Impact of Fluorescence Tracers on Combustion Performance in Optical Engine Experiments

2004-01-2975

10/25/2004

Event
2004 Powertrain & Fluid Systems Conference & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
For applications of planar laser induced fluorescence (PLIF) to measure the fuel or equivalence ratio distributions in internal combustion (IC) engines it is typically assumed that the addition of a fluorescence tracer to a base fuel does not alter the combustion performance. We have investigated the impact on combustion performance through the addition of various amounts of 3-pentanone or toluene to iso-octane fuel. Correlations between equivalence ratio for a range of fuel/tracer mixtures and engine parameters, like peak pressure, location of peak pressure, indicated mean effective pressure (IMEP), and peak burn rate are discussed for data obtained in a spark-ignition direct-injection (SIDI) gasoline engine operated with near homogeneous charge. For typical tracer concentrations the impact on combustion performance is mostly negligible. PLIF imaging for operation with fuel/tracer mixture of the same equivalence ratio (iso-octane with 3-pentanone or toluene) show identical behavior for flame propagation within scatter.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2004-01-2975
Pages
11
Citation
Zhang, R., Wermuth, N., and Sick, V., "Impact of Fluorescence Tracers on Combustion Performance in Optical Engine Experiments," SAE Technical Paper 2004-01-2975, 2004, https://doi.org/10.4271/2004-01-2975.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Oct 25, 2004
Product Code
2004-01-2975
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English