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Journal Article

Investigation of Fuel Effects on Spray Atomization and Evaporation Studied for a Multi-hole DISI Injector with a Late Injection Timing

2011-08-30
2011-01-1982
The influence of fuel composition on sprays was studied in an injection chamber at DISI conditions with late injection timing. Fuels with high, mid and low volatility (n-hexane, n-heptane, n-decane) and a 3-component mixture with similar fuel properties like gasoline were investigated. The injection conditions were chosen to model suppressed or rapid evaporation. Mie scattering imaging and phase Doppler anemometry were used to investigate the liquid spray structure. A spray model was set up applying the CFD-Code OpenFOAM. The atomization was found to be different for n-decane that showed a smaller average droplet size due to viscosity dependence of injected mass. And for evaporating conditions, a stratification of the vapor components in the 3-component fuel spray was observed.
Technical Paper

Characteristics and Application of Gasoline Injectors to SI Engines by Means of Measured Liquid Fuel Distributions

1997-10-01
972947
The spray formation of two different gasoline port fuel injectors has been studied in three stages of the mixture formation process using measured liquid fuel distributions. The injector characteristics were determined in fundamental chamber experiments providing the time dependent spray penetration and the internal structure of the spray in quiescent air by a laser light sheet technique. For the sane injectors the interaction between port flow and spray was investigated inside the port of a production engine. A strong dependence of the fuel distribution inside the port on the engine operation point was found for both injectors. This fuel distribution provides information on wall film generation and the optimum orientation of the injector inside the suction pipe.
Technical Paper

Interaction of Airflow and Injected Fuel Spray Inside the Intake Port of a Six Cylinder Four Valve SI Engine

1997-10-01
972984
Measurements of crank angle resolved air velocity and fuel droplet velocity inside the intake port of a six cylinder four valve production engine were performed using two component Laser Doppler Velocimetry (LDV). Prior to the engine measurements the fuel injector was characterized by determining time resolved droplet sizes and velocities with Phase Doppler Velocimetry (PDV) at an injector test rig with complete optical access. PDV results indicate that during spray penetration into quiescent air at atmospheric pressure (test rig conditions) large droplets move at the tip of the spray while small droplets due to their low force of inertia are slowed down by aerodynamic pressure and pile up at the end of the spray. Mean values of the droplet diameter rise with the distance from the injector because the smallest droplets do not reach the downstream measurement locations.
Technical Paper

Droplet Size and Velocity Measurements for the Characterization of a DI-Diesel Spray Impinging on a Flat Wall

1998-10-19
982545
In small high speed direct injection diesel engines the injected fuel spray impinges on the walls of the piston bowl. The mixture formation process is influenced considerably by the spray-wall interaction. Stringent exhaust gas emission regulations and growing demands for fuel economy are leading to the application of high-pressure fuel injection systems, e.g. common-rail. The trend towards downsized engines with smaller piston displacements leads to reduced distances between nozzle and wall. Higher injection pressures and smaller nozzle-wall distances both increase the significance of spray-wall interaction and near-wall mixture formation. In the present study the influence of governing parameters like injection pressure and wall temperature on the characteristics of the impinged spray was investigated.
Technical Paper

Vapor-Phase Structures of Diesel-Type Fuel Sprays: An Experimental Analysis

1998-10-19
982543
The vapor phase of an evaporating spray from a heavy-duty Diesel common-rail injection system has been investigated with an optical diagnostic technique based on linear Raman scattering, which has been extended to the application in fuel sprays. One-dimensional spatially resolved Raman measurements of the air/fuel-ratio have been performed in the spray region with high local and temporal resolution in an injection chamber at an air pressure of 4.5 MPa and at a temperature of 450°C. The influence of different parameters, such as rail pressure, nozzle geometry and injection duration on the temporal evolution of the local air/fuel-ratio in the vapor phase has been studied quantitatively, and results from a selected spatial location are compared. Furthermore, the effect of physical/chemical fuel properties on the evaporation dynamics has been investigated by performing measurements with two different fuels.
Technical Paper

Determination of the Gas-Phase Temperature in the Vaporizing Spray of a GDI-Injector Using Pure Rotational CARS

2004-03-08
2004-01-1350
Detailed experimental investigation of fuel sprays are of utmost importance for the development of appropriate injection systems for gasoline direct injection (GDI) engines. A number of laser based techniques have been developed to study the spray formation. The temperature of the gas phase surrounding the fuel droplets was not accessible up to now. In this work for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, gas-phase temperatures were measured within the vaporizing spray of a high pressure GDI injector using pure rotational coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectroscopy (CARS). Results from an isooctane fuel spray of a multi-hole injector in a heated injection chamber are presented with the probe volume located at a distance of 70mm downstream the injector nozzle in the centre of the spray cone.
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