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Technical Paper

Droplet Behaviors of DI Gasoline Wall Impinging Spray by Spray Slicer

2020-04-14
2020-01-1152
Owing to the small size of engines and high injection pressures, it is difficult to avoid the fuel spray impingement on the combustion cylinder wall and piston head in Direct Injection Spark Ignition (DISI) engine, which is a possible source of hydrocarbons and soot emission. As a result, the droplets size and distribution are significantly important to evaluate the atomization and predict the impingement behaviors, such as stick, spread or splash. However, the microscopic behaviors of droplets are seldom reported due to the high density of small droplets, especially under high pressure conditions. In order to solve this problem, a “spray slicer” was designed to cut the spray before impingement as a sheet one to observe the droplets clearly. The experiment was performed in a constant volume chamber under non-evaporation condition, and a mini-sac injector with single hole was used.
Technical Paper

Unsteady Flow Analysis Method for Automobile LED Headlamp Based on Massively Parallel CFD Considering the External Environment

2020-04-14
2020-01-0636
The aims of this study are to understand the mechanism of dew condensation and try to prevent it on automobile headlamp. In this case, it is necessary to build the computational model of the headlamp with all details accurately. In addition, the simulation framework for predicting the turbulent flow field has to be accompanied with the high temperature heat source and consider high accuracy of the wall heat transfer in the running environment of a vehicle. Moreover, it is a challenging task that using CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) to understand the mechanism of the flow field inside the light emitting diode (LED) headlamp with a rotating fan to cool the light sources because of the complicated internal structures and significant heat transfer. In this paper, the method of compressible turbulence has been constructed which based on hierarchical cartesian grid using the HPC (High Performance Computing) environment.
Journal Article

A Study on Design Factors of Gas Pedal Operation

2012-04-16
2012-01-0073
Lateral distance from the center of a driver's seating position to the gas and brake pedals is one of the main design factors that relates to the ease of stepping on the pedals from one and the other. It is important to keep a certain distance between the pedals to prevent erroneous operations or to reduce the driver's anxiety. In this paper, we explain that the distance between the pedals is affected by the driver's seating height. In other words, if the driver sits lower, the accuracy of stepping on the pedals from the gas pedal to the brake pedal will increase compared to the higher seating position. In addition, we found out that providing auxiliary parts for the leg support enhances the accuracy of the pedal operations.
Journal Article

Real-Time Vehicle Detection using a Single Rear Camera for a Blind Spot Warning System

2012-04-16
2012-01-0293
This paper describes a vision-based vehicle detection system for a blind spot warning function. This detection system has been designed to provide ample performance as a driving safety support system, while streamlining the image processing algorithm so that it can be processed using the computational power of an existing ECU. The procedure used by the system to detect a vehicle in a blind spot is as follows. The system consists of four functional components: obstacle detection, velocity estimation, vertical edge detection, and final classification. In obstacle detection, a predicted image is generated under the assumption that the road surface is a perfectly flat plane, and then an object is detected based on a histogram that is created by comparing the predicted image and an actually observed image. The velocity of the object is estimated by tracking the histogram over time, assuming that both the object and the host vehicle are traveling in the same direction.
Technical Paper

A challenge to vapor distribution measurement of multi-component evaporating fuel spray via laser absorption-scattering (LAS) technique

2007-07-23
2007-01-1892
In the present study, a challenge has been made to quantitatively determine the vapor phase concentration distributions in an evaporating multicomponent fuel spray using the LAS imaging technique. The theoretical considerations were particularly given when applying the LAS imaging technique to the multicomponent fuel spray and reconstructing the vapor concentration distributions from the spray images.
Technical Paper

The Origins of Nanoparticle Modes in the Number Distribution of Diesel Particulate Matter

2002-03-04
2002-01-1008
The measurement of the number distribution of nanometer size particles (nanoparticles) in the diesel exhaust emission is important in order to evaluate their environmental and health impact, and to develop new types of diesel particulate filters (DPFs). Generally, the distributions of diesel particulate matter are complicated in the nanometer size regime that contains some peaks depending on the various particle formation mechanisms. They are strongly influenced by the homogeneous and heterogeneous nucleation of heavy hydrocarbons in the dilution process, and nanoparticles are also generated even in the aerosol chargers used for the electrical aerosol measurement system.
Technical Paper

Aerodynamic Pitching Stability of Sedan-Type Vehicles Influenced by Pillar-Shape Configurations

2013-04-08
2013-01-1258
The present study investigated the aerodynamic pitching stability of sedan-type vehicles under the influence of A- and C-pillar geometrical configurations. The numerical method used for the investigation is based on the Large Eddy Simulation (LES) method. Whilst, the Arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian (ALE) method was employed to realize the prescribed pitching oscillation of vehicles during dynamic pitching and fluid flow coupled simulations. The trailing vortices that shed from the A-pillar and C-pillar edges produced the opposite tendencies on how they affect the aerodynamic pitching stability of vehicles. In particular, the vortex shed from the A-pillar edge tended to enhance the pitching oscillation of vehicle, while the vortex shed from the C-pillar edge tended to suppress it. Hence, the vehicle with rounded A-pillar and angular C-pillar exhibited a higher aerodynamic damping than the vehicle with the opposite A- and C-pillars configurations.
Technical Paper

