4.5 Article

Detailed prediction of HRR and NOx emissions in CI engines via a novel thermodynamic model with constant equivalence ratio zones

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGINE RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 6, Pages 2315-2337

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/14680874221128645

Keywords

CI combustion; multi-zone model; 1D spray; tabulated kinetics; ignition; NOx emissions; thermodynamic

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This paper presents a novel quasi-dimensional model for simulating the combustion process in compression-ignition engines. The model discretizes the in-cylinder air-fuel mass into multiple zones and uses a one-dimensional control-volume-based spray approach for charge stratification. The model has been validated against experimental data and detailed CFD simulation results, and demonstrates accurate predictions of combustion phases and wall interaction.
This paper presents a novel, quasi dimensional-model for the simulation of the combustion process in compression-ignition engines. The model discretizes with a multiple number of zones the in-cylinder air-fuel mass on fixed values of local equivalence ratio, with the charge stratification determined from a 2D reconstruction via a one-dimensional control-volume-based spray approach. Reacting multi-zones are further split into three conceptual sub-zones: liquid, unburnt vapor and burnt vapor, in which chemical reactions proceed according to a tabulated kinetics of ignition (TKI) model. This approach provides a simple methodological framework for the combustion of direct injection of virtually every kind of liquid fuel and relies on a detailed phenomenological chemical/physical link of jet's reacting phenomena. To account for engine geometry, a spray-wall interaction sub-model has been added to the axial spray. The model has been validated against experimental data and detailed CFD simulation results. First, the direct injection model (as a free jet) has been assessed with respect to ECN sprays A, C, and D experiments. For both the long injection and split injection cases, all the combustion phases are well predicted: premixed peak, mixing-controlled combustion, burn-out are seamlessly described and in good agreement with experimental and detailed CFD data. The wall interaction sub-model was validated with a suitable experiment where a reacting jet impinges on a mock-up wall inside a combustion vessel. Finally, the model has been validated against real heavy-duty engine experimental observations of 151 points of a complete engine map. The tuning of the model consists in two parameters, that are engine-specific, hence constant for the whole map. With these assumptions, the AHRR traces are well described in all simulated conditions. Mean predicted BSFC is only slightly underestimated (-2.3%), as it is the NOx production (-1.6%).

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