Abstract

The present study is aimed at numerically investigating the effect of in-cylinder charge motion on mixture preparation, combustion and emission formation in a high-speed direct-injection diesel engine. Previous investigations have shown that different valve-lift strategies nominally lead to similar in-cylinder filling and global swirl levels. However, significant differences in engine-out emissions, especially soot emission, give rise to the assumption that the flow structure and local differences of the swirl motion distribution have a noticeable effect on emission behaviour. In this work, different swirl generation strategies applying different intake valve actuation schemes are numerically investigated by applying transient in-cylinder computational fluid dynamic simulations using both the Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes model and the multi-cycle large-eddy simulation approach. Two operating points within the operating range of current diesel passenger cars during federal test procedure 75 and new European driving cycles are simulated. The injection and combustion simulations of different valve strategies show that an in-homogeneity in the in-cylinder flow structure leads to a significant increase in soot emissions, and agree with the observed trends of corresponding experimental investigations.

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