This is the unspecified version of the paper.This version of the publication may differ from the final published version. A computational fluid dynamics cavitation model based on the Eulerian-Lagrangian approach and suitable for hole-type diesel injector nozzles is presented and discussed.
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Modelling of cavitation in diesel injector nozzles E. G I A N N A D A K I S, M. G A V A I S E S A N D C. A R C O U M A N I SThe model accounts for a number of primary physical processes pertinent to cavitation bubbles, which are integrated into the stochastic framework of the model. Its predictive capability has been assessed through comparison of the calculated onset and development of cavitation inside diesel nozzle holes against experimental data obtained in real-size and enlarged models of single-and multi-hole nozzles. For the real-size nozzle geometry, high-speed cavitation images obtained under realistic injection pressures are compared against model predictions, whereas for the largescale nozzle, validation data include images from a charge-coupled device (CCD) camera, computed tomography (CT) measurements of the liquid volume fraction and laser Doppler velocimetry (LDV) measurements of the liquid mean and root mean square (r.m.s.) velocities at different cavitation numbers (CN) and two needle lifts, corresponding to different cavitation regimes inside the injection hole. Overall, and on the basis of this validation exercise, it can be argued that cavitation modelling has reached a stage of maturity, where it can usefully identify many of the cavitation structures present in internal nozzle flows and their dependence on nozzle design and flow conditions.
A prototype piezo-driven diesel injector has been developed and characterized in terms of measured flowrate, predicted cavitating nozzle hole flow distribution, and visual spray development. Results are compared with those obtained for a conventional solenoid-driven diesel injector equipped with the same micro-sac multi-hole injection nozzle. The response time and the needle lift trace for both injectors have been predicted for injection pressures up to 1300 bar using a hydraulic simulation model. Mie spray images obtained using a high-speed camera and utilizing diffusion illumination light, have allowed estimation of the spray tip penetration and spray cone angle under a variety of back pressures. The experimental results show that the piezo-driven injector produces longer spray tip penetration and smaller spray cone angle. This has been supported by CFD simulations of the internal nozzle hole cavitating flow obtained using the transient needle profile of the solenoid- and the piezo-driven injectors. Model predictions suggest an increase in the fuel exit momentum of the piezo-driven nozzle during the opening phase of the needle, relative to those of the solenoid-driven one.
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