Abstrakt: |
The ignition tendency of diesel fuels is highly sensitive to ambient conditions and fuel properties. In this study, the ignition characteristics of different diesel surrogate fuels with the same derived cetane numbers (DCN) were measured and compared in varied thermodynamic and oxidizing environments. The combustion pressures, heat release rates, ignition delays, and combustion delays of the test fuels were compared. The experimental results showed that the diesel surrogate fuels with the same DCNs exhibit similar ignition propensity at standard DCN test conditions. Further, for the test conditions of high cetane fuels, high ambient temperatures, and sufficient oxygen concentrations, surrogate fuels with the same DCN have similar ignition behaviors, and using the DCN to evaluate fuel ignition tendency is appropriate. However, for the test conditions of low cetane fuels, low ambient temperatures, and reduced oxygen concentrations, different ignition behaviors are observed for the surrogate fuels with the same DCN, so at these conditions using DCN as the evaluation index for fuel ignition tendency may lead to higher uncertainty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |