TY - GEN
T1 - Interaction between Fuel Jets and Prevailing Combustion During Closely-Coupled Injections in an Optical LD Diesel Engine
AU - Denny, Michael
AU - Matamis, Alexios
AU - Persson, Håkan
AU - Richter, Mattias
AU - Andersson, Öivind
PY - 2019/4/2
Y1 - 2019/4/2
N2 - Two imaging techniques are used to investigate the interaction between developed combustion from earlier injections and partially oxidized fuel (POF) ofa subsequent injection. The latter is visualized by using planar laser induced fluorescence (PLIF) of formaldehyde and poly-cyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. High speed imaging captures the natural luminescence (NL) of the prevailing combustion. Three different fuel injection strategies are studied. One strategy consists of two pilot injections, with modest separations after each, followed by single main and post injections. Both of the other two strategies have threepilots followed by single main and post injections. The separations after the second and third pilots are several times shorter than in the reference case (making them closelycoupled). The closely-coupled cases have more linear heatrelease rates (HRR) which lead to much lower combustion noise levels. For all cases, POF is detected during the very weak HRR before the notable combustion of the first pilot injection’s fuel. When the subsequent fuel injections overlapwith a local decrease in HRR, the prevailing combustion is to some degree extinguished during these phases. This is seen via the NL signal being replaced by the POF signal, indicating that hotter combustion products are being replaced by cooler ones. When the NL and POF regions spatially overlap, the POF signal decreases, and there is no injection, this marks the further oxidation of the POF into hotter combustion products. This extinguishing phenomenon can, to a lesser extent than closely-coupling, affect the combustion noise by affecting the magnitude of the local dips in the HRR, which via its influence on the pressure trace, affects combustion noise.
AB - Two imaging techniques are used to investigate the interaction between developed combustion from earlier injections and partially oxidized fuel (POF) ofa subsequent injection. The latter is visualized by using planar laser induced fluorescence (PLIF) of formaldehyde and poly-cyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. High speed imaging captures the natural luminescence (NL) of the prevailing combustion. Three different fuel injection strategies are studied. One strategy consists of two pilot injections, with modest separations after each, followed by single main and post injections. Both of the other two strategies have threepilots followed by single main and post injections. The separations after the second and third pilots are several times shorter than in the reference case (making them closelycoupled). The closely-coupled cases have more linear heatrelease rates (HRR) which lead to much lower combustion noise levels. For all cases, POF is detected during the very weak HRR before the notable combustion of the first pilot injection’s fuel. When the subsequent fuel injections overlapwith a local decrease in HRR, the prevailing combustion is to some degree extinguished during these phases. This is seen via the NL signal being replaced by the POF signal, indicating that hotter combustion products are being replaced by cooler ones. When the NL and POF regions spatially overlap, the POF signal decreases, and there is no injection, this marks the further oxidation of the POF into hotter combustion products. This extinguishing phenomenon can, to a lesser extent than closely-coupling, affect the combustion noise by affecting the magnitude of the local dips in the HRR, which via its influence on the pressure trace, affects combustion noise.
U2 - 10.4271/2019-01-0551
DO - 10.4271/2019-01-0551
M3 - Paper in conference proceeding
T3 - SAE Technical Papers
BT - SAE Technical Paper
PB - Society of Automotive Engineers
T2 - SAE World Congress Experience, WCX 2019
Y2 - 9 April 2019 through 11 April 2019
ER -