Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 2 of 2
Technical Paper

Flame Lift-Off on Direct-Injection Diesel Sprays Under Quiescent Conditions

2001-03-05
2001-01-0530
Ambient gas temperature and density, injection pressure, and orifice diameter effects on the flame lift-off length on a direct-injection (DI) diesel spray under quiescent conditions were experimentally investigated. The impacts of the observed lift-off length variations on air entrainment upstream of the lift-off location, soot formation, and the relationship between fuel vaporization and combustion were also examined. 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 decreases with increasing ambient gas temperature or density, and increases with increasing injection pressure or orifice diameter. The sensitivity of lift-off length to a change in either temperature or density was non-linear, with the sensitivity to either parameter decreasing as it increased.
Technical Paper

Measurement of the Flame Lift-Off Location on DI Diesel Sprays Using OH Chemiluminescence

2001-03-05
2001-01-0918
The flame on a high injection pressure direct-injection (DI) diesel spray under quiescent conditions stabilizes at a location downstream of the fuel injector. The distance from the injector to the location of stabilization is referred to as the flame “lift-off” length (or height). Air entrained into a diesel spray upstream of the flame lift-off length will mix with the injected fuel. The air and fuel premixed upstream of the lift-off length are believed to react immediately downstream of the location of flame lift-off. Recent measurements suggest that as much as 20% of the air required to burn the fuel injected is entrained prior to the flame lift-off length for typical, moderate-load, heavy-duty DI diesel conditions. These results imply that combustion at the flame lift-off location will play a pivotal role in diesel combustion and emission formation processes.
X