This article presents a computational fluid dynamics study of the engine combustion network Spray G, focusing on the transient characteristics of the spray during the start of injection and the impacts of nozzle geometry details derived from the manufacturing process. The large-eddy-simulation method, coupled with the volume-of-fluid method, was used to model the high-speed turbulent two-phase flow. A moving-needle boundary condition was applied to capture the internal flow boundary condition accurately. The injector geometry was measured with micron-level resolution using X-ray tomographic imaging at the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory, providing detailed machining tolerance and defects from manufacturing and a realistic rough surface. For comparison, a nominal geometry and a modified geometry incorporating measured large-scale geometric features but no surface details were also used in the simulations. Spray characteristics such as mass flow rate, injection velocity, and Sauter mean diameter were analyzed. Significantly distinct spray characteristics in terms of injection velocity, spray morphology, and primary breakup mechanism were predicted using different nozzle geometries, which is mainly attributable to the realistic surface finish and manufacturing defects. The measured high-resolution geometry predicts a lower injection velocity, a wider-spreading spray, and an overall slower breakup rate with evident injector tip wetting compared to the ideally smooth nozzle boundary. This result implies that the manufacturing details of the injector, which are usually ignored in fuel injection studies, have a significant impact on the spray development process and should be taken into account for design optimization.

Spray characterization for engine combustion network Spray G injector using high-fidelity simulation with detailed injector geometry

Battistoni M.;
2019

Abstract

This article presents a computational fluid dynamics study of the engine combustion network Spray G, focusing on the transient characteristics of the spray during the start of injection and the impacts of nozzle geometry details derived from the manufacturing process. The large-eddy-simulation method, coupled with the volume-of-fluid method, was used to model the high-speed turbulent two-phase flow. A moving-needle boundary condition was applied to capture the internal flow boundary condition accurately. The injector geometry was measured with micron-level resolution using X-ray tomographic imaging at the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory, providing detailed machining tolerance and defects from manufacturing and a realistic rough surface. For comparison, a nominal geometry and a modified geometry incorporating measured large-scale geometric features but no surface details were also used in the simulations. Spray characteristics such as mass flow rate, injection velocity, and Sauter mean diameter were analyzed. Significantly distinct spray characteristics in terms of injection velocity, spray morphology, and primary breakup mechanism were predicted using different nozzle geometries, which is mainly attributable to the realistic surface finish and manufacturing defects. The measured high-resolution geometry predicts a lower injection velocity, a wider-spreading spray, and an overall slower breakup rate with evident injector tip wetting compared to the ideally smooth nozzle boundary. This result implies that the manufacturing details of the injector, which are usually ignored in fuel injection studies, have a significant impact on the spray development process and should be taken into account for design optimization.
2019
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11391/1457929
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 36
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 20
social impact