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Technical Paper

Combined application of CFD modeling and pressure-based combustion diagnostics for the development of a low compression ratio high-performance diesel engine

2007-09-16
2007-24-0034
The simulation activity for the piston bowl development in a low compression ratio (CR) high-performance diesel engine is described, starting from the calibration of a 3-D CFD commercial code by pressure-based combustion diagnostics data. Calibration was made for the baseline engine built by GMPT-E, matching experimental pressure traces and heat release rates derived from these through the diagnostic tool. Measured pollutant emissions were also applied for calibration at this stage. The engine was susceptible to modifications, according to the outcomes of combined simulation and experimental investigations. The validated CFD model was used for the screening of three new piston bowls featuring a reduced compression ratio. The 3-D code has been integrated with a robustly calibrated 1-D hydraulic model for the injection system simulation and with a 1-D fluidynamic tool for modeling engine flow processes external to the cylinder to provide quite accurate boundary conditions.
Technical Paper

Development and Application of an Advanced Numerical Model for CR Piezo Indirect Acting Injection Systems

2010-05-05
2010-01-1503
A numerical model for simulating a Common Rail Piezo Indirect Acting fuel injection-system under steady state as well as transient operating conditions was developed using a commercial code. A 1D flow model of the main hydraulic system components, including the rail, the rail to injector connecting pipe and the injector, was applied in order to predict the influence of the injector layout and of each part of the hydraulic circuit on the injection system performance. The numerical code was validated through the comparison of the numerical results with experimental data obtained on a high performance test bench of the Moehwald-Bosch MEP2000/ CA4000 type. The developed injection-system mathematical model was applied to the analysis of transient flows in the hydraulic circuit paying specific attention to the fluid dynamics internal to the injector.
Technical Paper

Thermal Effect Simulation in High-Pressure Injection System Transient Flows

2004-03-08
2004-01-0532
Temperature variations due to compressibility effects of the liquid fuel were evaluated, for the first time in high-pressure injection system simulation, by employing the energy conservation equation, in addition to the mass-continuity and momentum-balance equations, as well as the constitutive state equation of the liquid. To that end, the physical properties (bulk elasticity modulus, thermal expansivity, kinematic viscosity) of the fluid were used as analytic functions of pressure and temperature obtained by interpolating carefully determined experimental data. Consistent with negligible thermal effects of heat transfer and viscous power losses involved in the flow process, the equation of energy was reduced to a state relation among the fluid thermodynamic properties, leading to a barotropic flow model.
Technical Paper

Development and Assessment of a Multizone Combustion Simulation Code for SI Engines Based on a Novel Fractal Model

2006-04-03
2006-01-0048
A combustion simulation code for the prediction of heat release, flame propagation speed and pollutant formation in SI engines was developed and assessed. It is based on a multizone combustion model that takes the non-uniform spatial distribution of the in-cylinder burned-gas thermochemical properties into account. The multizone approach for burning rate calculation is coupled with a CAD procedure for the evaluation of burned-gas front area and radius. Specifically developed sub-models for determining CO and NO formation are included in the code. An original model based on the fractal geometry concept was used to describe the entrainment of fresh mixture through the flame front.
Technical Paper

Development of an Improved Fractal Model for the Simulation of Turbulent Flame Propagation in SI Engines

2005-09-11
2005-24-082
The necessity for further reductions of in-cylinder pollutant formation and the opportunity to minimize engine development and testing times highlight the need of engine thermodynamic cycle simulation tools that are able to accurately predict the effects of fuel, design and operating variables on engine performance. In order to set up reliable codes for indicated cycle simulation in SI engines, an accurate prediction of heat release is required, which, in turn, involves the evaluation of in-cylinder turbulence generation and flame-turbulence interaction. This is generally pursued by the application of a combustion fractal model coupled with semi-empirical correlations of available geometrical and thermodynamical mass-averaged quantities. However, the currently available correlations generally show an unsatisfactory capability to predict the effects of flame-turbulence interaction on burning speed under the overall flame propagation interval.
Technical Paper

Delivery-Valve Effects on the Performance of an Automotive Diesel Fuel-Injection System

1999-03-01
1999-01-0914
An integrated theoretical and experimental investigation was carried out in order to evaluate the effects that the pump delivery-valve assembly can produce on the performance of a pump-line-nozzle fuel-injection system with a distributor-type pump for automotive diesel engines. Four distinct delivery valves, one constant-pressure valve, one reflux-hole and two relief-volume valves, were separately fitted to the pump and for each configuration of the delivery assembly the system behavior was analyzed under full-load steady-state operations in a wide pump angular-speed range. Fuel injection-rate as well as local pressure time-histories were investigated, paying specific attention to the occurrence and temporal evolution of cavitation phenomena in the pressure pipe and injector nozzle, after the valve closure. The flow across the delivery-valve assembly was theoretically examined in order to ascertain any instability sources as possible causes of cyclic fluctuations.
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