A Study on Gasoline Engine Combustion by Observation of Intermediate Reactive Products during Combustion

790840

02/01/1979

Event
1979 SAE International Off-Highway and Powerplant Congress and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
In the case of two-stroke cycle gasoline engines, it is a rather well known fact that under light-load operation they do not run smoothly, but have a high concentration of unburned hydrocarbons (HC) in the exhaust gas, as well as high a fuel consumption rate.
In the study to improve such unstable conditions by devising a scavenging process of the engine, we often encountered self-ignited combustion, a kind of “RUN-ON”. This combustion was found to be very stable and fine with low missions of HC, and improved fuel consumption.
A study was carried out on this self-ignited combustion by optical analysis. Many differences were observed between self-ignited combustion and conventional spark ignited combustion on the behavior of formation of chemical intermediate products before and after ignition.
Self-ignited combustion has been found to occur under relatively low cylinder pressure and temperature, compared to diesel engine combustion, presumably by virtue of intermediate products. This special self-ignited combustion is named “TS (Toyota-Soken) combustion”.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/790840
Pages
16
Citation
Noguchi, M., Tanaka, Y., Tanaka, T., and Takeuchi, Y., "A Study on Gasoline Engine Combustion by Observation of Intermediate Reactive Products during Combustion," SAE Technical Paper 790840, 1979, https://doi.org/10.4271/790840.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 1979
Product Code
790840
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English