C110 Modeling of Ignition Process in a Diesel Fuel Spray

2001 ◽  
Vol 2001 (0) ◽  
pp. 119-120
Author(s):  
Hidenori KOSAKA ◽  
Tomohiro MINAGAWA ◽  
Takeyuki KAMIMOTO
2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hidenori Kosaka ◽  
Volker H. Drewes ◽  
Luca Catalfamo ◽  
Allen A. Aradi ◽  
Norimasa Iida ◽  
...  

1995 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. H. Campbell ◽  
K. M. Sinko ◽  
B. Chehroudi
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Darlington Njere ◽  
Nwabueze Emekwuru

The evolution of diesel fuel injection technology, to facilitate strong correlations of in-cylinder spray propagation with injection conditions and injector geometry, is crucial in facing emission challenges. More observations of spray propagation are, therefore, required to provide valuable information on how to ensure that all the injected fuel has maximum contact with the available air, to promote complete combustion and reduce emissions. In this study, high pressure diesel fuel sprays are injected into a constant-volume chamber at injection and ambient pressure values typical of current diesel engines. For these types of sprays the maximum fuel liquid phase penetration is different and reached sooner than the maximum fuel vapour phase penetration. Thus, the vapour fuel could reach the combustion chamber wall and could be convected and deflected by swirling air. In hot combustion chambers this impingement can be acceptable but this might be less so in larger combustion chambers with cold walls. The fuel-ambient mixture in vapourized fuel spray jets is essential to the efficient performance of these engines. For this work, the fuel vapour penetration values are presented for fuel injectors of different k-factors. The results indicate that the geometry of fuel injectors based on the k-factors appear to affect the vapour phase penetration more than the liquid phase penetration. This is a consequence of the effects of the injector types on the exit velocity of the fuel droplets.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/ILASS2017.2017.4951


Fuel ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 206 ◽  
pp. 133-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iman Sohrabiasl ◽  
Mofid Gorji-Bandpy ◽  
Alireza Hajialimohammadi ◽  
Mostafa Agha Mirsalim

Author(s):  
Jaclyn E. Johnson ◽  
Jeffrey D. Naber ◽  
Seong-Young Lee

Quantifying fuel spray properties including penetration, cone angle, and vaporization processes sheds light on fuel-air mixing phenomenon, which governs subsequent combustion and emissions formation in diesel engines. Accurate experimental determination of these spray properties is a challenge but imperative to validate computational fluid dynamic (CFD) models for combustion prediction. This study proposes a new threshold independent method for determination of spray cone angle when using Mie back-scattering optical diagnostics to visualize diesel sprays in an optically accessible constant volume vessel. Test conditions include the influence of charge density (17.6 and 34.9 kg/m3) at 1990 bar injection pressure, and the influence of injection pressure (990, 1370, and 1980 bar) at a charge density of 34.8 kg/m3 on diesel fuel spray formation from a multi-hole injector into nitrogen at a temperature of 100 °C. Conventional thresholding to convert an image to black and white for processing and determination of cone angle is threshold subjective. As an alternative, an image processing method was developed, which fits a Gaussian curve to the intensity distribution of the spray at radial spray cross-sections and uses the resulting parameters to define the spray edge and hence cone angle. This Gaussian curve fitting methodology is shown to provide a robust method for cone angle determination, accounting for reductions in intensity at the radial spray edge. Results are presented for non-vaporizing sprays using this Gaussian curve fitting method and compared to the conventional thresholding based method.


2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryo Masuda ◽  
Takayuki Fuyuto ◽  
Makoto Nagaoka ◽  
Eberhard Von Berg ◽  
Reinhard Tatschl

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