Characterizing the thermal sensitivity of a gasoline homogeneous charge compression ignition engine with measurements of instantaneous wall temperature and heat flux

Author:

Chang J1,Filipi Z1,Assanis D1,Kuo T-W2,Najt P2,Rask R2

Affiliation:

1. Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA

2. General Motors R&D, Warren, Michigan, USA

Abstract

An experimental study was performed to provide qualitative and quantitative insight into the thermal effects on a gasoline-fuelled homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) engine combustion. The single-cylinder engine utilized exhaust gas rebreathing to obtain large amounts of hot residual gas needed to promote ignition. In-cylinder pressure, heat release analysis, and exhaust emission measurement were employed for combustion diagnostics. Fast response thermocouples were embedded in the piston top and cylinder head surface to measure instantaneous wall temperature and heat flux, thus providing critical information about the thermal boundary conditions and a thorough understanding of the heat transfer process. Two parameters determining thermal conditions in the cylinder, i.e. intake charge temperature and wall temperature, were considered and their effect on ignition and burning rate in an HCCI engine was investigated through systematic experimentation. The approach allowed quantitative analysis, and separating qualitatively different effects on the core gas temperature from the effects of near-wall temperature stratification. The results show great sensitivity to changes in wall temperature and such like, but a somewhat weaker effect of intake charge temperature on HCCI combustion. Variations of combustion phasing and peak burn rates due to wall temperature changes can be compensated if the intake charge temperature is varied in the opposite direction and with a factor of 1.11. The combustion stability limit of the HCCI engine depends more on wall temperature than on intake charge temperature. Analysis of a large number of individual cycles indicates that decreasing intake temperature retards timing, and the burn rates change primarily as a function of ignition timing. In contrast, lowering the wall temperature led to greater reduction in the bulk burn rate and greater increase in cyclic variability than expected simply as a result of retarded ignition, thus indicating significance of the thermal stratification in the near-wall boundary layer.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Ocean Engineering,Aerospace Engineering,Automotive Engineering

Reference4 articles.

1. Press W. H., Teukolsky S. A., Vetterling W. T., Flannery B. P., Numerical Recipes in C, 2nd edn, 1992, pp. 650–655 (Cambridge University Press).

2. Internal-combustion engine heat transfer

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