Study of the momentum coupling between liquid fuel and the chamber gas during injection with a novel dense spray LES approach
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We report on the development of a model framework to simulate spray flames from direct injection of liquid fuel into an automotive cylinder engine. The approach to this challenging problem was twofold. On one hand, the interface-capturing multiphase computer code CLSVOF was used to resolve the rapidly evolving, topologically convoluted interfaces that separate the liquid fuel from the gas at injection: the main challenges to address were the treatment of the high-pressure flow inside the injector, which required the inclusion of compressibility effects; and the computational framework necessary to achieve a Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) level of accuracy. On the other hand, the scales of turbulent fuel mixing and combustion in the cylinder engine were ad- dressed by the high-performance computer code RAPTOR within the Large Eddy Simulation (LES) framework. To couple the two computational methods, a novel methodology was developed to describe the dense spray dynamics in Raptor from the assigned spray size distribution and dispersion angle derived from CLSVOF. This new, independent Eulerian Multi-Fluid (EMF) spray module was developed based on the kinetic description of a system of droplets as a pressure-less gas; as we will show, it was demonstrated to efficiently render the near-nozzle coupling in mass, momentum, and energy with the carrier gas phase.
We report on the development of a model framework to simulate spray flames from direct injection of liquid fuel into an automotive cylinder engine. The approach to this challenging problem was twofold. On one hand, the interface-capturing multiphase computer code CLSVOF was used to resolve the rapidly evolving, topologically convoluted interfaces that separate the liquid fuel from the gas at injection: the main challenges to address were the treatment of the high-pressure flow inside the injector, which required the inclusion of compressibility effects; and the computational framework necessary to achieve a Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) level of accuracy. On the other hand, the scales of turbulent fuel mixing and combustion in the cylinder engine were addressed by the high-performance computer code RAPTOR within the Large Eddy Simulation (LES) framework. To couple the two computational methods, a novel methodology was developed to de- scribe the dense spray dynamics in Raptor from the assigned spray size distribution and dispersion angle derived from CLSVOF. This new, independent Eulerian Multi-Fluid (EMF) spray module was developed based on the kinetic description of a system of droplets as a pressure-less gas; as we will show, it was demonstrated to efficiently render the near-nozzle coupling in mass, momentum, and energy with the carrier gas phase.
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ICLASS 2015 - 13th International Conference on Liquid Atomization and Spray Systems
Kinetic theory is often used as a framework to derive moment equations for sprays, with considerable success in the case of a dilute spray in a fully resolved (DNS) gas field. In the prospect of computing LES of atomization with a spray solver, a formalism that accounts for the non-linear interaction between high-loading regions and turbulence at the subfilter level is needed. So we first introduce a kinetic theory frame, where the phase space is extended to space-filtered spray quantities. This rigorous formalism is a comprehensive baseline but it requires closures. Second we quantify segregation, through a priori DNS, as a relevant space-filtered quantity to account for the spray’s subfilter behavior. Third we discuss an assumption on the subfilter spray structures which allows the closure of drag, heating, and collisions from the sole knowledge of segregation.