Intake Valve Thermal Behavior During Steady-State and Transient Engine Operation

1999-01-3643

10/25/1999

Event
International Fuels & Lubricants Meeting & Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Intake valve thermal behavior was observed across a wide range of operating conditions while running an engine on both propane and gasoline. Compared to the gaseous fuel, the liquid fuel operation has cooler valve temperatures (∼50-100C difference) and there is significant temperature gradient across the valve surface due to liquid fuel impinging on the front quadrant of the valve. The valve warm-up time is largely determined by the effective thermal inertia of the valve (∼valve body plus 1/3 of stem mass) and the thermal resistance to the seat. The valve is heated up by the combustion chamber; the dominant cooling paths are through the seat contact and the liquid fuel evaporation. Just after starting, very little fuel evaporates from the cold valve until there is a substantial increase in valve temperature in a period of approximately 10-20 seconds.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/1999-01-3643
Pages
11
Citation
Cowart, J., and Cheng, W., "Intake Valve Thermal Behavior During Steady-State and Transient Engine Operation," SAE Technical Paper 1999-01-3643, 1999, https://doi.org/10.4271/1999-01-3643.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Oct 25, 1999
Product Code
1999-01-3643
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English