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Journal Article

Study of Fuel Distribution on Diesel PCCI Combustion by Development of a New Characteristic-Time Combustion Model

2008-06-23
2008-01-1605
In order to understand premixed charge compression ignition (PCCI) combustion, a new combustion model of kinetic-and-turbulent characteristic-time has been developed. A ununiformity function H(ϕ)was presented by analysis of the effect of fuel/air distributions on the role of turbulent timescale in the combustion model, then an analytical turbulent timescale coefficient f was deduced, which was proved to be able to correlate the fuel ununiformity with the turbulent timescale in the combustion model. The new model was employed for simulation of a PCCI combustion organized by various multi-pulse injection strategies in a heavy duty diesel engine. The simulation results agreed with the experimental data well. The ignition process of a PCCI combustion organized by multi-pulse injection was a separated volume autoignition process, which was strongly influenced by the condition of fuel stratification.
Technical Paper

Mixing-enhanced Combustion in the Circumstances of Diluted Combustion in Direct-injection Diesel Engines

2008-04-14
2008-01-0009
Both in conventional diesel combustion and the low temperature combustion represented by PCCI and EGR-diluted combustion, high mixing rate at the whole combustion history is the key to achieve comparative clean and high-efficiency combustion. In this study, a newly developed combustion chamber, vortex-induced combustion chamber which can enhance middle and late cycle combustion is developed based on BUMP combustion chamber investigated in previous study. And then, the combustion and emission characteristics in the circumstances of diluted combustion are studied. For low oxygen concentration cases, heat release rate goes down and combustion efficiency decreases due to decreased mixing efficiency. The results of chamber design indicate complex structure of flow can be realized by special designed chamber geometry. The velocity difference in the interface of the vortexes will benefit to mixing of fuel and air, therefore combustion and emissions.
Technical Paper

Experimental and Numerical Study of Diesel HCCI Combustion by Multi-Pulse Injection

2008-04-14
2008-01-0059
Diesel-fueled HCCI combustion was achieved by multi-pulse injection before top dead center (TDC). However, the multi-pulse injections strategies have not been sufficiently studied previously due to the large number of parameters to be considered. In the present work, a series of multi-pulse injection modes with four or five pulses in each mode are designed, and their effects on diesel HCCI Combustion are experimentally studied. The results showed that the HCCI diesel combustion was extremely sensitive to injection mode. There were many modes to achieve very low NOx and smoke emissions, but the injection parameters of these modes must be optimized for higher thermal efficiency. A micro-genetic algorithm coupled with a modified 3D engine simulation code is utilized to optimize the injection parameters including the injection pressure, start-of-first-injection timing (SOI), fuel mass in each pulse injection and dwell time between consecutive pulse injections.
Technical Paper

High Density-Low Temperature Combustion in Diesel Engine Based on Technologies of Variable Boost Pressure and Intake Valve Timing

2009-06-15
2009-01-1911
A concept of high density-low temperature combustion (HD-LTC) is put forward in this paper, showing potential of its high thermal efficiency and very low engine-out emissions by engine experimental and CFD modeling study. A single cylinder test engine has been built-up equipped with mechanisms of variable boost pressure and intake valve closing timing (IVCT). By delaying IVCT and raising boost pressure to certain values according to engine loads, the in-cylinder charge density is regulated much higher than in conventional engines. It is found that the high charge density can play the role of rising of heat capacity as exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) does. Thereby low temperature combustion is realized with less EGR (about 18~19% oxygen concentration) to achieve very low NOx and soot emissions, which is extremely important at high and full loads.
Technical Paper

Mixing Enhancement by a Bump Ring in a Combustion Chamber for Compound Combustion

2005-10-24
2005-01-3721
Engine experiments have shown that simultaneous reductions of NOx and soot emissions can be achieved by the so called BUMP (Bump-up mixing process) combustion chamber. In order to understand the underlying mechanism of emission reduction, a STAR-CD based multi-dimensional combustion modeling was carried out for a heavy-duty diesel engine with the BUMP combustion chamber. The results from an impingement gas jet experiment were also presented and compared with computer modeling. The results showed that complex air motion with high turbulence was obtained by adoption of the bump ring. The fuel/air mixing rate was promoted greatly. Therefore, for the BUMP combustion chamber, much fuel fell in the optimum equivalence ratio range than that of the baseline chamber.
Technical Paper

Injection Mode Modulation for HCCI Diesel Combustion

2005-04-11
2005-01-0117
In order to understand the effects of pulse injection mode on power output and emissions in an HCCI diesel engine, the pulse injection mode modulation was investigated. A computer simulation code of common rail injector FIRCRI was developed based on previous work by the authors, including the simulation of dynamic response and injected fuel amount. Then the injector parameters were partly revised to meet the requirement of pulse injections. By variation of control signals, a series of injection modes were realized based on the prejudgment of combustion requirement. The designed injection modes included so called even mode, staggered mode, hump mode and progressive increase mode with four, five and six pulses. Engine test was conducted with the designed injection modes. The experimental results showed that the HCCI diesel combustion was extremely sensitive to injection mode.
Technical Paper

A New Reduced Chemical Kinetic Model for Autoignition and Oxidation of Lean n-heptane/Air Mixtures in HCCI Engines

2005-04-11
2005-01-0118
The paper has presented a new reduced chemical kinetic model for the Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI) combustion of n-heptane in an engine, which contains 41 species and 63 reactions. The new model includes three sub-models: the first is the low-temperature reaction sub-model, which is established by determining particular aldehydes and small hydrocarbons in the model developed by Li et al. The second is the sub-model for large molecules decomposing directly into small molecules that is developed for linking the low-temperature reaction with high-temperature reaction. The third is used for high-temperature reaction, which is derived by several modifications to the model developed by Griffiths et al., eliminating several reactions, adding two oxidization reactions related to CO and CH3O.
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