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supersonic shock wave in high-speed fuel jets

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http://www.newscientist.com/hottopics/cars/article.jsp?id=23313900&sub=Green machines



Surprise discovery in diesel engines Study reveals supersonic shock wave in high-speed fuel jets used in diesel cars - designers will now have to scrap old models of fuel mixing and combustion From New Scientist Magazine 23 February 02 By Jeff Hecht



ENGINEERS have been barking up the wrong tree in their efforts to make diesel engines run cleaner and more efficiently.



A new X-ray study has revealed a type of supersonic shock wave that no one has seen before in the high-speed fuel jets used in diesel cars. "Nobody had any idea this was going on," says Jin Wang of the Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois. Engine designers will now have to scrap their old models of fuel mixing and combustion.



In a diesel, fuel ignites spontaneously when it is injected into the combustion chambers. The way the fuel mixes with air is crucial to how it burns, so knowing how the fuel sprays out is important for boosting efficiency and reducing pollution.



Researchers use light scattering from fuel droplets to profile the shape of the injected fuel jet. However, droplets in the jet scatter light many times, obscuring what's going on.



To see through the haze, Wang and his colleagues tried using a single-wavelength X-ray source and a high-speed detector that recorded an image every 5 microseconds. They sprayed standard diesel fuel, mixed with a caesium compound to enhance its X-ray contrast, into a chamber containing the inert gas sulphur hexafluoride to stop it combusting. As the jet moved through the gas, they took a series of pictures.



The team's research was funded by the automotive systems company Robert Bosch in Stuttgart. To simplify measurements, they used a modified version of a standard fuel-injector nozzle that had only one hole rather than the usual five or six.



They found that 90 per cent of the fuel was concentrated in a thin jet behind the V-shaped shock wave, with the densest concentration of fuel right behind the shock front. And while the gas in the chamber slowed down the leading edge of the fuel jet, the trailing edge moved several times faster, at supersonic velocity. As the tail end of the fuel jet caught up with the leading edge, most of the fuel became concentrated in a blob just behind the point of the shock cone. "Nobody knows why that should be, but we're going to try and find out," Wang told New Scientist.



The finding will send fuel efficiency researchers back to their drawing boards, says Oleg Vasilyev, a fluid dynamics specialist at the University of Missouri in Columbia. Fuel distribution in the initial jet is critical to how the fuel spreads through the chamber to be burnt. A better understanding could lead to new injector nozzle and chamber designs that improve fuel efficiency and reduce pollution, says Vasilyev.



From New Scientist Magazine 23 February 02
 
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Okay,, How 'bout this?



-Start Idea here-



Modern cars had two valves per cylinder,, then moved up to four,, then five.



Why not stuff two, or even four injector nozzles into the head of a diesel?

Common rail injection shouldn't have much of a problem keeping up with this concept since allready it is injecting up to three times per stroke.



This setup might not make it into high HP, but at idle RPM or moderate loads it should help lower emissions and pick up MPG.



If you could inject four small injections three time per stroke, that would help even out the power stroke.



Wouldn't it help get rid of alot of "Hot Spots" and the unstable rich/lean zones surrounding the fuel being injected?



What are yall's thoughts on this?



Merrick Cummings Jr
 
I've said this before. This idea I had years and years ago... . have a separate injection system and inject water into the cylinder on every other power stroke. The water would instantly turn to steam from the compression heat and the expanding steam would push the piston down - steam occupies 12,000 times the volume of the same mass of water.



As far as the multiple injections of fuel or staged injectors... it all comes down to cost and benefits. Look at what our Cummins injectors cost now compared to Duralax or Power Joke. Are the benefits worth it? I say get rid of the environmental extremist wacko terrorists and leave our engines alone.



Blake
 
I do know that in gasser turbo race cars, somethimes they put a second set of injectors on the intake, and don't turn them on untill they are high in the boost. I have some pics in a book of this.



Andrew
 
Usually a set of flow tested Bosch 160 LBS per hour injectors will cure all fueling problems with a F. A. S. T or ACCEL programmer on Turbo or Blower cars;)



Jim
 
Originally posted by TxDieselKid

I do know that in gasser turbo race cars, somethimes they put a second set of injectors on the intake, and don't turn them on untill they are high in the boost. I have some pics in a book of this.



Andrew



that does work in a gasoline engine [a lot of import 4 bangers have 5 injectors - 4 main and one cold start injector] but on a diesel that will not work. the fuel that would be sprayed in the intake air charge would ignite in the cylinder before the injector fired and you would have some major fuel knock... propane injection seems to work well though...
 
Originally posted by nickleinonen

that does work in a gasoline engine [a lot of import 4 bangers have 5 injectors - 4 main and one cold start injector] but on a diesel that will not work. the fuel that would be sprayed in the intake air charge would ignite in the cylinder before the injector fired and you would have some major fuel knock... propane injection seems to work well though...



Didn't say it worked on our trucks, but it has been tried on our trucks, and on a few Fords. :eek:
 
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