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Technical Paper

Cycle-Resolved Velocity and Turbulence Measurements Near the Cylinder Wall of a Firing S.I. Engine

1986-10-01
861530
Laser Doppler velocimetry has been used to make cycle-resolved velocity and turbulence measurements in a homogeneous-charge, spark-ignition engine. The engine had a ported intake and disc-shaped chamber with a compression ratio of 7.5 to 1. It was operated at a speed of 1200 rpm and with a TDC swirl number of 4. A stoichiometric propane-air mixture was used, and ignition was near the wall. Measurements of the tangential velocity component were made in both firing and non-firing cycles at nine spatial locations along a radius 180 degrees downstream of the spark. The radial velocity component was also measured at four of the locations. All measurements were made in the center of the clearance height. Tangential component measurements were made as close as 0.5mm from the cylinder wall, and the radial component was measured as close as 1.5mm from the wall.
Technical Paper

Preliminary Turbulence Length Scale Measurements in a Motored IC Engine

1986-03-01
860021
A recently developed laser Doppler velocimetry system for making two-point spatial correlation measurements of velocity fluctuations has been applied to the turbulent flow field of an IC engine. Fluctuation integral length scales have been measured within the clearance volume of a ported, single cylinder engine with a disc-shaped chamber and a compression ratio of 8.0. The engine was motored at 600 rpm and the engine flow field had a swirl ratio at top dead center of approximately 4. These measurements were made at the center of the clearance height at three-quarters of the cylinder radius. The integral length scale was found to reach a minimum of approximately one-fifth of the clearance height near IDC. Comparison of the results obtained using this technique with the integral length scales measured in engines by other authors using different methods gives agreement to within a factor of two.
Technical Paper

Modeling of Engine Sprays

1985-02-01
850394
Atomization and full-cone sprays from single cylindrical orifices are considered. The following subjects are reviewed: the structure of the breakup region; the structure of the far field; modern models that, given the outcome of the breakup process, compute the steady and transient of sprays; some comparisons with detailed measurements; and some practical applications. The following conclusions are reached: the spray breakup and the development regions are the most relevant in engine applications; the inner structure of the breakup region is still largely unknown; two- and three-dimensional spray models are available but remain mostly untested, particularly in their vaporization and combustion components, in part because of a lack of accurate measurements in controlled engine-type environments; engine applications of such models are, nonetheless, recommended for very valuable learning, interpretative, and exploratory studies, but not for predictions.
Technical Paper

A Pulsed-Illumination, Closed-Circuit Television System for Real-Time Viewing of Engine Combustion and Observed Cyclic Variations

1979-02-01
790093
A closed-circuit television technique has been developed for the real time viewing and recording of combustion and related processes in internal combustion engines. The technique has been applied to a transparent piston, transparent head engine, and shadowgraphs of combustion chamber events have been observed and recorded. The technique is particularly suited for the study of changes in the combustion process due to variations of engine parameters such as mixture ratio, load, speed, spark timing, injection initiation, etc., since the changes can be observed and recorded at the same time that they occur. A brief and qualitative study of flame and pressure cyclic variations is reported and discussed as an example of an application for which the television technique is particularly suited.
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