{"title":"Direct Numerical Simulation of Atomization Characteristics of ECN Spray-G Injector: In-Nozzle Fluid Flow and Breakup Processes","authors":"Yongxiang Li, Florian Ries, Yaquan Sun, Hao-Pin Lien, Kaushal Nishad, Amsini Sadiki","doi":"10.1007/s10494-023-00514-2","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>In order to sustain applications dealing with various liquid fuels in internal combustion engine (ICE), it is essential to make available prediction methodologies that allow an early evaluation of the potential usefulness of such fuels in terms of favourable mixture preparation process already in realistic configurations. Since the air-mixture formation and subsequent processes are predominantly governed by the fuel injection, a DNS based numerical investigation coupled with VOF as an interface tracking method is carried out in this paper to gain better insight on the fuel injection from an industrial injector \"Spray G\" configuration. Chosen from Engine Combustion Network (ECN), this is a gasoline direct injector (GDI) featuring 8-holes orifices and operating with high injection pressure (200 bar). Under consideration of the required computational cost associated with DNS, only the 1/8 of the nozzle geometry including one orifice is used. The numerical simulation is accomplished for the quasi-steady injection condition with nozzle needle fully opened. The obtained results are first validated with available experimental data for nozzle mass flow rate and spray spread angle showing a good agreement. Then, a detailed numerical analysis is provided for the in/near nozzle flow evolution especially for flow turbulence, primary and secondary atomization. Furthermore, droplet statistics in terms of droplet shape, and droplet size-velocity distribution together with a breakup regime map are reported. Finally, a 2-D data curation technique is proposed to extract the droplet statistics along selected planes and evaluated by direct comparison with three-dimensional droplet data, which may allow handling of the DNS data in more feasible and economical way especially for time series data with higher frequency. The comprehensive DNS data generated by this DNS-VOF approach enable not only to carry out detailed numerical analysis of in- and near-nozzle physical phenomena for which experimental data are still scarce, but also to provide a hint of more reliable injector boundary conditions useful for lower order spray injection method based on Lagrangian particle tracking.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":559,"journal":{"name":"Flow, Turbulence and Combustion","volume":"112 2","pages":"615 - 642"},"PeriodicalIF":2.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s10494-023-00514-2.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Flow, Turbulence and Combustion","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10494-023-00514-2","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"MECHANICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In order to sustain applications dealing with various liquid fuels in internal combustion engine (ICE), it is essential to make available prediction methodologies that allow an early evaluation of the potential usefulness of such fuels in terms of favourable mixture preparation process already in realistic configurations. Since the air-mixture formation and subsequent processes are predominantly governed by the fuel injection, a DNS based numerical investigation coupled with VOF as an interface tracking method is carried out in this paper to gain better insight on the fuel injection from an industrial injector "Spray G" configuration. Chosen from Engine Combustion Network (ECN), this is a gasoline direct injector (GDI) featuring 8-holes orifices and operating with high injection pressure (200 bar). Under consideration of the required computational cost associated with DNS, only the 1/8 of the nozzle geometry including one orifice is used. The numerical simulation is accomplished for the quasi-steady injection condition with nozzle needle fully opened. The obtained results are first validated with available experimental data for nozzle mass flow rate and spray spread angle showing a good agreement. Then, a detailed numerical analysis is provided for the in/near nozzle flow evolution especially for flow turbulence, primary and secondary atomization. Furthermore, droplet statistics in terms of droplet shape, and droplet size-velocity distribution together with a breakup regime map are reported. Finally, a 2-D data curation technique is proposed to extract the droplet statistics along selected planes and evaluated by direct comparison with three-dimensional droplet data, which may allow handling of the DNS data in more feasible and economical way especially for time series data with higher frequency. The comprehensive DNS data generated by this DNS-VOF approach enable not only to carry out detailed numerical analysis of in- and near-nozzle physical phenomena for which experimental data are still scarce, but also to provide a hint of more reliable injector boundary conditions useful for lower order spray injection method based on Lagrangian particle tracking.
为了在内燃机(ICE)中持续应用各种液体燃料,必须提供预测方法,以便在实际配置中尽早评估这些燃料在有利的混合物制备过程中的潜在用途。由于空气混合物的形成和后续过程主要受燃料喷射的控制,本文采用基于 DNS 的数值研究和 VOF 作为界面跟踪方法,以更好地了解工业喷油器 "Spray G "配置的燃料喷射情况。该喷射器选自发动机燃烧网络(ECN),是一种汽油直接喷射器(GDI),具有 8 个喷孔,喷射压力高(200 巴)。考虑到 DNS 所需的计算成本,只使用了包括一个喷孔在内的喷嘴几何形状的 1/8。数值模拟是在喷嘴针完全打开的准稳定喷射条件下完成的。获得的结果首先与喷嘴质量流量和喷雾扩散角的现有实验数据进行了验证,结果显示两者吻合良好。然后,对喷嘴内/近喷嘴流动的演变进行了详细的数值分析,特别是对流动湍流、一次雾化和二次雾化进行了分析。此外,还报告了液滴形状、液滴大小-速度分布等方面的液滴统计数据以及破裂状态图。最后,提出了一种二维数据整理技术,用于提取沿选定平面的液滴统计数据,并通过与三维液滴数据的直接比较进行评估,从而以更可行、更经济的方式处理 DNS 数据,尤其是频率更高的时间序列数据。这种 DNS-VOF 方法生成的全面 DNS 数据不仅能够对实验数据仍然稀缺的喷嘴内和喷嘴附近的物理现象进行详细的数值分析,还能为基于拉格朗日粒子跟踪的低阶喷雾喷射方法提供更可靠的喷射器边界条件。
期刊介绍:
Flow, Turbulence and Combustion provides a global forum for the publication of original and innovative research results that contribute to the solution of fundamental and applied problems encountered in single-phase, multi-phase and reacting flows, in both idealized and real systems. The scope of coverage encompasses topics in fluid dynamics, scalar transport, multi-physics interactions and flow control. From time to time the journal publishes Special or Theme Issues featuring invited articles.
Contributions may report research that falls within the broad spectrum of analytical, computational and experimental methods. This includes research conducted in academia, industry and a variety of environmental and geophysical sectors. Turbulence, transition and associated phenomena are expected to play a significant role in the majority of studies reported, although non-turbulent flows, typical of those in micro-devices, would be regarded as falling within the scope covered. The emphasis is on originality, timeliness, quality and thematic fit, as exemplified by the title of the journal and the qualifications described above. Relevance to real-world problems and industrial applications are regarded as strengths.