Numerical Investigation on the Spray Characteristics and Combustion Process in a DI Diesel Engine at Reduced Temperature Combustion Condition

Author(s):  
Hassan Khatamnezhad ◽  
Shahram Khalilarya ◽  
Samad Jafarmadar ◽  
Bahram Jafari ◽  
Ghasem Javadirad ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
Vol 476-478 ◽  
pp. 448-452
Author(s):  
Jun Zhang ◽  
Chang Pu Zhao ◽  
Nai Zhuan Chen ◽  
Da Lu Dong ◽  
Bo Zhong

Diesel spray characteristics are closely related to the combustion of the engine where the spray tip penetration and the fuel atomization play a key role especially for direct injection (DI) diesel engine. With different nozzles, the fuel atomization and evaporation will be different thereby affecting the combustion and emission characteristics. A three-dimensional model is built based on the parameters of a DI diesel engine, and its validation is also validated. Three nozzle-hole layouts are designed in this research, including the conventional hole, multi-hole, and group-hole. The spray characteristics and combustion process are studied with three different nozzle-hole layouts by the way of numerical simulation. Further more, the effect of inter-hole spacing of group-hole nozzle on the evaporation rate and combustion process is researched here.


2011 ◽  
Vol 15 (suppl. 2) ◽  
pp. 409-427 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hassan Khatamnezhad ◽  
Shahram Khalilarya ◽  
Samad Jafarmadar ◽  
Arash Nemati

In this paper, reduced temperature combustion has been investigated at high load condition of a DI diesel engine. A three dimensional CFD model for flow field, spray, air-fuel mixture formation, combustion and emissions formation processes have been used to carry out the computations. The combined effect of EGR temperature and EGR rate was analyzed to choose with consideration of engine performance. Then, the influence of different injection rates and split injection was explored at a reduced temperature combustion condition by the use of EGR. The results represent sensitiveness of various injection schemes on the combustion process and emission formation at reduced temperature condition in DI diesel engines.


Energy ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 115 ◽  
pp. 1234-1245 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Prabhakaran ◽  
P. Ramesh ◽  
C.G. Saravanan ◽  
M. Loganathan ◽  
E. James Gunasekaran

Author(s):  
Carl Hergart ◽  
Norbert Peters

Abstract Due to the wide spectrum of turbulent and chemical length- and time scales occurring in a HSDI diesel engine, capturing the correct physics and chemistry underlying combustion poses a tremendous modeling challenge. The processes related to the two-phase flow in a DI diesel engine add even more complexity to the total modeling effort. The Representative Interactive Flamelet (RIF) model has gained widespread attention owing to its ability of correctly describing ignition, combustion and pollutant formation phenomena. This is achieved by incorporating very detailed chemistry for the gas phase as well as the soot particle growth and oxidation, without imposing any significant computational penalty. The model, which is based on the laminar flamelet concept, treats a turbulent flame as an ensemble of thin, locally one-dimensional flame structures, whose chemistry is fast. A potential explanation for the significant underprediction of part load soot observed in previous studies applying the model is the neglect of wall heat losses in the flamelet chemistry model. By introducing an additional source term in the flamelet temperature equation, directly coupled to the wall heat transfer predicted by the CFD-code, flamelets exposed to walls are assigned heat losses of various magnitudes. Results using the model in three-dimensional simulations of the combustion process in a small-bore direct injection diesel engine indicate that the experimentally observed emissions of soot may have their origin in flame quenching at the relatively cold combustion chamber walls.


2020 ◽  
Vol 33 ◽  
pp. 52-65
Author(s):  
S. Gopinath ◽  
P.K. Devan ◽  
V. Sabarish ◽  
B.V. Sabharish Babu ◽  
S. Sakthivel ◽  
...  

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