Abstract

<div>The notable increase in combustion noise in the 7–10 kHz band has become an issue in the development of pre-chamber jet ignition combustion gasoline engines that aim for enhanced thermal efficiency. Combustion noise in such a high-frequency band is often an issue in diesel engine development and is known to be due to resonance in the combustion chamber. However, there are few cases of it becoming a serious issue in gasoline engines, and effective countermeasures have not been established. The authors therefore decided to elucidate the mechanism of high-frequency combustion noise generation specific to this engine, and to investigate effective countermeasures. As the first step, in order to analyze the combustion chamber resonance modes of this engine in detail, calculation analysis using a finite element model and experimental modal analysis using an acoustic excitation speaker were conducted. As a result, it was found that there are two combustion chamber resonance modes in the 7–10 kHz band, both of which affect the high-frequency oscillation of the in-cylinder pressure. Both resonant modes have mode shapes that form a single nodal plane in the diametrical direction including the central axis of the cylinder, but the orientations of those nodal planes differ by 90 degrees. In addition, the two resonance frequencies are influenced by not only the bore diameter, temperature, and heat capacity ratio, but also the spatial shape of the combustion chamber. Therefore, when the piston descends and the spatial shape of the combustion chamber changes, the resonance frequencies change as well.</div>

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call