Effects of Fuel Injection Strategy on HC Emissions in a Port-Fuel-Injection Engine During Fast Idle

2006-01-3400

10/16/2006

Authors
Abstract
Content
The interaction of intake port gas flow with the fuel spray in a port-fuel-injection engine is studied to see whether there are opportunities to facilitate the mixture preparation process and to improve the HC emissions through this interaction. The operating regime of interest is the fast idle period in a cold start. For single pulse injection, the HC emissions were not sensitive to injection details for closed-valve injection; emissions increased with open-valve injection. Then a split injection strategy was used in which the fuel was divided into two pulses. The first pulse was delivered during valve-closed; the second pulse was injected in the back flow period. Under cold-valve conditions, a small benefit (compared to close valve injection) was obtained with a second pulse fuel of 25%: 6% decrease in Specific HC emissions and 4.5% increase in the fuel delivery fraction. These benefits decreased with the increase of fuel in the second pulse because then much of the fuel will not be hit by the back flow.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2006-01-3400
Citation
Lang, K., and Cheng, W., "Effects of Fuel Injection Strategy on HC Emissions in a Port-Fuel-Injection Engine During Fast Idle," SAE Technical Paper 2006-01-3400, 2006, https://doi.org/10.4271/2006-01-3400.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
10/16/2006
Product Code
2006-01-3400
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English