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Technical Paper

Predicting the Onset of End-Gas Autoignition with a Quasi-Dimensional Spark Ignition Engine Model

1997-10-01
972877
A predictive, quasi-dimensional simulation of combustion in a spark ignition engine has been coupled with a chemical kinetic model for the low temperature, pre-flame reactions of hydrocarbon fuel and air mixtures. The simulation is capable of predicting the onset of autoignition without prior knowledge of the cylinder pressure history. Near-wall temperature gradients were computed within the framework of the engine cycle simulation by dividing the region into a number of thin mass slices which were assumed to remain adjacent to the combustion chamber surfaces in both the burned and unburned gas. The influence of the near-wall turbulence on the temperature field was accounted for by means of a boundary layer turbulence model developed by the authors. Fluid motion in the bulk gases has been considered by the inclusion of a turbulence model based on k - ε theory while the flame propagation rate was predicted using a fractal flame model.
Technical Paper

Thermal Boundary Layer Modelling in ‘Motored’ Spark Ignition Engines

1996-10-01
961965
A newly developed piece-wise method for calculating the effects of near-wall turbulence on the transport of enthalpy and hence the thermal boundary layer temperature profile in “motored” spark ignition engines has been compared with methods that have previously been employed in the development of expressions for the gas-wall interface heat flux. Near-wall temperature profiles resulting from the inclusion of the respective expressions in a “quasi-dimensional” thermodynamic engine simulation have been compared and in one case show considerable differences throughout the compression and expansion strokes of the “motored” engine cycle. However, the corresponding heat fluxes calculated from the simulated temperature profiles all show good agreement with measured results.
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