Ignition Delay Correlation for Engine Operating with Lean and with Rich Fuel-Air Mixtures

2016-01-0699

04/05/2016

Event
SAE 2016 World Congress and Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
An ignition delay correlation encompassing the effects of temperature, pressure, residual gas, EGR, and lambda (on both the rich and lean sides) has been developed. The procedure uses the individual knocking cycle data from a boosted direct injection SI engine (GM LNF) operating at 1250 to 2000 rpm, 8-14 bar GIMEP, EGR of 0 to 12.5%, and lambda of 0.8 to 1.3 with a certification fuel (Haltermann 437, with RON=96.6 and MON=88.5). An algorithm has been devised to identify the knock point on individual pressure traces so that the large data set (of some thirty three thousand cycles) could be processed automatically. For lean and for rich operations, the role of the excess fuel, air, and recycled gas (which has excess air in the lean case, and hydrogen and carbon monoxide in the rich case) may be treated effectively as diluents in the ignition delay expression.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2016-01-0699
Pages
6
Citation
McKenzie, J., and Cheng, W., "Ignition Delay Correlation for Engine Operating with Lean and with Rich Fuel-Air Mixtures," SAE Technical Paper 2016-01-0699, 2016, https://doi.org/10.4271/2016-01-0699.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 5, 2016
Product Code
2016-01-0699
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English