Effects of Fumigated Fuel on the Ignition and Initial Combustion Stages in a D.I. Diesel Engine

891880

09/01/1989

Event
1989 SAE International Off-Highway and Powerplant Congress and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Effects of fumigated fuel on the initial combustion stage of a diesel spray were studied by measuring an ignition delay period and rate of heat release, clarifying a self-ignition limit of a fumigated fuel. Combustion experiments on both fumigated diesel fuel and methanol in a direct injection diesel engine gave the following results; a rapid combustion occurs with the methanol fumigation, while, the diesel fuel fumigation slightly changes the combustion of the main spray of diesel fuel injected directly into the combustion chamber. Regarding the rate of heat release, the maximum rate in the initial combustion stage increases rapidly with an increase in methanol fumigation, while for the fumigated diesel fuel, the maximum rate changes only slightly. The ignition delay period affected by fumigated diesel fuel is shorter than that affected by methanol at the same fumigation equivalence ratio and intake temperature.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/891880
Pages
11
Citation
Kwon, S., Arai, M., and Hiroyasu, H., "Effects of Fumigated Fuel on the Ignition and Initial Combustion Stages in a D.I. Diesel Engine," SAE Technical Paper 891880, 1989, https://doi.org/10.4271/891880.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Sep 1, 1989
Product Code
891880
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English