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Technical Paper

CFD Modelling of the Effects of Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) and Injection Timing on Diesel Combustion and Emissions

2017-03-28
2017-01-0574
Emissions from Diesel engines have been a major concern for many years, particularly with regards to the impact of NOx and particulate matter on human health. Exhaust gas re-circulation (EGR) is a widely used method in diesel engines for controlling NOx production. While EGR rates can be varied to ensure engine performance and reduce NOx emissions, EGR also influences the ignition delay, reduces the peak combustion temperature and increases particulate emissions. Moreover, the injection timing directly affects NOx and particulate emissions under the broad and highly variable operating conditions. An effective CFD-based design tool for diesel engines must therefore include robust and accurate predictive capabilities for combustion and pollutant formation, to address the complex design tradeoffs. The objective of the present study is to evaluate CFD modeling of diesel engine combustion and emissions for various combinations of EGR rates and injection timings.
Journal Article

Modeling the Detailed Chemical Kinetics of NOx Sensitization for the Oxidation of a Model fuel for Gasoline

2010-04-12
2010-01-1084
At temperatures below 1100 K, the oxidation of nitric oxide (NO) impacts the oxidation of hydrocarbons, causing a sensitization effect in fuel combustion. This effect can be important in engine operations, especially those involving high levels of exhaust-gas recirculation (EGR). Many researchers have observed this NO sensitization for the oxidation of hydrocarbons in HCCI engines as well as stirred reactors. They used several model-fuel components relevant to gasoline, such as n-heptane, iso-octane, and toluene. As found in stirred reactor experiments, NO tends to increase the extent of oxidation for high-octane fuel components, such as isooctane and toluene. However, for the low-octane component n-heptane, NO has an inhibiting effect on hydrocarbon oxidation, particularly at low temperatures corresponding to the negative temperature coefficient (NTC) region.
Technical Paper

Validation Studies of a Detailed Soot Chemistry for Gasoline and Diesel Engines

2021-04-06
2021-01-0618
Accurately predicting the evolution of soot mass and soot particle numbers under engine conditions is critical to advanced engine design. A detailed soot-chemistry model that can capture soot under gasoline and diesel conditions without tuning is necessary for such predictions. Building confidence in the predictive usage of the chemistry in engine simulations requires validating the soot kinetics over a wide range of operating conditions and fuels, using data from different experimental techniques, and using sources from laboratory flames to engines. This validation study focuses on a soot-chemistry model that considers multiple nucleation, growth, and oxidation reaction pathways. It involves 14 gas-phase precursors and considers the effect of different soot-particle surface sites.
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