Ignition Delays of DME and Diesel Fuel Sprays Injected by a D.I. Diesel Injector

1999-10-25
1999-01-3600
Among the alternative fuels, dimethyl ether (DME), one of the oxygenated fuels, attracts attention as an alternative fuel for the Diesel engine since the properties of the DME are fitted to the Diesel engine combustion and the know-how development has been made of the mass production of the DME from a natural gas. In this study, experiments were performed of ignition characteristics of the DME and Diesel fuel sprays injected by a D.I. Diesel injector into a high-pressure, high-temperature vessel. The fuel injection was made by a Bosch type injection system. A schlieren optical system was adopted for visualizing the ignition process as well as the vaporization process of the DME and Diesel fuel sprays. The ignition delay was measured by using a photo-sensor which had a sensitivity in the wavelength range from visible to ultraviolet. Pressure and temperature of the ambient air and the oxygen concentration of the ambient air were changed as experimental parameters.
Technical Paper

Effects of Droplet Behaviors on Fuel Adhesion of Flat Wall Impinging Spray Injected by a DISI Injector

2019-09-09
2019-24-0034
Owing to the short impingement distance and high injection pressure, it is difficult to avoid the fuel spray impingement on the combustion cylinder wall and piston head in Direct Injection Spark Ignition (DISI) engine, which is a possible source of hydrocarbons and soot emission. For better understanding of the mechanisms behind the spray-wall impingement, the fuel spray and adhesion on a flat wall using a mini-sac injector with a single-hole was examined. The microscopic characteristics of impinging spray were investigated through Particle Image Analysis (PIA). The droplet size and velocity were compared before impingement. The adhered fuel on the wall was measured by Refractive Index Matching (RIM). The fuel adhesion mass and area were discussed. Moreover, the relationships between droplets behaviors and fuel adhesion on the wall were discussed.
Technical Paper

SI Combustion Characteristics of Cyclopentane - Detailed Kinetic Mechanism

2019-12-19
2019-01-2305
Cyclopentane (C5H10) has been reported to exhibit large octane sensitivity (RON − MON) = 17. During the course of research for sustainable liquid fuels, fundamental SI combustion characteristics of cyclopentane have been investigated using the kinetic mechanism which has been newly developed based on the quantum chemical calculations for essential chemical species and reactions. It was found that the intramolecular isomerization reaction via six-membered ring transition states are significantly hindered by the cyclic carbon skeleton. As a result, the predicted ignition delay times at low temperature are longer than those for the acyclic hydrocarbons. The effect on the laminar flame propagation speed was found to be small.
Technical Paper

Experimental Study on Diesel Spray Combustion and Wall Heat Transfer with Multiple Fuel Injection Strategies - Results of Rapid Compression and Expansion Machine Experiment

2023-10-24
2023-01-1843
The rapid compression expansion machine (RCEM) was used to investigate the temporal variations of the spray flame and wall heat flux in the diesel engine combustion process by using 120 MPa and 180 MPa common rail pressure. A stepped cavity was applied to investigate spray and flame behavior under the pilot, pre and main multiple injection strategy. Wall heat flux sensors were installed in the piston cavity and the cylinder side. The injector has 3 holes with the neighboring angle in the left direction and another 3 holes in the right direction to simulate the spray interaction in the 10-hole injector combustion system in the actual diesel engine. The spray and flame behavior were taken by a high-speed video camera with direct photograph. A two-color analysis was applied to investigate gas temperature and KL factor distribution. The effect of locations and common rail pressure on heat transfer was investigated.
Technical Paper

Characteristics of Flat-Wall Impinging Spray Flame and Its Heat Transfer under Small Diesel Engine-Like Condition

2017-11-05
2017-32-0032
Heat loss is more critical for the thermal efficiency improvement in small size diesel engines than large-size diesel engines. More than half of total heat energy in the internal-combustion engine is lost by cooling through the cylinder walls to the atmosphere and the exhaust gas. Therefore, the new combustion concept is needed to reduce losses in the cylinder wall. In a Direct Injection (DI) diesel engine, the spray behavior, including spray-wall impingement has an important role in the combustion development to reduce heat loss. The aim of this study is to understand the mechanism of the heat transfer from the spray and flame to the impinging wall. Experiments were performed in a constant volume vessel (CVV) at high pressures and high temperatures. Fuel was injected using a single-hole injector with a 0.133 mm diameter nozzle. Under these conditions, spray evaporates, then burns near the wall. Spray/flame behavior was investigated with a high-speed video camera.
Technical Paper

Development of Detailed Surface Reaction Mechanism of CO/ NO/ O2 System for Three Way Catalyst Based on Gaseous and Surface Species Analyses

2023-09-29
2023-32-0122
In this study, we determined the detailed reaction mechanism of CO/NO/O2 for automotive three way catalysts. The N2O formation process obtained from measurements of the reaction properties and the formation process of adsorbed NCO species obtained from surface analysis of platinum group metals were added to a previous detailed surface reaction mechanism. The computational accuracy of the developed reaction mechanism was verified by the one-dimensional simulation software BOOST, and it was found to be sufficient for any combination of platinum group metals and gas concentrations.
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