Dynamics of Post-Injection Fuel Flow in Mini-Sac Diesel Injectors Part 1: Admission of External Gases and Implications for Deposit Formation
Autor: | R. D. Lockett, Kassandra Makri, Mahesh Jeshani |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Common rail
Waste management Internal flow 020209 energy Mechanical Engineering Aerospace Engineering Ocean Engineering 02 engineering and technology Injector Fuel injection medicine.disease_cause complex mixtures Soot law.invention Diesel fuel 020303 mechanical engineering & transports 0203 mechanical engineering law Automotive Engineering 0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering Fuel flow medicine Environmental science Bar (unit) |
DOI: | 10.13140/rg.2.2.24875.90407 |
Popis: | Samples of unadditised, middle distillate diesel fuel were injected through real-size optically accessible mini-sac diesel injectors into ambient air at common rail pressures of 250 and 350 bar, respectively. High-resolution images of white light scattered from the internal mini-sac and nozzle flow were captured on a high-speed monochrome video camera. Following the end of each injection, the momentum-driven evacuation of fuel liquid from the mini-sac and nozzle holes resulted in the formation of a vapour cloud and bubbles in the mini-sac, and vapour capsules in the nozzle holes. This permitted external gas to gain entrance to the nozzle holes. The diesel fuel in the mini-sac was observed to rotate with large initial vorticity, which decayed until the fuel became stationary. The diesel fuel remaining in the nozzle holes was observed to move inwards towards the mini-sac or outwards towards the nozzle exit in concert with the rotational flow in the mini-sac. The mini-sac bubbles’ internal pressure differences revealed that the bubbles must have contained previously dissolved oxygen and nitrogen. Under diesel engine operating conditions, this multi-phase mixture would be highly reactive and could initiate local pyrolysis and/or oxidation reactions. Finally, the dynamical behaviour of the diesel fuel in the nozzle holes would support the admission of external hot combustion gases into the nozzle holes, establishing the conditions for oxidation/pyrolysis reactions with surrounding liquid fuel films. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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