Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 4 of 4
Technical Paper

Characterisation of Diesel Engine Transient Pumping-loss and Control Methodology for Transient Specific Fuel Consumption (SFC)

2009-11-02
2009-01-2748
This study measures, during various transients of speed and load, in-cylinder-, intake-/exhaust- (manifold) pressures and engine torque. The tests were conducted on a typical high power-density, passenger car powertrain (common-rail diesel engine, of in-line 4-cylinder configuration equipped with a Variable Geometry Turbocharger). The objective was to quantify the deterioration (relative to a steady-steady condition) in transient Specific Fuel Consumption (SFC) that may occur during lagged-boost closed-loop control and thus propose an engine control strategy that minimises the transient SFC deterioration. The results, from transient characterisation and the analysis method applied in this study, indicate that transient SFC can deteriorate up to 30% (function of load transient) and is primarily caused by excessive engine pumping-loss.
Technical Paper

Experimental Investigation of Cavitation in Gasoline Injectors

2010-05-05
2010-01-1500
Spray characteristics of injectors depend on, among other factors, not only the level of turbulence upstream of the nozzle plate, but also on whether cavitation arises. "Bulk" cavitation, by which we mean cavitation which arises far from walls and thus far from streamline curvature associated with salient points on a wall, has not been investigated thoroughly experimentally and moreover it is quite challenging to predict by means of computational fluid dynamics. Information about the effect of the injector geometry on the formation of bulk cavitation and quantitative measurements of the flow field that promotes this phenomenon in gasoline injectors does not exist and this forms the background to this work. Evolution of bulk cavitation was visualized in two gasoline multi-hole injectors by means of a fast camera.
Technical Paper

Influence of Injection Timing on In-Cylinder Fuel Distribution in a Honda VTEC-E Engine

1995-02-01
950507
Measurements are presented of droplet characteristics and air velocity in the cylinder of a 0.36 litre four valve engine, equipped with an sohc VTEC-E valve train and port injection. The results show that injection at crank angles, θinj(s), when the inlet valve is open results in most of the liquid volume flux being in the form of droplets with Sauter mean diameter between 20 and 30 mm which strikes the sleeve up to about 2.5 cm below the exhaust valves, thus generating a locally rich cloud there. The amount of liquid phase gasoline passing through the plane 16 mm below the spark plug gap increases with θinj(s) up to 50 CA after intake TDC and this, together with the crank angle of droplet arrival and vapour generation, controls stratification of the gaseous fuel phase. The optimum injection time is when the fuel-rich cloud is generated so that the tumble vortex convects it to the spark plug at the time of ignition.
Technical Paper

Cyclic Variations of Initial Flame Kernel Growth in a Honda VTEC-E Lean-Burn Spark-Ignition Engine

2000-03-06
2000-01-1207
Lean combustion in spark-ignition engines has long been recognised as a means of reducing both exhaust emissions and fuel consumption. However, problems associated with cycle-by-cycle variations in flame initiation and development limit the range of lean-burn operation. An experimental investigation was undertaken in order to quantify the effects of spark energy released and initial flame kernel growth on the cyclic variability of IMEP and crank angle at which 5% mass fraction was burned in a Honda VTEC-E, stratified-charge, pentroof-type, single-cylinder, optically accessed, spark-ignition engine. Simultaneous CCD images of the flame at the spark plug were acquired from two orthogonal views (one through the piston crown and one through the pentroof) on a cycle-by-cycle basis during the first 40 crank angle degrees after ignition timing, for isooctane port injection at an air to fuel ratio of 22, engine speed of 1500 RPM, 30% volumetric efficiency and 40° crank angle spark advance.
X