Abstract

ABSTRACT Thermal stratification may switch the combustion mode from deflagration to spontaneous (auto-ignition) in spark-ignition engines leading to knock. Despite the available numerical and experimental works, an analytical and systematic method on the role of local thermal stratification on the combustion mode is still missing. Particularly, the effects of heat diffusion before ignition in negative temperature coefficient (NTC) chemistry of gasoline surrogates are typically ignored. In this study, an a-priori diagnostics tool is provided to separate the deflagration and auto-ignition combustion modes by considering the diffusion effects, based on two parameters: stratification wavelength () and amplitude (). The diagnostics tool is an extension of Zeldovich’s theory to transient problems by solving the diffusion equation and considering the flame and ignition timescales. It is found that 1) The theory is valid against one-dimensional numerical simulations under different average temperatures and pressures. 2) NTC chemistry promotes spontaneous ignition at both low and high pressures. 3) In the presence of NTC chemistry, the transition region between the two combustion modes is broadened. A third blended mode is observed (spontaneous ignition assisted flame) with front speeds . 4) Finally, estimation of the knock propensity from the generated maps is related to the surrogates’ octane sensitivities.

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