The sensitivity of diesel engine performance to fuel injection parameters at various operating points

This thesis describes research undertaken to establish the advantages and disadvantages of using high pressure common rail fuel injection systems with multiple injection capabilities. The areas covered are detailed as follows. Oscillations in the rail pressure due to the opening of the injector ca...

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Main Author: Gambrill, Richard
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11253/
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author Gambrill, Richard
author_facet Gambrill, Richard
author_sort Gambrill, Richard
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis describes research undertaken to establish the advantages and disadvantages of using high pressure common rail fuel injection systems with multiple injection capabilities. The areas covered are detailed as follows. Oscillations in the rail pressure due to the opening of the injector can affect the quantity of fuel injected in subsequent injection events. The source of these oscillations has been investigated. A method of damping or reducing the oscillations has been defined and was applied. This successfully reduced the level of unpredictability of the quantity of injected fuel in subsequent injection events. A relationship between needle lift, injection pressure and the quantity of fuel injected was established. The effects of fuel injection parameters (main injection timing, split main separation and ratio) and engine operating parameters (boost pressure and EGR level) on emissions formations and fuel economy have been investigated at five operating points. Design of Experiments techniques were applied to investigate the effect of variables on pollutant emissions and fuel consumption. The sensitivity and linearity of responses to parameter changes have been analysed to assess the extent to which linear extrapolations will describe changes in smoke number (FSN) and oxides of nitrogen (NOx); and which parameters are the least constricting when it comes to adjustments of parameter settings on the FSN-NOx map. Comparing results for split main and single injection strategies at the five operating conditions shows that split main injection can be exploited to reduce NOx or FSN values at all conditions and both NOx and FSN simultaneously at high load conditions. The influence of changing engine speed and brake mean effective pressure (BMEP) on FSN and NOx emissions with given fixed values of parameter settings has been investigated. This established how much of the operating map could be covered by discrete calibration settings. Finally the variation in parameter settings required to maintain fixed FSN and NOx values across the operating map, near the optimum trade-off on the FSN-NOx map, was analysed. Combining the information gained from the individual investigations carried out highlighted some techniques that can be used to simplify the calibration task across the operating map, while also reducing the amount of experimental testing required.
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spelling nottingham-112532025-02-28T11:12:16Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11253/ The sensitivity of diesel engine performance to fuel injection parameters at various operating points Gambrill, Richard This thesis describes research undertaken to establish the advantages and disadvantages of using high pressure common rail fuel injection systems with multiple injection capabilities. The areas covered are detailed as follows. Oscillations in the rail pressure due to the opening of the injector can affect the quantity of fuel injected in subsequent injection events. The source of these oscillations has been investigated. A method of damping or reducing the oscillations has been defined and was applied. This successfully reduced the level of unpredictability of the quantity of injected fuel in subsequent injection events. A relationship between needle lift, injection pressure and the quantity of fuel injected was established. The effects of fuel injection parameters (main injection timing, split main separation and ratio) and engine operating parameters (boost pressure and EGR level) on emissions formations and fuel economy have been investigated at five operating points. Design of Experiments techniques were applied to investigate the effect of variables on pollutant emissions and fuel consumption. The sensitivity and linearity of responses to parameter changes have been analysed to assess the extent to which linear extrapolations will describe changes in smoke number (FSN) and oxides of nitrogen (NOx); and which parameters are the least constricting when it comes to adjustments of parameter settings on the FSN-NOx map. Comparing results for split main and single injection strategies at the five operating conditions shows that split main injection can be exploited to reduce NOx or FSN values at all conditions and both NOx and FSN simultaneously at high load conditions. The influence of changing engine speed and brake mean effective pressure (BMEP) on FSN and NOx emissions with given fixed values of parameter settings has been investigated. This established how much of the operating map could be covered by discrete calibration settings. Finally the variation in parameter settings required to maintain fixed FSN and NOx values across the operating map, near the optimum trade-off on the FSN-NOx map, was analysed. Combining the information gained from the individual investigations carried out highlighted some techniques that can be used to simplify the calibration task across the operating map, while also reducing the amount of experimental testing required. 2004 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11253/1/417189.pdf Gambrill, Richard (2004) The sensitivity of diesel engine performance to fuel injection parameters at various operating points. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Fuel injection systems Diesel motors Motor performance
spellingShingle Fuel injection systems
Diesel motors
Motor performance
Gambrill, Richard
The sensitivity of diesel engine performance to fuel injection parameters at various operating points
title The sensitivity of diesel engine performance to fuel injection parameters at various operating points
title_full The sensitivity of diesel engine performance to fuel injection parameters at various operating points
title_fullStr The sensitivity of diesel engine performance to fuel injection parameters at various operating points
title_full_unstemmed The sensitivity of diesel engine performance to fuel injection parameters at various operating points
title_short The sensitivity of diesel engine performance to fuel injection parameters at various operating points
title_sort sensitivity of diesel engine performance to fuel injection parameters at various operating points
topic Fuel injection systems
Diesel motors
Motor performance
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11253/