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Technical Paper

A Process for an Efficient Heat Release Prediction at Multiple Engine Speeds and Valve Timings in the Early Stage of Gasoline Engine Development

2019-09-09
2019-24-0085
The increasing need for cleaner and more efficient combustion systems has promoted a paradigm shift in the automotive industry. Virtual hardware and engine calibration screening at the early development stage, has become the most effective way to reduce the time necessary to bring new products to market. Virtual engine development processes need to provide realistic engine combustion rate responses for the entire engine map and for different engine calibrations. Quasi Dimensional (Q-D) combustion models have increasingly been used to predict engine performance at multiple operating conditions. The physics-based Q-D turbulence models necessary to correctly model the engine combustion rate within the Q-D combustion model framework are a computationally efficient means of capturing the effect of port and combustion chamber geometry on performance.
Technical Paper

Implementation of a 0-D/1-D/3-D Process for the Heat Release Prediction of a Gasoline Engine in the Early Development Stage

2019-04-02
2019-01-0468
The automotive market’s need for ever cleaner and more efficient powertrains, delivered to market in the shortest possible time, has prompted a revolution in digital engineering. Virtual hardware screening and engine calibration, before hardware is available is a highly time and cost-effective way of reducing development and validation testing and shortening the time to bring product to market. Model-based development workflows, to be predictive, need to offer realistic combustion rate responses to different engine characteristics such as port and fuel injector geometry. The current approach relies on a combination of empirical, phenomenological and experienced derived tools with poor accuracy outside the range of experimental data used to validate the tool chain, therefore making the exploration of unconventional solutions challenging.
Journal Article

Statistical Approach on Visualizing Multi-Variable Interactions in a Hybrid Breakup Model under ECN Spray Conditions

2017-09-04
2017-24-0104
The Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) approach to solving the fundamental transport equations down to the smallest scales of motion is favorable should the requirement be a truly predictive solution of fluid dynamic problems, but the simulation run times are unacceptable for most practical industrial applications. Despite the steadily increasing computational capabilities, Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) based frameworks remain the most commercially viable option for high volume sectors, like automotive. The sub models within RANS simplify the description of key physical phenomena and include several numerical constants. These so-called “tuning constants” introduce multivariable dependencies that are almost impossible to untangle with local sensitivity studies.
Journal Article

The Recuperated Split Cycle - Experimental Combustion Data from a Single Cylinder Test Rig

2017-09-04
2017-24-0169
The conventional Diesel cycles engine is now approaching the practical limits of efficiency. The recuperated split cycle engine is an alternative cycle with the potential to achieve higher efficiencies than could be achieved using a conventional engine cycle. In a split cycle engine, the compression and combustion strokes are performed in separate chambers. This enables direct cooling of the compression cylinder reducing compression work, intra cycle heat recovery and low heat rejection expansion. Previously reported analysis has shown that brake efficiencies approaching 60% are attainable, representing a 33% improvement over current advanced heavy duty diesel engine. However, the achievement of complete, stable, compression ignited combustion has remained elusive to date.
Technical Paper

A Late Injection Combustion Strategy Using a Novel Ramped Combustion System

2017-09-04
2017-24-0090
Traffic related NOx and particle emission remain a significant concern particularly in the urban environment. Electrification offers a medium to long term solution, but there remains a need to significantly reduce internal combustion engine emissions in the short and medium term, and potentially in the long term for long range inter city transportation. Late injection low temperature combustion (LTC) has the potential to achieve ultra-low emissions levels in a compression ignition engine by increasing the lean pre-mixed burn fraction. However, significant quantities of diluent are normally required to achieve the required delay in ignition and pre-mixing to achieve LTC. This results in high boost requirements, increased pumping work and the complexity of the air handling system and potentially adversely impacting fuel economy.
Technical Paper

The Benefits of High Injection Pressure on Future Heavy Duty Engine Performance

2015-09-06
2015-24-2441
Diesel fuel injection pressures have increased steadily on heavy duty engines over the last twenty years and pressures as high as 300MPa are now possible. This was driven by the need to control toxic exhaust emissions, in particular particulate emissions using advanced in-cylinder combustion strategies. With the introduction of efficient aftertreatment systems for both particulate and NOx emissions control there is less demand for in-cylinder emissions control especially considering the drive for improved fuel economy. In this paper we consider the benefit of high fuel injection pressure for a number of emissions control strategies with different balances of in-cylinder and exhaust aftertreatment emissions control. A test program was undertaken on a single cylinder heavy duty research engine installed at the University of Brighton, in collaboration with Ricardo.
Technical Paper

