Numerical Simulation of Post-Flame Oxidation of Hydrocarbons in Spark Ignition Engines

970886

02/24/1997

Event
SAE International Congress and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
About 50-90 percent of the hydrocarbons that escape combustion during flame passage in spark-ignition engine operation are oxidized in the cylinder before leaving the system. The process involves the transport of unreacted fuel from cold walls towards the hotter burned gas regions and subsequent reaction. In order to understand controlling factors in the process, a transient one-dimensional reactive-diffusive model has been formulated for simulating the oxidation processes taking place in the reactive layer between hot burned gases and cold unreacted air/fuel mixture, with initial and boundary conditions provided by the emergence of hydrocarbons from the piston top land crevice. Energy and species conservation equations are solved for the entire process, using a detailed chemical kinetic mechanism for propane.
Simulation results show that the post-flame oxidation process takes place within a reactive layer where intermediate hydrocarbon products are formed at temperatures above 1100-1200 K, followed by a carbon monoxide conversion region closer to the hot burned gases.
Model results show that most of hydrocarbons leaving the crevice are completely oxidized inside the cylinder. The largest contribution of remaining hydrocarbons are those leaving the crevice at temperatures below 1400 K. The largest fraction of non-fuel (intermediate) hydrocarbons results from hydrocarbons leaving the crevice when core temperatures are around 1400 K
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/970886
Pages
12
Citation
Wu, K., and Hochgreb, S., "Numerical Simulation of Post-Flame Oxidation of Hydrocarbons in Spark Ignition Engines," SAE Technical Paper 970886, 1997, https://doi.org/10.4271/970886.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 24, 1997
Product Code
970886
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English