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Technical Paper

Diesel Engines: One Option to Power Future Personal Transportation Vehicles

1997-08-06
972683
In the twenty-first century, exhaust emission control will remain a major technical challenge especially as additional pressures for fuel and energy conservation mount. To address these needs, a wide variety of engine and powertrain options must be considered. For many reasons, the piston engine will remain the predominant engine choice in the twenty-first century, especially for conventional and/or parallel hybrid drive trains. Emissions constraints favor the conventional port fuel-injected gasoline engine with 3-way exhaust catalyst, while energy conservation favors direct-injection gasoline and diesel engines. As a result of recent technological progress from a competitive European market, diesels, and most recently, direct-injection (DI) diesels now offer driveability and performance characteristics competitive with those of gasoline engines. In addition, DI diesels offer the highest fuel efficiency.
Technical Paper

A Study of NO and Soot Evolution in a DI Diesel Engine via Planar Imaging

1993-03-01
930973
An experimental study has been conducted to characterize NO and soot evolution in an optically-accessible D.I. diesel engine with a square combustion chamber. Two-dimensional laser-induced fluorescence was used to characterize NO evolution. Soot evolution was characterized by two-dimensional laser-induced incandescence (LII) and Mie scattering techniques as well as direct photography of the flame luminosity. The engine operating parameters were set to provide optimum conditions for NO imaging. Attenuation of the UV beam proved to be the major obstacle in obtaining NO images. Therefore, oxygen was added to the intake air charge in order to reduce the optical density of the combustion medium. The NO images showed that the NO formation started almost immediately after ignition and ceased no later than 40 degrees ATDC. No soot images could be obtained by the laser-induced incandescence or Mie scattering methods before 20 degrees ATDC since the soot concentration was very low.
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