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Fuel Injection Systems for CI Engines
P M V Subbarao Professor Mechanical Engineering Department Methods to Facilitate High Compression Ratio ….
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Coal dust injection system of Rudolph Diesel. AIR INJ ECTION (After U
Coal dust injection system of Rudolph Diesel. AIR INJ ECTION (After U.S. patent No of 1895.) Compressed air tank A Hopper : B Combustion chamber : C Rotary valve: D Injection valve: E Orifice: F
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Type of Fuel Vs Combustion Strategy
Occurrence of Heat Addition in SI Engine : A Child Care Event. Highly volatile with High self Ignition Temperature: Spark Ignition. Ignition after thorough mixing of air and fuel. Occurrence of Heat Addition in CI Engine: A Teen Care Event. Less Volatile with low self Ignition Temperature: Compression Ignition, Almost simultaneous mixing & Ignition.
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Colour Coded Evolution of Diesel Spray
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Onset of The Inevitable Danger
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The Complex Nature of Young Teen
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Simultaneous Occurrence of Multiple Process in CI Engines
Start of injection End of injecction -10
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Schematic of a diesel spray & Transport Process
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Events in CI Combustion
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Fuel Injection System for CI Engines
The fuel is to be introduced into the cylinder of a diesel engine through a nozzle with a large pressure differential across the nozzle orifice. The cylinder pressure at injection is typically in the range of 50 to 100 atm. Fuel injection pressures in the range of 200 to 1700 atm are used depending on the engine size and type of combustion system employed. These large pressure differences across the injector nozzle are required so that the injected liquid fuel jet will enter the chamber at sufficiently high velocity to Atomize into small-sized droplets to enable rapid evaporation. Traverse the combustion chamber in the time available and fully utilize the air charge.
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Ecological Awareness : European Standards
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Types of CI Engine Injection Systems
Fuel-Injection Systems Unit Injector System (UIS) – Single-Cylinder CI Engine. Unit Pump System (UPS) – Multi-cylinder CI Engine. Common Rail Injection System (CRS) – Multi-cylinder CI Engine.
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Development of Injection Pressure & Injection System in CI Engines
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Common Rail Diesel Injection System
The Common Rail Diesel Injection System delivers a more controlled quantity of atomised fuel, which leads to better fuel economy; a reduction in exhaust emissions; and a significant decrease in engine noise during operation.
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History of CRDI The common rail system prototype was developed in the 1960's by Robert Huber of Switzerland. The technology was further developed by Dr.Marco Ganser at the swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. The first successful usage in production vehicle began in Japan in the mid-1990's by Dr.Shohei Itoh & Masahina Miyaki of the Denso Corporation.
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Electronically Controlled CRDI
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Common rail diesel injection system
In the Common Rail system, an accumulator, or rail, is used to create a common reservoir of fuel under a consistent controlled pressure that is separate from the fuel injection points. A high-pressure pump increases the fuel pressure in the accumulator up to 1,600 bar . The pressure is set by the engine control unit and is independent of the engine speed and quantity of fuel being injected into any of the cylinders. The fuel is then transferred through rigid pipes to the fuel injectors, which inject the correct amount of fuel into the combustion chambers.
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Injectors for CRDI The injectors used in Common Rail systems are triggered externally by an Electronic Diesel Control, (EDC) unit. EDC controls all the engine injection parameters including the pressure in the fuel rail and the timing and duration of injection. Diesel fuel injectors used in Common Rail injection systems operate differently to conventional fuel injectors used in the jerk pump system. Some common rail injectors are controlled by a magnetic solenoid on the injector. Hydraulic force from the pressure in the system is used to open and close the injector, but the available pressure is controlled by the solenoid triggered by the Electronic Diesel Control unit.
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Some injectors use Piezo crystal wafers to actuate the injectors.
These crystals expand rapidly when connected to an electric field. In a Piezo inline injector, the actuator is built into the injector body very close to the jet needle and uses no mechanical parts to switch injector needles. The electronic diesel control unit precisely meters the amount of fuel injected, and improves atomization of the fuel by controlling the injector pulsations. This results in quieter, more fuel efficient engines; cleaner operation; and more power output.