Effect of Hydrogen Fumigation in a Dual Fueled Heavy Duty Engine

2015-09-06
2015-24-2457
Concerns over the impact of road transport emissions on the climate have led to increased focus on how CO2 emissions could be reduced from the sector. This is of particular concern in the commercial vehicle sector, where engine downsizing and electrification have limited benefit due to the vehicle duty cycle. In this paper, we present results from an experimental program to investigate the impact of dual fueling a heavy duty engine on hydrogen and diesel. Hydrogen is potentially a zero carbon fuel, if manufactured from renewable energy but could also be manufactured on the vehicle through steam reformation of part of the liquid fuel. This opens a novel pathway for the recovery of waste heat from the exhaust system through the endothermic steam reformation process, improving the overall system efficiency. For these concepts to be viable, it is essential the dual fueled combustion system is both thermally efficient, and does not increase toxic emissions such as NOx.
Journal Article

An Assessment of the Bottoming Cycle Operating Conditions for a High EGR Rate Engine at Euro VI NOx Emissions

2013-09-08
2013-24-0089
This paper investigates the application of a Bottoming Cycle (BC) applied to a 10-litre (L) heavy duty Diesel engine for potential improvements in fuel efficiency. With the main thermodynamic irreversibility in the BC due to the temperature difference between the heat source and the working fluid, a proper selection of the working fluid and its operating condition for a given waste heat is the key in achieving high overall conversion efficiency. The paper reviews a fluid selection methodology based on thermodynamic/thermo-physical and environmental/safety properties. Results are presented using seven pure, dry, isentropic and wet working fluids (synthetic, organic and inorganic) operating with expansion starting from the saturated vapour, superheated vapour, supercritical phase, saturated liquid, and two-phase. Efficiency improvements by recovering Charge Air Coolers (CAC) and Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) cooler heat on two engine platforms were calculated.
Technical Paper

Validation of a CFD Model of a Hollow-Cone Spray with Gasoline Fuel Blends

2011-04-12
2011-01-0379
This paper presents the summary of the development of a two-phase spray model of a hollow-cone fuel injector commonly applied to spray-guided, gasoline direct injection, (SGDI) engines. The model was simulated using the Ricardo VECTIS CFD code and takes into account the physical and chemical effects of oxygenated fuel blends (flexfuels). The characteristics of the fuel sprays at typical gasoline part-load conditions, identified in a parallel study, were of particular interest. An injection duration of 0.3 ms was chosen which represented a stratified charge, unthrottled, part-load operating condition in a spray guided GDI engine with a piezoelectric fuel injector and a fuel injection pressure of 200 bar gauge. In the first instance, the spray model was validated against data recorded in a constant volume spray chamber. Secondly, the robustness of the model was tested against data measured in an optically-accessed engine.
Technical Paper

Multiple Injection Strategies for Improved Combustion Stability under Stratified Part Load Conditions in a Spray Guided Gasoline Direct Injection (SGDI) Engine

2011-04-12
2011-01-1228
Compared to conventional homogeneous direct injection or port-fuel injected engines, the second generation, spray guided, direct injection engine (SGDI) has the potential for significantly improved fuel economy during part load stratified charge operation. Multiple fuel injection strategies can be utilised to increase the unthrottled operating range, leading to further improvements in fuel economy. However, careful optimisation of these strategies is essential to ensure that benefits are maintained whilst further minimising emissions within combustion stability limits and consumer driveability demands. The effects of multiple injection strategies upon fuel consumption, emissions and combustion stability were investigated in a single cylinder Ricardo Hydra engine with a spray guided combustion system. An outwardly opening piezoelectric actuated injector was employed. The fuel injection strategy utilised up to five injections per engine cycle.
Technical Paper

High-Speed Microscopic Imaging of the Initial Stage of Diesel Spray Formation and Primary Breakup

