Study on Air Assist Fuel Injector Atomization and Effects on Exhaust Emission Reduction

930323

03/01/1993

Event
International Congress & Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
The effect of fuel injection atomization on engine performance has been known to improve fuel economy and to reduce emissions. Hitachi America, Ltd. Research and Development along with Hitachi Research Laboratory in Japan have studied the effects and the operation of the air assist injection system which was developed and studied to help meet future Low Emission Vehicles (LEV) regulations and also Ultra Low Emission Vehicles (ULEV) regulations.
The system consisted of newly designed air assist injectors having a spray angle of 15° at 170 kPa (absolute air pressure) with 370 kPa (absolute fuel pressure). The air assist injector generates highly atomized fuel droplets by swirling the fuel clockwise and the air counterclockwise. The fuel and air flowing in opposite directions collide, thereby producing particles around 30 μm in size at 274 kPa air pressure.
These characteristics improve cold start, cold coolant conditions and fully warm engine conditions. HydroCarbons (HC) reduction of up to 40 percent were obtained with certain set engine parameters.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/930323
Pages
10
Citation
Saikalis, G., Byers, R., and Nogi, T., "Study on Air Assist Fuel Injector Atomization and Effects on Exhaust Emission Reduction," SAE Technical Paper 930323, 1993, https://doi.org/10.4271/930323.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Mar 1, 1993
Product Code
930323
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English