Author:
Hall Matthew,Kim Kyeongmin,Tambasco Corey,Matthews Ron
Abstract
<div class="section abstract"><div class="htmlview paragraph">A multi-dimensional model of the spark ignition process for SI engines was developed as a user defined function (UDF) integrated into the commercial engine simulation software CONVERGE CFD. The model simulates spark plasma movement in an inert flow environment without combustion. The UT model results were compared with experiments for arc movement in a crossflow and also compared with calorimeter measurements of thermal energy deposition under quiescent conditions. The arc motion simulation is based on a mean-free-path physical model to predict the arc movement given the contours of the crossflow velocity through the gap and the interaction of the spatially resolved electric field with the electrons making up the arc. A further development is the inclusion of a model for the thermal energy deposition of the arc as it is stretched by the interaction of the flow and the electric field. A novel feature of this model is that the thermal energy delivered to the gap at the start of the simulation is distributed uniformly along the arc rather than at discrete points along the arc, as is the case with the default CONVERGE CFD ignition models. This feature was found to greatly reduce the tendency of the arc to distort its shape and tangle itself in a non-physical way, as is the tendency when discrete energy input is used. It was found that the tangled distortion of the arc when using discrete energy input was due to perturbations along the arc caused by differential expansion of the gas along groups of adjacent mesh cells that either had energy input or did not. The distributed energy feature also gave arc temperature distributions that were more spatially uniform and had steeper temperature gradients, consistent with experimental arc images. The results are compared with experimental high-speed video images of arc movement for a spark plug of similar geometry and taken over a range of pressures and crossflow velocities in a high-pressure constant volume vessel. There is good agreement between the simulations and experimental images for the arc stretch distance in response to a crossflow. The simulations did not display as much lateral arc dispersion as seen in the experimental results, however, that were perhaps associated with flow recirculation zones downstream of the gap, present in the experiments. The influence of the electric field was shown by turning off the electric field effect in the simulations such that the arc movement was influenced by the flow field alone. The effect of the electric field was found to be more pronounced at lower crossflow velocities of 5 m/s and at lower pressures.</div></div>
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