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Technical Paper

Characteristics of Heat Release History of Multi-Hole Diesel Spray Affected by Initial Mixture Formation, Wall Impingement and Spray Interaction

2020-09-15
2020-01-2119
Spray development and fuel-air mixture formation are important process early in diesel combustion. Moreover, wall impingement of spray and spray interaction also affect combustion process greatly. The spray interaction happens in multi-hole injector. This study investigated influence of spray combustion accompanied with wall impingement and spray interaction on heat release history. The experiment observed initial spray development by shadowgraph technique using a constant volume spray chamber. The injectors were a single-hole injector and multi-hole injectors with the hole-number of 8, 6 and 4. The combustion experiment observed flame development. The spatial distribution of the flame temperature and the soot oxidation were analyzed by the flame images. Results of the unburned spray images revealed the difference of mixture formation and initial combustion between single-hole and multi-hole sprays.
Technical Paper

Numerical Simulations of Mixture Formation in Combustion Chambers of Lean-Burn Natural Gas Engines Incorporating a Sub-Chamber

2017-10-08
2017-01-2280
The aim of this study is to clarify the mixture formation in the combustion chamber of our developed natural gas engine incorporating the sub-chamber injection system, in which natural gas is directly injected into a combustion sub-chamber in order to completely separate rich mixture in the sub-chamber, suitable for ignition, from ultra-lean mixture in the main chamber. Mixture distributions in chambers with and without sub-chamber were numerically simulated at a variety of operating conditions. The commercial software of Fluent 16.0 was used to conduct simulations based on Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes equations in an axial 2 dimensional numerical domain considering movements of piston. Non-reactive flow in the combustion chamber was simulated before the ignition timing at an engine speed of 2000 rpm. The turbulence model employed here is standard k-ε model. Air-fuel ratio is set with a lean condition of 30.
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