4.7 Article

A comparative study of isobaric combustion and conventional diesel combustion in both metal and optical engines

Journal

FUEL
Volume 295, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2021.120638

Keywords

Isobaric combustion; Optical diagnostics; Heavy-duty engines; Multiple injections; Planar laser-induced fluorescence; Laser-induced incandescence

Funding

  1. Saudi Aramco Research and Development Center FUELCOM3 program [6600024505/01]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study compared the performance and emissions of isobaric combustion and conventional diesel combustion, finding that isobaric combustion resulted in higher soot emissions due to locally fuel-rich mixtures and less fuel-air mixing. Additionally, late fuel injections led to more combustion in certain areas, increasing local temperature gradients and potentially resulting in more heat losses. Multiple injectors are recommended to reduce soot emissions in isobaric combustion by spreading injections in space.
Isobaric combustion is more efficient than isochoric combustion when the peak cylinder pressure is restricted. Recently a double compression expansion engine concept using isobaric combustion was proposed to improve the engine performance. However, the knowledge about the in-cylinder isobaric combustion process is limited. This study investigated isobaric combustion in both metal and optical engines utilizing a centrally placed direct injector and a multiple injections strategy, and the performance and emissions of isobaric combustion and conventional diesel combustion (CDC) were compared. Mie scattering and fuel-tracer planar laser-induced fluorescence (PLIF) were used to visualize the liquid-phase fuel penetration length and fuel distribution under non-reactive conditions, respectively. The natural flame luminosity and spatial soot distribution were measured with high-speed imaging and laser-induced incandescence (LII), respectively. Results demonstrate an increased soot formation in the isobaric cases compared with the CDC case. The successive fuel injection into reacting zones, which induces a locally fuel-rich mixture and less fuel?air mixing, accounts for the high soot emissions in the isobaric combustion. This study further demonstrates that the late injections of the isobaric cases lead to more combustion in the squish zone and near the cylinder walls, which increases the local temperature gradient and may result in more heat losses. There is still room to reduce the heat losses in the isobaric combustion although the total heat loss of the isobaric combustion is lower than the CDC case due to a lower combustion temperature. Multiple injectors are suggested to reduce the soot emissions of the isobaric combustion by spreading the different injections in space.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available