Ducted Fuel Injection: Confirmed Re-entrainment Hypothesis
2024-01-2885
04/09/2024
- Event
- Content
- Testing of ducted fuel injection (DFI) in a single-cylinder engine with production-like hardware previously showed that adding a duct structure increased soot emissions at the full load, rated speed operating point [1]. The authors hypothesized that the DFI flame, which travels faster than a conventional diesel combustion (CDC) flame, and has a shorter distance to travel, was being re-entrained into the on-going fuel injection around the lift-off length (LOL), thus reducing air entrainment into the on-going injection. The engine operating condition and the engine combustion chamber geometry were duplicated in a constant pressure vessel. The experimental setup used a 3D piston section combined with a glass fire deck allowing for a comparison between a CDC flame and a DFI flame via high-speed imaging. CH* imaging of the 3D piston profile view clearly confirmed the re-entrainment hypothesis presented in the previous engine work. This finding suggests that a DFI retrofit for this combustion chamber geometry may at best be load-limited.
- Pages
- 11
- Citation
- Svensson, K., Fitzgerald, R., and Martin, G., "Ducted Fuel Injection: Confirmed Re-entrainment Hypothesis," SAE Technical Paper 2024-01-2885, 2024, https://doi.org/10.4271/2024-01-2885.