Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/17226
Title: Spatio-temporal Evolution of Diesel Sprays at the Early Start of Injection
Authors: Pos, R
Wardle, R
Cracknell, R
Ganippa, L
Keywords: diesel sprays;used injectors;deposits;transients;start of injection anomalies;hole-to-hole spray variation
Issue Date: 2018
Citation: Pos, R., Wardle, R., Cracknell, R. and Ganippa, L. (2018) 'Spatio-temporal Evolution of Diesel Sprays at the Early Start of Injection', Applied Energy, 205, pp. 391 - 398 (8). doi: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2017.07.092.
Abstract: The impact of injector life on the spatio-temporal evolution of fuel spray quality was optically investigated using high speed imaging techniques. Both new and used injectors, which had been used in intense operation for up to 90,000 miles, were considered in this investigation. Used injectors are prone to wear, deposit formation, and altered internal nozzle flow. High resolution SEM images clearly portray the presence of carbonaceous deposits both at the injector tip as well as within the holes of used injectors. Investigations revealed that used injectors tend to produce a chaotic hole-to-hole variation at the start of each injection, resulting in an asymmetric early fuel spraypenetration pattern in the first 500μs. Often those sprays thatsuffereda reduced spray tippenetration rate at the start of injection also showed off-axis transient expansions, and those sprays appeared to be bulky compared to other sprays. Following the early asymmetric spray penetration phase of injection the retarded sprays undergo rapid acceleration with time, and this transformed the early asymmetric spray pattern into a nearly uniform spray pattern from all the orifices in the quasi-steady state regime. The hole-to-hole penetration variations and the resultant asymmetric spray structure at the early start are therefore short lived transient phenomena. However if the radial expansion of the spray is large during the early phase, the radially expanded plume remains almost at the same radial location due to lack of local axial momentum, even after different time instants of spray tip propagation. This appears as a bulge to the spray and can eventually end up as a stationary local pocket of fuel vapor close to the nozzle for the entire duration of injection. This may alter the ignition, flame lift-off and entrainment characteristics of sprays injected from used or deposit rich injectors.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/17226
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2017.07.092
ISSN: 0306-2619
Appears in Collections:Dept of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Research Papers

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