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Technical Paper

Reduction of Exhaust Emission with New Water Injection System in a Diesel Engine

1996-02-01
960033
In this study a new water injection system was applied to an 11 liter naturally aspirated DI diesel engine in order to reduce exhaust emissions. In this system, the water and fuel were arranged in the injection nozzle during the time between injections as fuel, water and then fuel. The fuel and water were then injected into the cylinder in that order. The tests were conducted at several engine operating conditions from the Japanese 13 mode test cycle to clarify effects of water injection on exhaust emissions and fuel consumption. The results showed that NOx reduction was directly proportional to the relative amount of water injection, regardless of engine speed and load. By using the optimal relative amount of water injection at each engine operating condition, total NOx and particulate matter (PM) in the Japanese 13 mode test cycle were reduced by 50% and 25%, respectively, without a fuel consumption penalty.
Technical Paper

NO Measurement in Diesel Spray Flame Using Laser Induced Fluorescence

1997-02-24
970874
NO, OH, and soot in combustion flame produced from burning at high temperature and pressure diesel fuel spray issuing from a single-hole injection nozzle was measured by laser induced fluorescence (LIF) and laser induced incandescence (LII) methods. The LIF images of OH showed that OH radical, distributed in a band-like zone outside the region of the flame luminescence observed, would persist even after the extinction of flame luminescence. The LIF images of NO showed that NO was located slightly outside the flame luminescence zone and that its region was almost the same as that of OH and would tended to increase in the latter period of the combustion process. Also, the LII images showed that the formation of soot would take place near the flame central zone coincident with the flame luminescence zone.
Technical Paper

Application of Fuel Spray Theory to Exhaust Emission Control in a D.I. Diesel Engine

1976-02-01
760214
Recently diesel engines are required to get not only high performance but also low pollution gas quality (oxides of nitrogen, carbon monoxide, unburned hydrocarbons and smoke). Our approach to this requirement is based on the fuel spray theory that good fuel-air mixing in the fuel spray developed into the quiescent air depends upon high kinetic energy of the spray motion. From the theoretical analysis of fuel spray motion in the quiescent air and the photographic study of the fuel spray combustion, it was found that higher rate of air entrainment into the fuel spray by its own kinetic energy gives a very important effect on the increasing of combustion efficiency in the diesel engine and the reduction of soot formation.
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