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Endoscopic fuel film,chemiluminescence, and soot incandescence imaging in a direct-injection spark-ignition engine
Authors:MA Shahbaz  N Jüngst  R Grzeszik  SA Kaiser
Institution:1. Institute for Combustion and Gas Dynamics - Reactive Fluids, University of Duisburg-Essen, 47057 Duisburg, Germany;2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Engineering and Technology, KSK Campus, Lahore, Pakistan;3. Powertrain Systems Engineering, Robert Bosch GmbH, 71272 Renningen, Germany
Abstract:In direct-injection spark-ignition engines, fuel films formed on the piston surface due to impinging sprays are a major source of soot. Previous studies investigating the fuel films and their correlation to soot production were mostly performed in model experiments or optical engines. These experiments have different operating conditions compared to commercial engines. In this work, fuel films and soot are visualized in an all-metal engine with endoscopic access via laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) and natural incandescence, respectively. Gasoline and a mixture of isooctane/toluene were used as fuel for the experiments. The fuel films were excited by 266 nm laser pulses and visualized by an intensified CCD camera through a modular UV endoscope. Gasoline yielded much higher signal-to-noise ratio, and this fuel typically took an order of magnitude longer to evaporate than isooctane/toluene. The effects of injection time, injection pressure, engine temperature, and combustion on the fuel-film evaporation time were investigated. This film survival time was reduced with higher engine temperature, higher injection pressure, and later injection time, with engine temperature being the most significant parameter, whereas skip-fired combustion had very little effect on the film survival time. In complementary experiments, LIF from fuel films and soot incandescence were simultaneously visualized by an intensified double-frame CCD camera. At lower engine temperatures the fuel films remained distinct, and soot formation was limited to regions above the films, whereas at higher temperatures, fuel films, and hence the soot, appeared to be spread over the whole piston surface. Finally, high-speed imaging showed the spray, chemiluminescence, and soot incandescence, with results broadly consistent with fuel-film LIF and soot incandescence imaging.
Keywords:
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