Title of article :
Flow effects due to pulsation in an internal combustion engine exhaust port
Author/Authors :
Semlitsch، نويسنده , , Bernhard and Wang، نويسنده , , Yue and Mih?escu، نويسنده , , Mihai، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
17
From page :
520
To page :
536
Abstract :
In an internal combustion engine, the residual energy remaining after combustion in the exhaust gasses can be partially recovered by a downstream arranged device. The exhaust port represents the passage guiding the exhaust gasses from the combustion chamber to the energy recovering device, e.g. a turbocharger. Thus, energy losses in the course of transmission shall be reduced as much as possible. However, in one-dimensional engine models used for engine design, the exhaust port is reduced to its discharge coefficient, which is commonly measured under constant inflow conditions neglecting engine-like flow pulsation. In this present study, the influence of different boundary conditions on the energy losses and flow development during the exhaust stroke are analyzed numerically regarding two cases, i.e. using simple constant and pulsating boundary conditions. The compressible flow in an exhaust port geometry of a truck engine is investigated using three-dimensional Large Eddy Simulations (LES). The results contrast the importance of applying engine-like boundary conditions in order to estimate accurately the flow induced losses and the discharge coefficient of the exhaust port. The instantaneous flow field alters significantly when pulsating boundary conditions are applied. Thus, the induced losses by the unsteady flow motion and the secondary flow motion are increased with inflow pulsations. The discharge coefficient decreased about 2 % with flow pulsation. A modal flow decomposition method, i.e. Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD), is used to analyze the coherent structures induced with the particular inflow and outflow conditions. The differences in the flow field for different boundary conditions suggest to incorporate a modeling parameter accounting for the quality of the flow at the turbocharger turbine inlet in one-dimensional simulations.
Keywords :
internal combustion engines , Fuel economy , Exhaust gas energy , Turbocharged engines , Automotive exhaust systems
Journal title :
Energy Conversion and Management
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
Energy Conversion and Management
Record number :
2337980
Link To Document :
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