(2-15) Analysis of Cycle-by-Cycle Variation in a Direct-Injection Gasoline Engine Using Laser-Induced Fluorescence Technique((SI-5)S. I. Engine Combustion 5-In-Cylinder A/F and Temperatures)

Author(s):  
Taketoshi Fujikawa ◽  
Yoshihiro Nomura ◽  
Yoshiaki Hattori ◽  
Tatsuo Kobayashi ◽  
Mutsumi Kanda
2003 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 143-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Fujikawa ◽  
Y Nomura ◽  
Y Hattori ◽  
T Kobayashi ◽  
M Kanda

To analyse the cycle-by-cycle variation of combustion in a direct injection gasoline engine equipped with a fan-shape spray nozzle and operated with exhaust gas recirculation (EGR), the fuel mixture distribution was measured at a time of spark and during the combustion period by the laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) technique. It was found that in the case of advanced or retarded injection timing, the initial combustion period tends to extend and the indicated mean effective pressure (i.m.e.p.) becomes low when lean mixtures appear at the spark position and at the spark timing. This suggests that the cycle-by-cycle variation of combustion under these conditions is dominated by the fuel concentration at the spark position and spark timing. In contrast to this, for the best injection timing, which allows the lowest cycle-by-cycle variation, the i.m.e.p. fluctuation is affected not by the initial combustion period but by the main combustion period. The observation of LIF images revealed that the i.m.e.p. fluctuation at this condition is strongly correlated to the unburned mixture quantity at the side area of the piston cavity during the latter half of the combustion period. It was shown by a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) calculation that the combination of a uniform spray pattern and a compact cavity shape is effective to reduce the over-lean mixture region in the edge of the piston cavity, which is responsible for the cycle-by-cycle variation of combustion at the condition of best-tuned injection timing.


1999 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 760-767 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taketoshi FUJIKAWA ◽  
Yoshiaki HATTORI ◽  
Makoto KOIKE ◽  
Kazuhiro AKIHIMA ◽  
Tatsuo KOBAYASHI ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Simon Orchard ◽  
Umud Ozturk ◽  
Nick Evans ◽  
Tomasz Duda ◽  
Ed Chappell ◽  
...  

Abstract In this work, an external air and EGR emulation facility has been designed that can replicate a wide range of boosting and EGR delivery systems to a multi-cylinder engine platform. The facility works by removing the incumbent air path and replacing it with externally boosted fresh air that is conditioned using a transient flow and temperature controller. The facility also recycles the actual exhaust gases from the engine whilst removing the constraints of required pressure differences to drive this flow. The resulting system is able to control the boundary conditions of intake air flow - pressure and temperature, engine back-pressure and EGR flow rate independently. Three testing approaches have been described that allow to obtain valuable data across a wide range of the engine map (based on an example of a 1.0L direct injection gasoline engine) also beyond its typical hardware related limits. The facility is designed to be used as part of an engine design optimisation process. The facility generates data of the engine combustion system independently of the associated air path subsystems and excites the boundary conditions beyond those that would be expected from a specific air path design. The data is then used to populate 1D engine models which can be confidently used to predict the performance of a specific air path hardware combination and control strategy.


Author(s):  
Daniel Probst ◽  
Sameera Wijeyakulasuriya ◽  
Eric Pomraning ◽  
Janardhan Kodavasal ◽  
Riccardo Scarcelli ◽  
...  

High cycle-to-cycle variation (CCV) is detrimental to engine performance, as it leads to poor combustion and high noise and vibration. In this work, CCV in a gasoline engine is studied using large eddy simulation (LES). The engine chosen as the basis of this work is a single-cylinder gasoline direct injection (GDI) research engine. Two stoichiometric part-load engine operating points (6 BMEP, 2000 RPM) were evaluated: a non-dilute (0% EGR) case and a dilute (18% EGR) case. The experimental data for both operating conditions had 500 cycles. The measured CCV in IMEP was 1.40% for the non-dilute case and 7.78% for the dilute case. To estimate CCV from simulation, perturbed concurrent cycles of engine simulations were compared to consecutively obtained engine cycles. The motivation behind this is that running consecutive cycles to estimate CCV is quite time-consuming. For example, running 100 consecutive cycles requires 2–3 months (on a typical cluster), however, by running concurrently one can potentially run all 100 cycles at the same time and reduce the overall turnaround time for 100 cycles to the time taken for a single cycle (2 days). The goal of this paper is to statistically determine if concurrent cycles, with a perturbation applied to each individual cycle at the start, can be representative of consecutively obtained cycles and accurately estimate CCV. 100 cycles were run for each case to obtain statistically valid results. The concurrent cycles began at different timings before the combustion event, with the motivation to identify the closest time before spark to minimize the run time. Only a single combustion cycle was run for each concurrent case. The calculated standard deviation of peak pressure and coefficient of variance (COV) of indicated mean effective pressure (IMEP) were compared between the consecutive and concurrent methods to quantify CCV. It was found that the concurrent method could be used to predict CCV with either a velocity or numerical perturbation. A large and small velocity perturbation were compared and both produced correct predictions, implying that the type of perturbation is not important to yield a valid realization. Starting the simulation too close to the combustion event, at intake valve close (IVC) or at spark timing, under-predicted the CCV. When concurrent simulations were initiated during or before the intake even, at start of injection (SOI) or earlier, distinct and valid realizations were obtained to accurately predict CCV for both operating points. By simulating CCV with concurrent cycles, the required wall clock time can be reduced from 2–3 months to 1–2 days. Additionally, the required core-hours can be reduced up to 41%, since only a portion of each cycle needs to be simulated.


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