Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
241837 Progress in Energy and Combustion Science 2010 27 Pages PDF
Abstract

The impingement of fuel spray onto interposed surfaces in an IC engine, equipped either with a direct or an indirect injection system, is a fundamental issue affecting mixture preparation prior to combustion and, therefore, also affecting engine performance and pollutant emissions. In this context, the development of fuel injection systems relies on accurate knowledge of the fluid dynamic and thermal processes occurring during spray/wall interaction.Injection systems however, are very complex and the background physics requires fundamental studies, performed at simplified flow geometries. In particular, the impact of individual droplets has been extensively used to describe the behaviour of spray impact and to predict its outcome, despite the known fact that a spray does not behave exactly as a summation of individual droplets; then, researchers incorporate all the governing parameters. The present paper offers a critical review of the investigations reported in the literature on spray-wall impact relevant to IC engines, in an attempt to address the rationale of describing spray-wall interactions based on the knowledge of single droplet impacts.Moreover, although the review was first aimed at fuel-spray impingement in IC engines, it also became relevant to provide a systematization of the current state of the art, which can be useful to the scientific community involved with droplet and spray impingement phenomena.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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