion chamber wall under the guide of the spray induced entrainment vortex and the wall. At the same time, the rich mixture would diffuse to its surroundings. Finally, by the time to ignition, the ignitable stratified lean mixture could be formed.


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