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Technical Paper

Characterization of High-Tumble Flow Effects on Early Injection for a Lean-Burn Gasoline Engine

2023-04-11
2023-01-0238
The influence of early induction stroke direct injection on late-cycle flows was investigated for a lean-burn, high-tumble, gasoline engine. The engine features side-mounted injection and was operated at a moderate load (8.5 bar brake mean effective pressure) and engine speed (2000 revolutions per minute) condition representative of a significant portion of the duty cycle for a hybridized powertrain system. Thermodynamic engine tests were used to evaluate cam phasing, injection schedule, and ignition timing such that an optimal balance of acceptable fuel economy, combustion stability, and engine-out nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions was achieved. A single cylinder of the 4-cylinder thermodynamic engine was outfitted with an endoscope that enabled direct imaging of the spark discharge and early flame development.
Journal Article

Gasoline Direct Injector Deposits: Impacts of Fouling Mechanism on Composition and Performance

2022-03-29
2022-01-0488
Injector performance in gasoline Direct-Injection Spark-Ignition (DISI) engines is a key focus in the automotive industry as the vehicle parc transitions from Port Fuel Injected (PFI) to DISI engine technology. DISI injector deposits, which may impact the fuel delivery process in the engine, sometimes accumulate over longer time periods and greater vehicle mileages than traditional combustion chamber deposits (CCD). These higher mileages and longer timeframes make the evaluation of these deposits in a laboratory setting more challenging due to the extended test durations necessary to achieve representative in-use levels of fouling. The need to generate injector tip deposits for research purposes begs the questions, can an artificial fouling agent to speed deposit accumulation be used, and does this result in deposits similar to those formed naturally by market fuels?
Technical Paper

Flame Lift-Off on Direct-Injection Diesel Fuel Jets: Oxygen Concentration Effects

2002-03-04
2002-01-0890
The effects of reductions in the ambient gas oxygen concentration on the flame lift-off length on direct-injection (DI) diesel fuel jets under quiescent conditions were experimentally investigated. Reductions in the ambient (i.e., in-cylinder) gas oxygen concentration occur in an engine when exhaust gas recirculation is used to reduce the emission of nitrogen oxides. Also examined were the effects of the changes in lift-off length observed for various conditions on the total amount of oxygen entrained upstream of the lift-off location, soot formation, and the relationship between fuel vaporization and combustion processes. The research was conducted in a constant-volume combustion vessel using a common-rail fuel injector and a Phillips research grade #2 diesel fuel. The lift-off length measurements show that lift-off length is inversely proportional to the ambient gas oxygen concentration.
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