TY - GEN
T1 - Jet Characteristics of a Narrow Throat Pre-Chamber and Influence on the Main-Chamber Combustion
AU - Echeverri Marquez, Manuel Alejandro
AU - Sharma, Priybrat
AU - Hlaing, Ponnya
AU - Cenker, Emre
AU - Magnotti, Gaetano
AU - Turner, James W. G.
N1 - KAUST Repository Item: Exported on 2022-10-11
Acknowledgements: The paper is based upon work supported by Saudi Aramco Research and Development Center FUELCOM3 program under Master Research Agreement Number 6600024505/01. FUELCOM (Fuel Combustion for Advanced Engines) is a collaborative research undertaking between Saudi Aramco and KAUST intended to address the fundamental aspects of hydrocarbon fuel combustion in engines and develop fuel/engine design tools suitable for advanced combustion modes.
PY - 2022/8/30
Y1 - 2022/8/30
N2 - Lean combustion is one of the most applied methods to increase engine efficiency and maintain a good trade-off with engine emissions. The pre-chamber combustion (PCC) is one of the most promising combustion concepts to extend the lean operating limits of the engine. The Narrow throat pre-chamber has shown better lean limit extension compared to other ignition sources. The pre-chamber jets and the main-chamber combustion were studied in a Heavy-Duty optical engine using methane fuel. The tested conditions covered global excess air ratios (λ), between 1.9 to 2.3. The combustion process was recorded using three collection systems: (a) Natural Flame Luminosity (NFL) with a temporal resolution of 0.1 CAD; (b) OH∗ Chemiluminescence, and (c) CH∗ Chemiluminescence with a temporal resolution of 0.2 CAD for both. The propagating velocity of the reacting jets was studied using Combustion Image Velocimetry (CIV) based on bottom view images of the main chamber. After the pre-chamber jets ignite the main-chamber charge, a two-stage heat release rate (HRR) was observed for all the tested conditions. None of the three combustion visualizations exhibited a linear correlation with the HRR. The CIV reported high-speed jets penetrating around 400 m/s into the main chamber. The richest case of λ 1.9 presented a higher axial and radial propagation speed than the other cases. The individual vector fields have significant differences with the ensemble average fields, behavior characteristic of a high turbulent process. Finally, the ultra-lean case showed higher vorticity during the pre-chamber discharge, a synonym of high air-fuel entrainment that generates heavy waviness on the flame front. This heavy waviness generates local/partial or total extinction, resulting in abnormal combustion cycles.
AB - Lean combustion is one of the most applied methods to increase engine efficiency and maintain a good trade-off with engine emissions. The pre-chamber combustion (PCC) is one of the most promising combustion concepts to extend the lean operating limits of the engine. The Narrow throat pre-chamber has shown better lean limit extension compared to other ignition sources. The pre-chamber jets and the main-chamber combustion were studied in a Heavy-Duty optical engine using methane fuel. The tested conditions covered global excess air ratios (λ), between 1.9 to 2.3. The combustion process was recorded using three collection systems: (a) Natural Flame Luminosity (NFL) with a temporal resolution of 0.1 CAD; (b) OH∗ Chemiluminescence, and (c) CH∗ Chemiluminescence with a temporal resolution of 0.2 CAD for both. The propagating velocity of the reacting jets was studied using Combustion Image Velocimetry (CIV) based on bottom view images of the main chamber. After the pre-chamber jets ignite the main-chamber charge, a two-stage heat release rate (HRR) was observed for all the tested conditions. None of the three combustion visualizations exhibited a linear correlation with the HRR. The CIV reported high-speed jets penetrating around 400 m/s into the main chamber. The richest case of λ 1.9 presented a higher axial and radial propagation speed than the other cases. The individual vector fields have significant differences with the ensemble average fields, behavior characteristic of a high turbulent process. Finally, the ultra-lean case showed higher vorticity during the pre-chamber discharge, a synonym of high air-fuel entrainment that generates heavy waviness on the flame front. This heavy waviness generates local/partial or total extinction, resulting in abnormal combustion cycles.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10754/682322
UR - https://www.sae.org/content/2022-01-1006/
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85138823557&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4271/2022-01-1006
DO - 10.4271/2022-01-1006
M3 - Conference contribution
BT - SAE Technical Paper Series
PB - SAE International
ER -