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Journal Article

The Effects of Ignition Environment and Discharge Waveform Characteristics on Spark Channel Formation and Relationship between the Discharge Parameters and the EGR Combustion Limit

2015-09-01
2015-01-1895
In order to realize the high compression ratio and high dilution combustion toward improvement in thermal efficiency, the improvement in stability of ignition and initial phase of combustion under the high gas flow field is the major challenge. In terms of the shift on the higher power side of the operating point by downsizing and improvement of real world fuel consumption, the improvement of ignitability is increasingly expected in the wide operating range also including high load and high engine speed region. In this study, the effects of the gas pressure, gas flow velocity near the spark gap at ignition timing, and discharge current characteristics on spark channel formation were analyzed, focusing on restrike event and spark channel stretching in the spark channel formation process. And the relationship between the average discharge current until 1 ms and the EGR combustion limit was considered.
Technical Paper

A Comprehensive Model to Predict the Initial Stage of Combustion in SI Engines

2013-04-08
2013-01-1087
A correct prediction of the initial stages of the combustion process in SI engines is of great importance to understand how local flow conditions, fuel properties, mixture stratification and ignition affect the in-cylinder pressure development and pollutant formation. However, flame kernel growth is governed by many interacting processes including energy transfer from the electrical circuit to the gas phase, interaction between the plasma channel and the flow field, transition between different combustion regimes and gas expansion at very high temperatures. In this work, the authors intend to present a comprehensive, multi-dimensional model that can be used to predict the initial combustion stages in SI engines. In particular, the spark channel is represented by a set of Lagrangian particles where each one of them acts as a single flame kernel.
Journal Article

A Study of Volumetric Ignition Using High-Speed Plasma for Improving Lean Combustion Performance in Internal Combustion Engines

2008-04-14
2008-01-0466
It is well known that ultra-lean combustion can result in higher thermal efficiency, better fuel economy, and greatly reduced NOx emissions. Accomplishing ultra-lean combustion is very difficult with a conventional spark plug, and ignition instability can be cited as one of the factors. Therefore, it is thought that ignition system innovation is important for the achievement of ultra-lean combustion in gasoline engines. This study investigated high-speed plasma ignition as a new ignition system for internal combustion engines. High-speed plasma refers to the transient (non-equilibrated) phase of plasma before formation of an arc discharge; it is obtained by applying high voltage with an ultra-short pulse between coaxial cylindrical electrodes. High-speed plasma can inherently form a multi-channel discharge, with the electrical discharge spreading over a much larger volume than a spark discharge does.
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