Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/31387
Title: Multiphase Phenomena in Diesel Fuel Injection Systems
Authors: Karathanassis, Ioannis K. 
Koukouvinis, Foivos (Phoevos) 
Gavaises, Manolis 
Major Field of Science: Engineering and Technology
Field Category: Mechanical Engineering;Chemical Engineering
Keywords: Multiphase flows;Diesel fuel;Injection systems;Numerical simulations;Experimental methods;Optical diagnostics;Thermodynamics
Issue Date: 12-Oct-2019
Source: Simulations and Optical Diagnostics for Internal Combustion Engines: Current Status and Way Forward, 2019, pp. 95-126
Start page: 95
End page: 126
Abstract: Fuel Injection Equipment (FIE) are an integral component of modern Internal Combustion Engines (ICE), since they play a crucial role in the fuel atomization process and in the formation of a fuel/air combustible mixture, consequently affecting efficiency and pollutant formation. Advancements and improvements of FIE systems are determined by the complexity of the physical mechanisms taking place; the spatial scales are in the order of millimetres, flow may become locally highly supersonic, leading to very small temporal scales of microseconds or less. The operation of these devices is highly unsteady, involving moving geometries such as needle valves. Additionally, extreme pressure changes imply that many assumptions of traditional fluid mechanics, such as incompressibility, are no longer valid. Furthermore, the description of the fuel properties becomes an issue, since fuel databases are scarce or limited to pure components, whereas actual fuels are commonly hydrocarbon mixtures. Last but not least, complicated phenomena such as phase change or transition from subcritical to transcritical/supercritical state of matter further pose complications in the understanding of the operation of these devices.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/31387
ISBN: 978-981-15-0335-1
DOI: 10.1007/978-981-15-0335-1_8
Rights: CC0 1.0 Universal
Type: Book Chapter
Affiliation : University of London 
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed
Appears in Collections:Κεφάλαια βιβλίων/Book chapters

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