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Technical Paper

Effects of Fuel Composition on In-Cylinder Air/Fuel Ratio During Fuelling Transients in an SI Engine, Measured Using Differential Infra-Red Absorption

1996-05-01
961204
Departures from optimum stoichiometry during transients (acceleration and deceleration) and cold start can lead to significant degradation in driveability and emissions control. Such departures occur as a result of a complex interplay between fuel transport mechanisms and the fuelling strategy. The relative contributions of several of these mechanisms are affected by fuel composition. To help understand these effects an open-path differential infra-red absorption technique has been used to monitor the transient evolution of the fuel vapour phase directly within the combustion chamber. The sensor projected a narrow infra-red beam which traversed the cylinder of an optical access engine along an open path under the head, and measured the path-integrated attenuation caused by absorption of the infra-red radiation by the fuel vapour. It operated in the near infrared (NIR) spectral region around 2.3 μm, an absorption band in hydrocarbon species containing methyl groups.
Technical Paper

First In-Situ Measurement of Lubricant Degradation in the Ring Pack of a Running Engine

1994-10-01
942026
Mid-infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy, has been applied for the first time to the measurement of lubricant degradation products in the ring pack of a firing single-cylinder, IDI diesel. An IR-transmitting window, mounted in the cylinder wall, enables illumination of the moving piston by a broadband IR source located on the engine exterior. Light reflected from the piston is analysed in three wavebands to measure carbonyl oxidation products and oil volumes. Intra-cycle observations reveal differences in the apparent extent of lubricant oxidation between strokes and at different spatial locations in the ring pack. The data are interpreted in terms of a non-homogeneous sample.
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