The Effects of Ignition Location in a Swirl Field on Homogeneous-Charge Combustion

821221

02/01/1982

Event
1982 SAE International Fall Fuels and Lubricants Meeting and Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
The effects of ignition location on combustion duration, thermal efficiency, exhaust emissions, cyclic variability, and knock sensitivity were investigated in two premixed-charge spark-ignition engines with disk-shaped combstion chambers and having high levels of swirlu. Except for very lean high-swirl conditions, peripheral ignition produced a longer combustion duration than did central ignition, but the difference was less than expected from geometric considerations alone. Flame holding at the spark electrodes, observed in high-speed schlieren films, enhances mass-burning rates for off-center ignition locations. For a swirl number of 4 no significant differences with ignition location were measured in thermal efficiency, heat-transfer losses, exhaust temperature, cyclic variability, or exhaust emissions, but with peripheral ignition the engine had a greater knock sensitivity, lower knock-1imited peak power, and a misfire problem of unidentified origin. For a swirl number of 7 an increase in heat-transfer losses and a corresponding decrease in thermal efficiency were measured for peripheral ignition. Thus with intake-generated swirl, central ignition was found to be desirable in the two engines tested.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/821221
Pages
20
Citation
Groff, E., and Sinnamon, J., "The Effects of Ignition Location in a Swirl Field on Homogeneous-Charge Combustion," SAE Technical Paper 821221, 1982, https://doi.org/10.4271/821221.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 1982
Product Code
821221
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English