Effect of Fuel Mass Flow at the End of Injection on Cavitation and Gas Ingestion in the Nozzle

The fuel flow in the diesel engine nozzle has a vital impact on the fuel atomization and spray, and the fuel mass flux affects the internal flow of the nozzle. The visual experimental platform for a transparent nozzle was built to obtain the image of fuel flow in a nozzle with a small sac combining...

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Main Authors: Hua Wen, Yulong Jiang, Jinglong Ma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-12-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/1/258
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spelling doaj-51331b9c4fbf4d58acff41233b039d982020-12-30T00:04:50ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172021-12-011125825810.3390/app11010258Effect of Fuel Mass Flow at the End of Injection on Cavitation and Gas Ingestion in the NozzleHua Wen0Yulong Jiang1Jinglong Ma2School of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering, Nanchang University, Nanchang 330031, ChinaSchool of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering, Nanchang University, Nanchang 330031, ChinaSchool of Energy and Power Engineering, Beihang University, Beijing 100191, ChinaThe fuel flow in the diesel engine nozzle has a vital impact on the fuel atomization and spray, and the fuel mass flux affects the internal flow of the nozzle. The visual experimental platform for a transparent nozzle was built to obtain the image of fuel flow in a nozzle with a small sac combining the back-light imaging technology and a high-speed framing camera. A two-phase three-component numerical model, based on the OpenFOAM solver, was calculated to quantitatively analyze gas ingestion and cavitation in the nozzle. The results indicate that at the end of injection (EOI), fuel cavitation and external air backflow (gas ingestion) occur successively in the nozzle, and both phenomena first appear in the orifice and then transition to the sac. Cavitation collapse is the major factor of gas ingestion, and the total amount of gas ingestion and cavitation mainly depends on the sac. The outflow of fuel largely depends on the total amount of cavitation and the inertial outflow of fuel at the EOI. The type of cavitation in the nozzle mainly presents annular and bulk cavitation, the former primarily exists in the sac, while the latter is established within the orifice. Therefore, larger mass flows will contribute to stronger cavitation and gas ingestion.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/1/258gas ingestioncavitationmass fluxQ iso-surfacevolume fraction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hua Wen
Yulong Jiang
Jinglong Ma
spellingShingle Hua Wen
Yulong Jiang
Jinglong Ma
Effect of Fuel Mass Flow at the End of Injection on Cavitation and Gas Ingestion in the Nozzle
Applied Sciences
gas ingestion
cavitation
mass flux
Q iso-surface
volume fraction
author_facet Hua Wen
Yulong Jiang
Jinglong Ma
author_sort Hua Wen
title Effect of Fuel Mass Flow at the End of Injection on Cavitation and Gas Ingestion in the Nozzle
title_short Effect of Fuel Mass Flow at the End of Injection on Cavitation and Gas Ingestion in the Nozzle
title_full Effect of Fuel Mass Flow at the End of Injection on Cavitation and Gas Ingestion in the Nozzle
title_fullStr Effect of Fuel Mass Flow at the End of Injection on Cavitation and Gas Ingestion in the Nozzle
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Fuel Mass Flow at the End of Injection on Cavitation and Gas Ingestion in the Nozzle
title_sort effect of fuel mass flow at the end of injection on cavitation and gas ingestion in the nozzle
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2021-12-01
description The fuel flow in the diesel engine nozzle has a vital impact on the fuel atomization and spray, and the fuel mass flux affects the internal flow of the nozzle. The visual experimental platform for a transparent nozzle was built to obtain the image of fuel flow in a nozzle with a small sac combining the back-light imaging technology and a high-speed framing camera. A two-phase three-component numerical model, based on the OpenFOAM solver, was calculated to quantitatively analyze gas ingestion and cavitation in the nozzle. The results indicate that at the end of injection (EOI), fuel cavitation and external air backflow (gas ingestion) occur successively in the nozzle, and both phenomena first appear in the orifice and then transition to the sac. Cavitation collapse is the major factor of gas ingestion, and the total amount of gas ingestion and cavitation mainly depends on the sac. The outflow of fuel largely depends on the total amount of cavitation and the inertial outflow of fuel at the EOI. The type of cavitation in the nozzle mainly presents annular and bulk cavitation, the former primarily exists in the sac, while the latter is established within the orifice. Therefore, larger mass flows will contribute to stronger cavitation and gas ingestion.
topic gas ingestion
cavitation
mass flux
Q iso-surface
volume fraction
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/1/258
work_keys_str_mv AT huawen effectoffuelmassflowattheendofinjectiononcavitationandgasingestioninthenozzle
AT yulongjiang effectoffuelmassflowattheendofinjectiononcavitationandgasingestioninthenozzle
AT jinglongma effectoffuelmassflowattheendofinjectiononcavitationandgasingestioninthenozzle
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