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Technical Paper

A Computational Investigation into the Effects of Included Spray Angle on Heavy-Duty Diesel Engine Operating Parameters

2012-09-10
2012-01-1714
Effects of included spray angle with different injection strategies on combustion characteristics, performance and amount of pollutant emission have been computationally investigated in a common rail heavy-duty DI diesel engine. The CFD model was firstly validated with experimental data achieved from a Caterpillar 3401 diesel engine for a conventional part load condition at 1600 rev/min. Three different included spray angles (α = 145°, 105°, 90°) were studied in comparison with the traditional spray injection angle (α = 125°). The results show that spray targeting is very effective for controlling the in-cylinder mixture distributions especially when it accompanied with various injection strategies. It was found that 105° spray cone angle along with an optimized split pre- and post-Top Dead Center (TDC) injection strategy could significantly reduce NOx and soot emissions without much penalty of the fuel consumption, as compared to the wide spray angle.
Technical Paper

Investigation of Pilot and Multiple Injection Parameters on Mixture Formation and Combustion Characteristics in a Heavy Duty DI-Diesel Engine

2012-04-16
2012-01-0142
The mechanism of NOx and soot reduction using different pilot and multiple injection strategies has been computationally studied in a heavy duty DI Diesel engine. A designed set of advanced injection schemes with various variables and exhaust gas recirculation rate (up to 10%) have been analyzed. The CFD model was firstly calibrated against experimental data for a part load operation at 1600 rpm. The computational models used were found to predict the correct trends obtained in the experiment. The study demonstrated the potential and explained the mechanism of the combination of EGR and multiple injection to reduce both soot and NOx emissions together with improved fuel economy.
Technical Paper

Number-Based Droplet Velocity Distribution in High Pressure Diesel Fuel Sprays

1994-09-01
941689
Using a Laser Doppler Velocimetry with Burst Spectrum Analyzer (LDV-BSA), droplet velocities of a diesel fuel spray under a pressure higher than 100 MPa were measured at different points within the spray profile. Results show that although the mean velocity distribution at the sampling plane is rather uniform, the number-based droplet velocity distributions of two sampling points at the same plane are different. The conclusions agree with theoretical predictions through maximum entropy principle qualitatively.
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