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Technical Paper

Two-Dimensional In-Cylinder Flow Field in a Natural Gas Fueled Spark Ignition Engine Probed by Particle Tracking Velocimetry and Its Dependence on Engine Specifications

1999-05-03
1999-01-1534
An experimental study was made to investigate in-cylinder flow field in a natural gas fueled spark ignition engine and the effects of engine specifications on in-cylinder flow field. The instantaneous two-dimentional flow fields in a single-cylinder visualization engine, which has 75mm bore and 62mm stroke, were measured in various cross sections perpendicular to the cylinder axis by using the laser light sheet PTV method at various crank angles during intake, compression, and expansion strokes over the wide range of piston combustion chamber configuration, top clearance, and nominal swirl ratio. Flow fields during compression and expansion strokes were also calculated using KIVA2 simulation code for better understanding of the measured results. The results showed that induction-generated swirl is getting concentric to the cylinder center in compression stroke, and is shifted in the radial direction in expansion stroke.
Technical Paper

In-Cylinder Combustion in a Natural Gas Fueled Spark Ignition Engine Probed by High Speed Schlieren Method and Its Dependence on Engine Specifications

1999-05-03
1999-01-1493
An experimental study was made to investigate the effect of combustion chamber configuration, top clearance, nominal swirl ratio, and spark plug position on in-cylinder combustion in a spark-ignited natural gas engine, which is converted from a direct injection diesel engine. Flame propagation in a single-cylinder visualization engine was measured from the cylinder axis direction by the high speed schlieren method, over the wide range of combustion chamber configuration, top clearance, nominal swirl ratio, and spark plug position. The results showed that flame does not propagate concentrically to the spark plug, but is shifted by swirl, which is the main flow in this engine. Smaller piston cavity diameter led to more rapid flame propagation, resulting in larger heat release rate and larger cylinder pressure. Piston cavity diameter does not affect the initial combustion until TDC.
Technical Paper

Effect of Fluid Flow on Combustion Process of Natural Gas in a Rapid Compression Combustor

1996-10-01
961937
For the final goal of developing the natural gas fueled spark ignition engine with high thermal efficiency and low pollutant emission, the effects of the fluid flow inside a combustion chamber on the combustion process of a homogeneous lean mixture of natural gas and air were examined using a rapid compression combustor. The rapid compression combustor was designed to simulate the combustion process in a spark ignition engine involving the rapid compression of a mixture and the heal release during flame propagation. The main advantage of using this combustor is that experiments can be made under the idealized and well-controlled conditions. The time history of pressure in the combustion cylinder was measured with a pressure transducer. The fluid flow in the combustion cylinder was varied using two kinds of experimental technique. First, compression ratio, piston speed and the configuration of the piston head were changed.
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