2010-10-25
2010-01-2247
The formation and breakup of diesel sprays was investigated experimentally on a common rail diesel injector using a long range microscope. The objectives were to further the fundamental understanding of the processes involved in the initial stage of diesel spray formation. Tests were conducted at atmospheric conditions and on a rapid compression machine with motored in-cylinder peak pressures up to 8 MPa, and injection pressures up to 160 MPa. The light source and long range imaging optics were optimized to produce blur-free shadowgraphic images of sprays with a resolution of 0.6 μm per pixel, and a viewing region of 768x614 μm. Such fine spatial and temporal resolutions allowed the observation of previously unreported shearing instabilities and stagnation point on the tip of diesel jets.
Technical Paper

The Mixture Response of a Stratified Charge Gasoline Engine with Independent, Twin, Port-Fuel Injector Control

2010-05-05
2010-01-1458
An experimental study of the mixture response performance of novel, port-fuel injection strategies upon combustion stability in a gasoline engine was undertaken at low engine load and speed conditions in the range of 1.0 bar to 1.8 bar GIMEP and 1000 rpm to 1800 rpm. The aim was to improve the thermal efficiency of the engine, by extending the lean limit of combustion stability, through promotion of stable charge stratification. The investigation was carried out using a modified 4-valve single-cylinder head, derived from a 4-cylinder, pent-roof, production, gasoline engine. The cylinder head was modified by dividing the intake tract into two, separate and isolated passages; each incorporating a production fuel injector. The fuel injection timing and duration were controlled independently for each injector.
Technical Paper

Laser-Induced Fluorescence Investigation of Nitric Oxide Formation and Hydroxyl Radicals in a Diesel Rapid Compression Machine

2010-05-05
2010-01-1508
The research presented here aims at providing a deeper understanding of the formation of nitric oxide in diesel combustion. To this end, in-cylinder distributions of nitric oxide (NO) were acquired by laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) in a rapid compression machine at conditions representative of a modern diesel passenger vehicle. In particular, the effects of injection and in-cylinder pressure on NO formation were investigated temporally and spatially to offer new insight into the formation of NO. Excitation and collection strategies were notably fine-tuned to avoid the collection of spurious signal due to oxygen (O₂) fluorescence. NO fluorescence was first recorded slightly after the onset of the diffusion flame and until late in the expansion stroke. The early low levels of NO were located on the lean side of the high density of hydroxyl radicals (OH).
Technical Paper

Vortex Ring-like Structures in a Non-evaporating Gasoline-fuel Spray: Simplified Models versus Experimental Results

2010-05-05
2010-01-1491
The results of recent developments of analytical vortex ring models and the applications of these models to interpretation of the experimentally observed dynamics of vortex ring-like structures in gasoline sprays, under non-evaporating conditions, are summarized. Analytical formulae in the limit of small Reynolds numbers (Re), are compared with numerical solutions. Particular attention is focused on the generalized vortex ring model in which the time evolution of the thickness of the vortex ring core L is approximated as atb, where a and b are constants (1 ≤ b ≤ 1/2). This model incorporates both the laminar model for b=1/2 and fully turbulent model for b=1/4. The values of velocities in the region of maximal vorticity, predicted by the generalized vortex ring model, are compared with the results of experimental studies of fuel droplets distributed in vortex ring-like structures in two gasoline injectors, under cold-start, engine-like conditions.
Technical Paper

Fuel Droplet Heating and Evaporation: Analysis of Liquid and Gas Phase Models

2007-01-23
2007-01-0019
Recently developed liquid and gas phase models for fuel droplet heating and evaporation, suitable for implementation into computational fluid dynamics (CFD) codes, are reviewed. The analysis is focused on the liquid phase model based on the assumption that the liquid thermal conductivity is infinitely large (infinite thermal conductivity (ITC) model), and the so called effective thermal conductivity (ETC) model. Seven gas phase models are compared. It is pointed out that the gas phase model, taking into account the finite thickness of the thermal boundary layer around the droplet predicts the evaporation time closest to the one based on the approximation of experimental data. In most cases, the droplet evaporation time depends strongly on the choice of the gas phase model. The dependence of this time on the choice of the liquid phase model, however, is weak if the droplet break-up processes are not taken into account.
Technical Paper