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The Design Algorithm to Facilitate Fluid Dynamics
The basic concept of the design model is as follows. The fuel injected into a combustion chamber is divided into many zones. Events in each zone, such as droplet break-up, evaporation, air–fuel mixing, ignition, heatrelease, heat transfer and formation of exhaust emis are traced and calculated in order to obtain zonal temperature and compositions. The mass, internal energy and mole quantity of NOx of every zone are calculated to obtain cylinder-averaged temperature, air–fuel ratio and NOx concentration.
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Fluid Dynamics Factors Geometric Features
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Spray development After fuel is injected into the cylinder, spray break-up takes place in few crankshaft angles followed by wall impingement. In these stages, the movement of the fuel jet follows different laws. Before break-up, the jet follows the energy conservation law and the intial velocity of jet is as follows:
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Diesel fuel injection nozzles
Sac type VCO-type The holes in a modern injection system are very small, typically 50 – 250 μm, and they are manufactured using a complicated EDM (Electro Discharge Machining) process.
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Actuation of Injector Nozzle
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Mass flow rate through Nozzle
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Fuel Exiting into High Pressure& Temperature Air Enviroment : An unexplored Fluid Mechanics
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Coefficient of Discharge
Nurick’s Number, K pv is the vapor pressure of the fuel.
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Optimal Design of Nozzle Hole
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Spray Formation Spray formation is explained as Breakup Mechanism, described as: Stretching of fuel ligament into sheets or streams. Appearance of ripples and protuberances. Formation of small ligaments or holes in sheets. Collapse of ligaments or holes in sheets. Further breakup due to vibration of droplets. Agglomeration or shedding from large drops. The flow parameters of a jet: Jet Reynolds number Jet weber number Ohnesorge number
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Spray Structure
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Distribution of Droplets in A Spray
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Distribution of Droplets in A Spray
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Distribution of Droplets in A Spray
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Where is the liquid surface tension, L is the liquid viscosity, A is the air density, L is the liquid density, pL, is the injection pressure differential across the nozzle, is the half spray angle and t is the film thickness, given by where do is the discharge orifice diameter and FN is the nozzle flow number defined by
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Post Break-up Kinematics
After break-up, the fuel jet behaves as a gas jet and follows the moment conservation law. jet centreline (um) is According to the cylindrical free turbulent jet theory, the velocity distribution at the jet cross-section is
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where u is the velocity of fuel reaching the point (r, z).
ce is the entrainment factor. The spray angle The velocity of the fuel zone reaching the point (, s) is
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Penetration of Fuel Spray
The spray penetration length and spray penetration rate from a fuel injector are the parameters used to judge fuel spray performance. The merits of high or low penetration largely depend on engine design and geometry. Shorter spray penetration may be of an advantage where it reduces fuel impingement, but in larger engines may inhibit maximum air utilisation.
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Influence of Injection Pressure on Spray Penetration Length : HS Diesel
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Influence of Ambient Pressure on Spray Penetration Length : HS Diesel
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Model to Design a Spray
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SOI : 11o BTDC
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Impingement of Spray After the fuel jet has impinged the opposite chamber wall, the movement of the wall jet is complicated. Many experimental formulae have been suggested in the design methodologies. One such formulae used to calculate the velocity of the zone that has impinged on the wall :
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Spray Velocity Distribution in A Two Hole Nozzle Effect of Swirl
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Spray Velocity Distribution in A Two Hole Nozzle Effect of Swirl
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Air entrainment and mixing
The rate of air entrainment into each zone is calculated on the basis of the momentum conservation principle. The rate of entrainment relates not only to the fuel but also to the air–fuel ratio in the quiescent combustion chamber. It is observed that the rate of air entrainment increases with the increase of air–fuel ratio in the cylinder. The entrainment factor ce is linearly related to the equivalence air–fuel, . Where a and b are constants for a certain engine type.
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u The relation takes some account of incomplete mixing for low air–fuel ratios.
The relationship given above also improves the predictive ability of the model for transient operating conditions, for which the air–fuel ratio is low and the fresh air in the cylinder may be consumed by entrainment of fuel zones.
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Idealized spray vaporization
The spray is divided into an initial "cool” and "hot" zone. Within the cool zone, heat transfer is restricted to radiation from the flame front to the droplet surface. In the hot zone, heat transfer takes place both by radiation from the flame front and by turbulent convection. The reduction in droplet diameter due to vaporization follows the "d2 law": where is the evaporation constant for forced convection.
