Mechanisms of fuel injector tip wetting and tip drying based on experimental measurements of engine-out particulate emissions from gasoline direct-injection engines

M. Medina*, F. M. Alzahrani, M. Fatouraie, M. S. Wooldridge, V. Sick

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Gasoline fuel deposited on the fuel injector tip has been identified as a significant source of particulate emissions at some operating conditions of gasoline direct-injection engines. This work proposes simplified conceptual understanding for mechanisms controlling injector tip wetting and tip drying in gasoline direct-injection engines. The objective of the work was to identify which physical mechanisms of tip wetting and drying were most important for the operating conditions and hardware considered and to relate the mechanisms to measurements of particulate number emissions. Trends for each of the physical processes were evaluated as a function of engine operating conditions such as engine speed, start of injection timing, engine load, fuel rail pressure, and coolant temperature. The effects of fuel injector geometries on the tip wetting and drying mechanisms were also considered. Several mechanisms of injector tip wetting were represented with the conceptual understanding including wide plume wetting, vortex droplet wetting, fuel dribble wetting, and fuel condensation wetting. The main tip drying mechanism considered was single-phase evaporation. Using the conceptual understanding for tip wetting and drying mechanisms that were created in this work, the effects of engine operating conditions and fuel injector geometries on the mechanisms were compared with experimental results for particulate number. The results indicate that measured particulate number was increased by increasing injected fuel mass. Increasing injected fuel mass was suspected to increase tip wetting via wide plume wetting and vortex droplet wetting mechanisms. Particulate number was also observed to increase with hole length. Longer hole length was suspected to result in higher tip wetting via vortex droplet and fuel dribble wetting mechanisms. Longer timescale was found to decrease particulate number emissions. Lower speeds and early injection timings increased the timescale. Similarly, higher coolant temperature decreased particulate number. The coolant temperature influenced tip temperature resulting in higher tip drying.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2035-2053
Number of pages19
JournalInternational Journal of Engine Research
Volume22
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2021

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© IMechE 2020.

Keywords

  • Tip wetting
  • direct fuel injection
  • gasoline
  • particulate emissions
  • tip drying

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Automotive Engineering
  • Aerospace Engineering
  • Ocean Engineering
  • Mechanical Engineering

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