The Prediction of Ignition Delay and Combustion Intervals for a Homogeneous Charge, Spark Ignition Engine

780232

02/01/1978

Event
1978 Automotive Engineering Congress and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Correlations for the ignition delay and combustion energy release intervals in a homogeneous charge, spark-ignited engine are developed. After incorporation within a simplified engine cycle simulation, predicted values of these two combustion parameters are compared to experimental engine data. The correlations are based on four fundamental quantities-the turbulent integral scale, the turbulent micro-scale, the turbulent intensity, and the laminar flame speed. The major assumptions include: (1) The turbulent integral scale is proportional to the instantaneous chamber height prior to flame initiation. (2) Angular momentum is conserved in the individual turbulent eddies ahead of the flame front (i.e., a “rapid distortion” turbulence model). (3) The turbulent intensity scales with the mean piston speed.
Two empirical constants scale the correlations to a given engine. Predicted values for the ignition delay and burn intervals show good agreement with experimental results for wide variations in engine operating and design conditions (e.g., engine speed and load, spark timing, EGR, air-fuel ratio, and compression ratio). In addition, the shapes of the predicted mass fraction burned curves agree well with published data.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/780232
Pages
15
Citation
Hires, S., Tabaczynski, R., and Novak, J., "The Prediction of Ignition Delay and Combustion Intervals for a Homogeneous Charge, Spark Ignition Engine," SAE Technical Paper 780232, 1978, https://doi.org/10.4271/780232.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 1978
Product Code
780232
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English