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Journal Article

Applying Detailed Kinetics to Realistic Engine Simulation: the Surrogate Blend Optimizer and Mechanism Reduction Strategies

2010-04-12
2010-01-0541
Designing advanced, clean and fuel-efficient engines requires detailed understanding of fuel chemistry. While knowledge of fuel combustion chemistry has grown rapidly in recent years, the representation of conventional fossil fuels in full detail is still intractable. A popular approach is to use a model-fuel or surrogate blend that can mimic various characteristics of a conventional fuel. Despite the use of surrogate blends, there remains a gap between detailed chemistry and its utilization in computational fluid dynamics (CFD), due to the prohibitive computational cost of using thousands of chemical species in large numbers of computational cells. This work presents a set of software tools that help to enable the use of detailed chemistry in representing conventional fuels in CFD simulation. The software tools include the Surrogate Blend Optimizer and a suite of automated mechanism reduction strategies.
Technical Paper

Validation Studies of a Detailed Kinetics Mechanism for Diesel and Gasoline Surrogate Fuels

2010-04-12
2010-01-0545
Surrogate fuels used in simulations need to capture the physical, combustion and emission characteristics of the real diesel and gasoline fuels they represent. This requirement can result in complex surrogate fuels that are blends of components representing several chemical classes, such as normal-, cyclo- and iso-alkanes, alkenes and aromatics. With a palette of around 20 potential surrogate-fuel components we can identify a blend to represent the most important physical and chemical properties of a particular real fuel. However, a detailed chemical kinetics mechanism is required to use such a surrogate in a model of the in-cylinder combustion processes. The detailed mechanism must capture the relevant kinetic pathways for all of the surrogate-fuel components. To this end, we have assembled a large comprehensive kinetic mechanism that includes several thousands of species to represent the combustion behavior of a wide range of surrogate fuels for gasoline and diesel.
Technical Paper

Efficient Simulation of Diesel Engine Combustion Using Realistic Chemical Kinetics in CFD

2010-04-12
2010-01-0178
Detailed knowledge of hydrocarbon fuel combustion chemistry has grown tremendously in recent years. However, the gap between detailed chemistry and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) remains, because of the high cost of solving detailed chemistry in a large number of computational cells. This paper presents the results of applying a suite of techniques aimed at closing this gap. The techniques include use of a surrogate blend optimizer and a guided mechanism reduction methodology, as well as advanced methods for efficiently and accurately coupling the pre-reduced kinetic models with the multidimensional transport equations. The advanced methods include dynamic adaptive chemistry (DAC) and dynamic cell clustering (DCC) algorithms.
Technical Paper

Accurate Reduction of Combustion Chemistry Mechanisms Using a Multi-zone Model

2008-04-14
2008-01-0844
Automated mechanism reduction is important in enabling the use of kinetics data in engineering design. In this work, we report on a mechanism-reduction technique that serves as a practical tool for automated mechanism reduction when applied to engine-simulation, with particular focus on compression-ignition engines. For this application, a multi-zone engine model has been developed, which can capture the stratification in the engine due to crevice and boundary-layer cooling effects. The multi-zone model serves as the workhorse for the mechanism-reduction algorithm. The reduction process is designed to operate on model-solution data from a parametric matrix of runs, in which the multi-zone model is run under different conditions. A more accurate reduction can therefore be achieved while accounting for spatial variations in the engine, temporal variations over the compression cycle, and variations in operating conditions.
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