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The evaporation in forced convection
The evaporation constant in forced convection Where, k is the thermal conductivity of the gas, Cp is the specific heat of the gas, f is the density of the fuel and B=the transfer number
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hfg = latent heat of vaporization per unit mass of fuel,
T= temperature of gas surrounding the droplet, Tf= temperature of drop surface, Q = heat of reaction, Y0=mass fraction of oxidant in the surrounding atmosphere and stoichiometric mixture ratio.
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Ignition Delay The sum of times required for sub process.
The most widely reported correlation relating the ignition delay to the ambient gas condition is given by the relation where τ is the ignition delay, Pg and Tg are the ambient gas mean pressure and temperature before autoignition takes place, A, B and n are experimental constants.
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Arhenius-type equation for Ignition Delay
An Arhenius type equation for Ignition delay is: p :Premixed air fuel ratio.
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Symptoms to be Sensed to Predict Auto Ignition
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Effect of Gas Temperature on Ignition Delay
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Effect of Equivalence Ratio on Ignition Delay
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The flammability limits versus the number of carbon atoms in alkanes
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Development of Injection Pressure & Injection System in CI Engines
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Fuel Injection System The fuel is to be introduced into the cylinder of a diesel engine through a nozzle with a large pressure differential across the nozzle orifice. The cylinder pressure at injection is typically in the range of 50 to 100 atm. Fuel injection pressures in the range of 200 to 1700 atm are used depending on the engine size and type of combustion system employed. These large pressure differences across the injector nozzle are required so that the injected liquid fuel jet will enter the chamber at sufficiently high velocity to Atomize into small-sized droplets to enable rapid evaporation Traverse the combustion chamber in the time available and fully utilize the air charge.
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European Standards
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Types of CI Engine Injection Systems
Fuel-Injection Systems Unit Injector System (UIS) – Single-Cylinder CI Engine. Unit Pump System (UPS) – Multi-cylinder CI Engine. Common Rail Injection System (CRS) – Multi-cylinder CI Engine. The Unit Injector System (UIS) and the Unit Pump System (UPS) are among the most significant innovations in this field. They inject precisely the right amount of fuel individually into each cylinder, at very high pressure, and at exactly the right moment in time. This results in considerably more efficient combustion than is the case with conventional injection systems. This, in turn, equates to higher output, less fuel consumption, and lower levels of noise and exhaust-gas emissions.
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Unit Injector System
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Functional Principle of Modern Unit Injection System
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Actuation of Solenoid Valve
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Actuation of Injector Nozzle
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Unit Pump Diesel Injection System
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Common Rail Diesel Injection System
The Common Rail Diesel Injection System delivers a more controlled quantity of atomised fuel, which leads to better fuel economy; a reduction in exhaust emissions; and a significant decrease in engine noise during operation.
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Common rail diesel injection system
In the Common Rail system, an accumulator, or rail, is used to create a common reservoir of fuel under a consistent controlled pressure that is separate from the fuel injection points. A high-pressure pump increases the fuel pressure in the accumulator up to 1,600 bar . The pressure is set by the engine control unit and is independent of the engine speed and quantity of fuel being injected into any of the cylinders. The fuel is then transferred through rigid pipes to the fuel injectors, which inject the correct amount of fuel into the combustion chambers.
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Injectors for CRDI The injectors used in Common Rail systems are triggered externally by an Electronic Diesel Control, or EDC unit. EDC controls all the engine injection parameters including the pressure in the fuel rail and the timing and duration of injection. Diesel fuel injectors used in Common Rail injection systems operate differently to conventional fuel injectors used in the jerk pump system. Some common rail injectors are controlled by a magnetic solenoid on the injector. Hydraulic force from the pressure in the system is used to open and close the injector, but the available pressure is controlled by the solenoid triggered by the Electronic Diesel Control unit.
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Some injectors use Piezo crystal wafers to actuate the injectors.
These crystals expand rapidly when connected to an electric field. In a Piezo inline injector, the actuator is built into the injector body very close to the jet needle and uses no mechanical parts to switch injector needles. The electronic diesel control unit precisely meters the amount of fuel injected, and improves atomization of the fuel by controlling the injector pulsations. This results in quieter, more fuel efficient engines; cleaner operation; and more power output.
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