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Technical Paper

The Study of the Fundamental Characteristics of Tumble in a Spark-Ignition Engine via Numerical Analysis

2021-04-06
2021-01-0408
A spark-ignition engine commonly induces tumble flow because it generates high turbulence, which is a crucial factor in determining the flame propagation speed. Since tumble affects not only the flame propagation speed but also the various in-cylinder phenomena, it predominantly determines the performance of the engine. In that sense, many studies have been conducted to investigate tumble. Although various studies have revealed the characteristics of tumble numerically and experimentally, there has been no research to identify the physical mechanisms of these characteristics. Although some studies specified the mechanisms from an angular momentum perspective, the theory was insufficient to explain the entire phenomena of tumble. Hence, this study attempts to comprehend the fundamental causes of tumble phenomena such as ‘spinning up’ and ‘vortex breakdown’ from the perspective of kinetic energy.
Technical Paper

An Experimental Study on a Six-Stroke Gasoline Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI) Engine with Continuously Variable Valve Duration (CVVD)

2021-04-06
2021-01-0512
An experimental study was conducted on a multi-cylinder engine to understand the feasibility of a six-stroke homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) operation under stoichiometric conditions. State-of-the-art technologies such as continuously variable valve duration (CVVD) and high-pressure gasoline direct injection (GDI) were experimentally exploited to increase the degree of freedom of engine control. The motivation of six-stroke HCCI combustion is to remedy the load limitation and the cyclic variation in four-stroke HCCI combustion with two additional strokes: compression and expansion strokes. The six-stroke HCCI combustion occurs in the following order. First, hot residual gas is trapped by applying negative valve overlap (NVO). Next, fresh air enters, fuel is injected, and lean HCCI combustion occurs in the 1st power stroke (PS). Subsequently, additional fuel is injected, and the 2nd combustion occurs with the remaining oxygen in the two additional strokes.
Technical Paper

Predicting the Influences of Intake Port Geometry on the Tumble Generation and Turbulence Characteristics by Zero-Dimensional Spark Ignition Engine Model

2018-09-10
2018-01-1660
The flame propagation characteristic is one of the greatest factor that determines the performance of spark ignition (SI) engines. The in-cylinder flow dynamics is very significant in terms of flame propagation because of its direct influence on the flame shape, turbulent flame speed, and the ignition quality. A number of different techniques are available to optimize the in-cylinder flow and maximize the utilization of turbulence for faster combustion, and tumble enhancement by intake port geometry is one of them. It requires excessive computational expenses to evaluate multiple designs under wide range of operating conditions by 3D-CFD, therefore, a low-dimensional model would be more competitive in such design optimization process. This work suggests a new modification approach for typical 0D turbulence model to take account for the tumble generation during the intake process as well as the turbulence characteristics associated with it.
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