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Experimental and Numerical Simulations of Spray Impingement and Combustion Characteristics in Gasoline Direct Injection Engines under Variable Driving Conditions

Authors
Seo, JuhyeongKim, Ho YoungPark, SimsooJames, Scott C.Yoon, Sam S.
Issue Date
3월-2016
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Spray-wall impingement; Direct injection; Gasoline engine; Wall wetting
Citation
FLOW TURBULENCE AND COMBUSTION, v.96, no.2, pp.391 - 415
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
FLOW TURBULENCE AND COMBUSTION
Volume
96
Number
2
Start Page
391
End Page
415
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/89386
DOI
10.1007/s10494-015-9678-1
ISSN
1386-6184
Abstract
Gasoline direct injection (GDI) increases engine power output and reduces emissions. In GDI engines, increasing injection pressure improves atomization, which increases thermal efficiency at the cost of wall wetting. When wall wetting occurs, both soot emissions and fuel consumption increase. Wall wetting in GDI engines under cold driving conditions has rarely been considered. In this study, experimental data characterizing droplet splashing/spreading phenomena were collected to inform numerical simulations of combustion characteristics and wall wetting subject to variable driving conditions and excess air ratio, lambda. Fully 3D and unsteady numerical simulations were carried out to predict flow-field, combustion, and spray-impingement characteristics. To simulate a GDI engine, a spray-impingement model was developed using both experimental data and previous modeling efforts. The excess air ratio and driving-condition temperature were the variable parameters considered in this study. When decreasing lambda from 1.0 to 0.7 by increasing the fuel-injection rate (fuel rich), the cylinder pressure increases to 61 % of the pressure when lambda=1.0. Because of increasing the fuel-injection rate, the increased momentum in the fuel spray increases both wall wetting and soot generation. At low driving-condition temperatures, the cylinder pressure was up to 63 % less than that under warm conditions, but with increased soot generation. Simulations revealed a correlation between wall wetting and the soot emissions. Soot generation was most sensitive to changes in wall wetting.
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