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Journal Article

Comparison of PFI and DI Operation in a Downsized Gasoline Engine

2013-04-08
2013-01-1103
A 300 cc gasoline engine has been experimentally and numerically studied to compare PFI and DI operation on naturally-aspirated and turbocharged full load operating points. Experiment outlines the benefits from DI operation in terms of volumetric efficiency, fuel economy and knock propensity but also clearly indicates worse raw engine-out CO emissions. The latter is an indication of the survival of a large scale mixture heterogeneity in this downsized GDI engine even when early injection and intense induced fluid motion are combined. For such a full load operation, the application of optical diagnostics to study mixture heterogeneity cannot be considered because pressure and temperature exceed sustainable levels for transparent materials. Therefore, 3D CFD RANS computations of the intake, injection, combustion and pollutant formation processes including detailed chemistry information are performed to complement the experimental data.
Technical Paper

LES Calculations of a Four Cylinder Engine

2011-04-12
2011-01-0832
A full 3D Large Eddy Simulation (LES) of a four-stroke, four-cylinder engine, performed with the AVBP-LES code, is presented in this paper. The drive for substantial CO₂ reductions in gasoline engines in the light of the global energy crisis and environmental awareness has increased research into gasoline engines and increased fuel efficiencies. Precise prediction of aerodynamics, mixing, combustion and pollutant formation are required so that CFD may actively contribute to the improvement/optimization of combustion chamber, intake/exhaust ducts and manifold shapes and volumes which all contribute to the global performance and efficiency of an engine. One way to improve engine efficiency is to reduce the cycle-to-cycle variability, through an improved understanding of their sources and effects. The conventional RANS approach does not allow addressing non-cyclic phenomena as it aims to compute the average cycle.
Technical Paper

An Experimental Database Dedicated to the Study and Modelling of Cyclic Variability in Spark-Ignition Engines with LES

2011-04-12
2011-01-1282
In spark-ignition engines, cyclic variability limits the optimisation of operating conditions (choice of spark advance and/or injection timing) since it induces load variations and the occurrence of misfire and/or knock. This, in turn, restricts the operation range of new concepts such as downsizing or stratified combustion. To understand the basic physical phenomena behind cyclic variations, careful experimental studies are necessary to simultaneously characterise the combustion and the unsteady flow in the complete engine set-up. With a well-characterised experimental engine set-up, Large Eddy Simulation (LES) modelling can be easily combined with experiment in order to tackle intricate physical phenomena couplings. This paper describes an experimental database acquired on an optical research engine. The single-cylinder spark-ignition engine is equipped with four valves, a pentroof combustion chamber and a flat piston. The database is dedicated to the validation of LES models.
Technical Paper

Potential of Concomitant Injection of CNG and Gasoline on a 1.6L Gasoline Direct Injection Turbocharged Engine

2011-08-30
2011-01-1995
The use of CNG in modern spark ignition turbocharged engine offers many advantages such as high knocking resistance, low CO₂ emissions and high specific power outputs. On the other hand, compared to gasoline, the volumetric efficiency is significantly decreased when CNG is port-injected due to its low energy density. In order to address this issue, recent studies have successfully highlighted the advantages on port-injection engines of the CIGAL™ concept (Concomitant Injection of Gas And Liquid fuels) from IFP Energies Nouvelles. However, the combination of port-injection of CNG with direct injection of gasoline remains unexplored. This paper investigates this novel injection concept on the four-cylinder 1.6L turbocharged GDI engine with inlet variable valve timing resulting from the cooperation between PSA Peugeot-Citroen and the BMW Group.
Technical Paper

Effects of Ethanol Addition in RON 95 Gasoline on GDI Stratified Combustion

2011-09-11
2011-24-0055
The aim of this work is to study the effect of ethanol/gasoline blends on stratified operation in a single-cylinder GDI engine and to build up a large database that will be used to improve engine simulation codes. The effects of three different fuel blends are compared: a reference RON 95 fuel without oxygenates, E20 with 20% in volume of ethanol added to the RON 95 fuel, and E85 corresponding to 85% of ethanol added to the RON 95 fuel. The engine was equipped with a centrally-mounted piezoelectric injector. A wide range of engine speed and load operating conditions were studied: from 1000 to 4000 rpm and from 1.5 to 9 bar IMEP. Injection strategies were optimized using up to three injections per working cycle. It was shown that multi-injection is necessary to improve stratified combustion stability and to limit particulate emissions.
Technical Paper

Investigation of the Mixing Process and the Fuel Mass Concentration Fields for a Gasoline Direct-Injection Spray at ECN Spray G Conditions and Variants

2015-09-01
2015-01-1902
Within the Engine Combustion Network (ECN) research frame, the mixing process and the fuel mass concentration fields were investigated at spray G conditions and variants with optical diagnostics. Experiments were conducted in a high-temperature high-pressure constant-volume pre-combustion vessel. The target condition, called “Spray G”, which is representative of gasoline direct-injection engine conditions, uses well-defined ambient (573 K, 6 bar, 3.5 kg/m3, O2-free) and injector conditions (200 bar, eight-hole injector, 0.165 mm orifice diameter). Measurements were also conducted at 6 and 9 kg/m3 for temperatures of 700 and 800 K respectively. Two techniques were used to visualize the jet formation: p-difluorobenzene laser induced fluorescence (LIF) imaging and high-repetition-rate schlieren visualization. Images from both methods were compared in terms of jet penetration and size.
Technical Paper

Using RON Synergistic Effects to Formulate Fuels for Better Fuel Economy and Lower CO2 Emissions

2019-12-19
2019-01-2155
The knock resistance of gasoline is a key factor to decrease the specific fuel consumption and CO2 emissions of modern turbocharged spark ignition engines. For this purpose, high RON and octane sensitivity (S) are needed. This study shows a relevant synergistic effect on RON and S when formulating a fuel with isooctane, cyclopentane and aromatics, the mixtures reaching RON levels well beyond the ones of individual components. The same is observed when measuring their knock resistance on a boosted single cylinder engine. The mixtures were also characterized on a rapid compression machine at 700 K and 850 K, a shock tube at 1000 K, an instrumented and an adapted CFR engine. The components responsible for the synergistic effects are thus identified. Furthermore, the correlations plotted between these experiments results disclose our current understanding on the origin of these synergistic effects.
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