Investigation of turbulence–chemistry interactions in a heavy-duty diesel engine with a representative interactive linear eddy model

2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (8) ◽  
pp. 1469-1479
Author(s):  
Tim Lackmann ◽  
Andreas Nygren ◽  
Anders Karlsson ◽  
Michael Oevermann

Simulations of a heavy-duty diesel engine operated at high-load and low-load conditions were compared to each other, and experimental data in order to evaluate the influence of turbulence–chemistry interactions on heat release, pressure development, flame structure, and temperature development are quantified. A recently developed new combustion model for turbulent diffusion flames called representative interactive linear eddy model which features turbulence–chemistry interaction was compared to a well-stirred reactor model which neglects the influence of turbulent fluctuations on the mean reaction rate. All other aspects regarding the spray combustion simulation like spray break-up, chemical mechanism, and boundary conditions within the combustion chamber were kept the same in both simulations. In this article, representative interactive linear eddy model is extended with a progress variable, which enables the model to account for a flame lift-off and split injection, when it is used for diffusion combustion. In addition, the extended version of representative interactive linear eddy model offers the potential to treat partially premixed and premixed combustion as well. The well-stirred reactor model was tuned to match the experimental results, thus computed pressure and apparent heat release are in close agreement with the experimental data. Representative interactive linear eddy model was not tuned specifically for the case and thus the computed results for pressure and heat release are in reasonable agreement with experimental data. The computational results show that the interaction of the turbulent flow field and the chemistry reduce the peak temperatures and broaden up the turbulent flame structure. Since this is the first study of a real combustion engine (metal engine) with the newly developed model, representative interactive linear eddy model appears as a promising candidate for predictions of spray combustion in engines, especially in combustion regimes where turbulence–chemistry interaction plays an even more important role like, example given, in low-temperature combustion or combustion with local extinction and re-ignition.

2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 1566-1579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mirko Baratta ◽  
Roberto Finesso ◽  
Hamed Kheshtinejad ◽  
Daniela Misul ◽  
Ezio Spessa ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Joan Boulanger ◽  
W. Stuart Neill ◽  
Fengshan Liu ◽  
Gregory J. Smallwood

An extension to a phenomenological submodel for soot formation to include soot agglomeration effects is developed. The improved submodel was incorporated into a commercial computational fluid dynamics code and was used to investigate soot formation in a heavy-duty diesel engine. The results of the numerical simulation show that the soot oxidation process is reduced close to the combustion chamber walls, due to heat loss, such that larger soot particles and clusters are predicted in an annular volume at the end of the combustion cycle. These results are consistent with available in-cylinder experimental data and suggest that the cylinder of a diesel engine must be split into several volumes, each of them with a different role regarding soot formation.


2014 ◽  
Vol 651-653 ◽  
pp. 866-874 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Chen ◽  
Hong Zeng ◽  
Xiao Bei Cheng

A 6-cylinder, turbocharged, common rail heavy-duty diesel engine was used in this study. The effect of pilot injection strategies on diesel fuel combustion process, heat release rate, emission and economy of diesel engine is studied. The pilot injection strategies include pilot injection timing and pilot injection mass to achieve the homogeneous compression ignition and lower temperature combustion of diesel engine. The two-color method was applied to take the flame images in the engine cylinder and obtain soot concentration distribution. The results demonstrate that with the advance of pilot injection timing, the peak in-cylinder pressure becomes lower, the ignition delay of the main combustion is shortened, the NOXand soot emissions are reduced, but the HC and CO emissions are increased. With the increase of pilot injection fuel mass, the heat release rate of the pilot injection combustion and the maximum rate of pressure rise increase, NOXand HC emissions are higher, and PM and CO emissions are reduced. The pilot combustion flame is non-luminous.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noud Maes ◽  
Nico Dam ◽  
Bart Somers ◽  
Tommaso Lucchini ◽  
Gianluca D'Errico ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clément Chartier ◽  
Ulf Aronsson ◽  
Oivind Andersson ◽  
Rolf Egnell ◽  
Robert Collin ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 156 ◽  
pp. 105781
Author(s):  
Louise Gren ◽  
Vilhelm B. Malmborg ◽  
John Falk ◽  
Lassi Markula ◽  
Maja Novakovic ◽  
...  

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