Investigation of Intake Valve Lift Effect on Air-Fuel Mixing of Dual Fuel Engine Based on CFD Simulation

Author(s):  
S. Semin ◽  
Nilam Sari Octaviani ◽  
Rosli Abu Bakar ◽  
Muhammad Badrus Zaman
Author(s):  
Tingting Sun ◽  
Yingjie Chang ◽  
Zongfa Xie ◽  
Kaiyu Zhang ◽  
Fei Chen ◽  
...  

A novel fully hydraulic variable valve system is described in this paper, which achieves continuous variations in maximum valve lift, valve opening duration, and the timing of valve closing. The load of the unthrottled spark ignition engine with fully hydraulic variable valve system is controlled by using an early intake valve closing rather than the conventional throttle valve. The experiments were carried out on BJ486EQ spark ignition engine with fully hydraulic variable valve system. Pumping losses of the throttled and unthrottled spark ignition engines at low-to-medium loads are compared and the reason of it decreasing significantly in the unthrottled spark igntion engine is analyzed. The combustion characteristic parameters, such as cyclic variation, CA50, and heat release rate, were analyzed. The primary reasons for the lower combustion rate in the unthrottled spark ignition engines are discussed. In order to improve the evaporation of fuel and mix with air in an unthrottled spark ignition engine, the in-cylinder swirl is organized with a helical intake valve, which can generate a strong intake swirl at low intake valve lifts. The effects of the intake swirl on combustion performance are investigated. Compared with the throttled spark ignition engine, the brake specific fuel consumption of the improved unthrottled spark ignition engine is reduced by 4.1% to 11.2%.


2021 ◽  
pp. 146808742110653
Author(s):  
Jingchen Cui ◽  
Liping Chen ◽  
Wuqiang Long ◽  
Xiangyu Meng ◽  
Bo Li ◽  
...  

A variable valvetrain system is the key part of the variable stroke engine (VSE), which could achieve higher power performance and low-speed torque. An innovative axial shift valvetrain system (ASVS) was put forward to meet the air-charging requirements of a 2/4-stroke engine and complete a changeover within one working cycle. Two sets of intake and exhaust cam profiles for both intake and exhaust sides in the 2/4-stoke mode were designed for 2/4-stoke modes. Furthermore, a simulation model based on ADAMS was established to evaluate the dynamic valve motion and the contact force at different engine speeds. The dynamic simulation results show that the valve motion characteristics meet the challenges at the target engine speed of 3000 r/min. In two-stroke mode, the maximum intake valve lift could achieve 7.3 mm within 78°CaA, and the maximum exhaust valve lift could achieve 7.5 within 82°CaA on the exhaust side. In four-stroke mode, the maximum intake valve lift can achieve 8.8 mm within 140°CaA, and the maximum exhaust valve lift can achieve 8.4 mm within 140°CaA. The valve seating speeds are less than 0.3 m/s in both modes, and the fullness coefficients are more than 0.5 and 0.6 in the 2-stroke and 4-stroke mode, respectively. At the engine speed of 3000 r/min, the contact force on each component is acceptable, and the stress between cam and roller can meet the material requirement.


Author(s):  
Mohammed El Adawy ◽  
Morgan Heikal ◽  
bin Abd. Aziz Abd. Rashid

Abstract RICARDO-VECTIS CFD simulation of the in-cylinder air flow was first validated with those of the experimental results from high-speed particle image velocimetry (PIV) measurements taking cognisant of the mid-cylinder tumble plane. Furthermore, high-speed fuel spray measurements were carried out simultaneously with the intake-generated tumble motion at high valve lift using high-speed time-resolved PIV to chronicle the spatial and time-based development of air/fuel mixture. The effect of injection pressure(32.5 and 35.0 MPa) and pressure variation across the air intake valves(150, 300 and 450 mmH2O) on the interaction process were investigated at valve lift 10 mm where the tumble vortex was fully developed and filled the whole cylinder under steady-state conditions. The PIV results illustrated that the intake generated-tumble motion had a substantial impact on the fuel spray distortion and dispersion inside the cylinder. During the onset of the injection process the tumble motion diverted the spray plume slightly towards the exhaust side before it followed completely the tumble vortex. The fuel spray plume required 7.2 ms, 6.2 ms and 5.9 ms to totally follow the in-cylinder air motion for pressure differences 150, 300 and 450 mmH2O, respectively. Despite, the spray momentum was the same for the same injection pressure, the magnitude of kinetic energy was different for different cases of pressure differences and subsequently the in-cylinder motion strength.


2011 ◽  
Vol 36 (21) ◽  
pp. 13793-13807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulugbek Azimov ◽  
Masahiro Okuno ◽  
Kazuya Tsuboi ◽  
Nobuyuki Kawahara ◽  
Eiji Tomita

Author(s):  
A C Clenci ◽  
G Descombes ◽  
P Podevin ◽  
V Hara

The inefficient running of the spark ignition engine at part loads due to the load control method but, mostly, their major weighting in the vehicle's operation time justifies the interest in the technical solutions, which act in this particular operating range. These drawbacks encountered at low part loads are even more amplified when considering larger engines. For instance, it is well known that, at the same engine load, a larger engine is more throttled than a smaller engine; therefore the concerns are the higher pumping work, the lower real compression ratio, and the overall mechanical efficiency, which is also lower. One solution is a reduction in the displacement without affecting the power output. This is what is now commonly known as the downsizing technique. The combination of downsizing and uploading an engine has been known for a long time. However, the conversion, in an acceptable way, of this potential to actual practice is very challenging. On the one hand, the degree of the downsizing is related to the boost pressure. In order to cope with the knocking phenomenon, the downsized high-pressure turbocharged gasoline engine requires a lower volumetric compression ratio that limits the efficiency on part loads. Therefore, the degree of the downsizing has been limited and, thus, the possible fuel consumption reduction has not yet been fully achieved. On the other hand, other problems are encountered when considering a downsized turbocharged gasoline engine: insufficient low-end torque, poor starting performance, and turbo lag. In order to solve these problems an effective combination of the downsized turbocharged gasoline engine with additional technologies is needed. Thus, the paper will present a so-called adaptive thermal engine, which has at the same time a variable compression ratio and a variable intake valve lift. It will then be demonstrated that it is highly suitable for turbocharging, thus resulting in a high downsizing factor.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document