Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 2 of 2
Technical Paper

On-Board Diagnostics of Fuel Injector Clogging

1993-10-01
932664
A pressure transducer, closely mounted to the fuel rail pressure regulator of a production fuel system, captured transient waveforms in a bench experiment. Signals were processed to detect the reduction of fuel flow caused by injector clogging. Interference among wave patterns and the proximate action of the pressure regulator made quantitative correlation difficult. However, changes in wave amplitudes can be qualitative indicators of injector clogging problems. A modification was made that moved the regulator nearer the fuel pump outlet and deadheaded the rail. With these modifications, sequential transient pulses from a single operating injector showed good correlation between the pressure drop in the fuel rail during injection and the injector static fuel flow rate. To apply this behavior to multi-cylinder engine analysis, a waveform superposition method was developed to extract single injector information during multi-injector operation.
Technical Paper

A Comparative Study of the Effects of Fuel Properties of Non-Petroleum Fuels on Diesel Engine Combustion and Emissions

1984-10-01
841334
A single cylinder indirect injection diesel engine was used to evaluate the emissions, fuel consumption, and ignition delay of non-petroleum liquid fuels derived from coal, shale, and tar sands. Correlations were made relating fuel properties with exhaust emissions, fuel consumption, and ignition delay. The results of the correlation study showed that the indicated fuel consumption, ignition delay, and CO emissions significantly correlated with the H/C ratio, specific gravity, heat of combustion, aromatics and saturates content, and cetane number, Multiple fuel properties were necessary to correlate the hydrocarbon emissions. The NOx emissions did not correlate well with any fuel property. Because these fuels from various resources were able to correlate succesfully with many of the fuel properties suggests that the degree of refinement or the chemical composition of the fuel is a better predictor of its performance than its resource.
X