A Gas Sampling Study on the Formation Processes of Soot and NO in a DI Diesel Engine

800254

2/1/1980

Authors
Abstract
Content
The concentrations of soot, NO and the other combustion products were measured by incylinder gas sampling in a DI diesel engine. The effects of injection timing, swirl ratio, and combustion chamber geometry on the formation and emission processes of soot and NO were studied. The following results were obtained: (1) Soot is promptly formed in the flame during the early combustion period where the equivalence ratio in the flame is high over 1.0. Thereafter almost all the formed soot is swiftly burnd up by oxidation during the middle combustion period. This process mainly determines the exhaust soot concentration. (2) NO is formed in the flame during the early and middle combustion period where the flame temperature is high over 2000 K. The highest NO concentration is observed at the flame tip swept by the air swirl. Though the concentration of the formed NO decreases by dilusion it nearly constant during the later combustion period. For this reason the concentration of exhaust NO is almost completely governed by the formation process.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/800254
Citation
Aoyagi, Y., Kamimoto, T., Matsui, Y., and Matsuoka, S., "A Gas Sampling Study on the Formation Processes of Soot and NO in a DI Diesel Engine," 1980 Automotive Engineering Congress and Exposition, Detroit, Michigan, United States, February 25, 1980, https://doi.org/10.4271/800254.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
2/1/1980
Product Code
800254
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English