Modelling of Premixed Laminar Combustion of Hydrogen and Oxygenated Fuels Inside a Closed Spherical Vessel

2007-01-23
2007-01-0068
Premixed laminar combustion in closed vessels has been widely used for the evaluation of the combustion characteristics from the fundamental side. Evaluation of the combustion characteristics inside the closed vessel is significant because it provide in a single test run a set of data under varying temperature and pressure conditions, which are relevant for both fundamental combustion studies and engine conditions. In the present work the aim is to investigate the laminar combustion characteristic of the emerging alternative fuels to establish their comparative fundamental combustion behavior under the closed spherical vessel. A novel multiple burnt gas zone has been used to describe the different aspects of premixed laminar combustion of four different fuels: hydrogen, methanol, dimethyl ether, and diesel.
Technical Paper

Fuel Spray Penetration in High Pressure Diesel Engines

2007-01-23
2007-01-0066
The effects of injection pressure, in-cylinder pressure and in-cylinder temperature at the start of injection on diesel spray penetration were studied experimentally and numerically. The study also considered injection delay, hesitation period and the effect of the number of nozzle holes. The experiments were conducted in a rapid compression machine based on a single cylinder Ricardo Proteus test engine installed at University of Brighton. The numerical studies were carried out using the recently developed multidimensional engine combustion computer code KIVA 3V rel2. Results using single hole, 3-hole and 5-hole nozzles were compared. The injection pressure was varied between 60 and 160 MPa whilst the in-cylinder pressure varied from 2 MPa to 6 MPa. Two in-cylinder temperatures were investigated; ‘cold air intake’ at 576° K and ‘hot air intake’ at 721° K.
Technical Paper

Development of a Two-Stroke/Four-Stroke Switching Gasoline Engine - The 2/4SIGHT Concept

2005-04-11
2005-01-1137
The pursuit of flexibility is a recurring theme in engine design and development. Engines that are able to switch between the two-stroke operating cycle and four-stroke operation promise a great leap in flexibility. Such 2S-4S engines could then continuously select the optimum operating mode - including HCCI/CAI combustion - for fuel efficiency, emissions or specific output. With recent developments in valvetrain technology, advanced boosting devices, direct fuel injection and engine control, the 2S-4S engine is an increasingly real prospect. The authors have undertaken a comprehensive feasibility study for 2S-4S gasoline engines. This study has encompassed concept and detailed design, design analysis, one-dimensional gas dynamics simulation, three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics, and vehicle simulation. The resulting 2/4SIGHT concept engine is a 1.04 l in-line three-cylinder engine producing 230 Nm and 85 kW.
Technical Paper

PDA Characterisation of Dense Diesel Sprays Using a Common-Rail Injection System

2003-10-27
2003-01-3085
To meet the future low emission targets for Diesel engines, engineers are optimising both the fuel injection and after treatment systems fitted to Diesel engines. In order to optimise the fuel injection system there is a need to characterize the fuel spray for a given injection nozzle geometry and injection pressure/duration. Modern Diesel common rail systems produce very dense sprays, making in-cylinder investigation particularly difficult. In this study the measurement of droplet sizes and velocities in dense Diesel sprays has been investigated using Phase Doppler Anemometry (PDA). PDA has been proven to be a valuable technique in providing an understanding of the structure and characteristics of liquid sprays in many studies. It is often applied to finely atomised and dispersed particle flows.
Technical Paper

Characterisation of the Soot Formation Processes in a High Pressure Combusting Diesel Fuel Spray

2003-10-27
2003-01-3086
As part of an ongoing investigation, the influence of In Cylinder Pressure (ICP) and fuel injection pressure on the soot formation processes in a diesel fuel spray were studied. The work was performed using a rapid compression machine at ambient conditions representative of a modern High Speed Direct Injection diesel engine, and with fuel injection more representative of full load. Future tests will aim to consider the effects of pilot injections and EGR rates. The qualitative soot concentration was determined using the Laser Induced Incandescence (LII) technique both spatially and temporally at a range of test conditions. Peak soot concentration values were determined, from which a good correlation between soot concentration and injection pressure was observed. The peak soot concentration was found to correlate well with the velocity of the injected fuel jet.
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