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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur Andrea Emilio Catania
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Affiner la rechercheHydraulic circuit design rules to remove the dependence of the injected fuel amount on dwell time in multijet CR systems / Baratta, Mirko in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of fluids engineering, Vol. 130 N° 12 (Décembre 2008)
[article]
in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of fluids engineering > Vol. 130 N° 12 (Décembre 2008) . - 13 p
Titre : Hydraulic circuit design rules to remove the dependence of the injected fuel amount on dwell time in multijet CR systems Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Baratta, Mirko, Auteur ; Andrea Emilio Catania, Auteur ; Alessandro Ferrari, Auteur Année de publication : 2009 Article en page(s) : 13 p Note générale : Fluids engineering Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Oscillations; pressure; fuels; waves; ejectors; pipes; rails; design Résumé : In multijet common rail (CR) systems, the capability to manage multiple injections with full flexibility in the choice of the dwell time (DT) between consecutive solenoid current pulses is one of the most relevant design targets. Pressure oscillations triggered by the nozzle closure after each injection event induce disturbances in the amount of fuel injected during subsequent injections. This causes a remarkable dispersion in the mass of fuel injected when DT is varied. The effects of the hydraulic circuit layout of CR systems were investigated with the objective to provide design rules for reducing the dependence of the injected fuel amount on DT. A multijet CR of the latest solenoid-type generation was experimentally analyzed at different operating conditions on a high performance test bench. The considerable influence that the injector-supplying pipe dimensions can exert on the frequency and amplitude of the injection-induced pressure oscillations was widely investigated and a physical explanation of cause-effect relationships was found by energetics considerations, starting from experimental tests. A parametric study was performed to identify the best geometrical configurations of the injector-supplying pipe so as to minimize pressure oscillations. The analysis was carried out with the aid of a previously developed simple zero-dimensional model, allowing the evaluation of pressure-wave frequencies as functions of main system geometric data. Pipes of innovative aspect ratio and capable of halving the amplitude of injected-volume fluctuations versus DT were proposed. Purposely designed orifices were introduced into the rail-pipe connectors of a commercial automotive injection system, so as to damp pressure oscillations. Their effects on multiple-injection performance were experimentally determined as being sensible. The resulting reduction in the injector fueling capacity was quantified. It increased by lowering the orifice diameter. The application of the orifice to the injector inlet-pipe with innovative aspect ratio led to a hydraulic circuit solution, which coupled active and passive damping of the pressure waves and minimized the disturbances in injected fuel volumes. Finally, the influence of the rail capacity on pressure-wave dynamics was studied and the possibility of severely reducing the rail volume (up to one-fourth) was assessed. This can lead to a system not only with reduced overall sizes but also with a prompter dynamic response during engine transients. En ligne : http://fluidsengineering.asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/Issue.aspx?issueID=27349 [...] [article] Hydraulic circuit design rules to remove the dependence of the injected fuel amount on dwell time in multijet CR systems [texte imprimé] / Baratta, Mirko, Auteur ; Andrea Emilio Catania, Auteur ; Alessandro Ferrari, Auteur . - 2009 . - 13 p.
Fluids engineering
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of fluids engineering > Vol. 130 N° 12 (Décembre 2008) . - 13 p
Mots-clés : Oscillations; pressure; fuels; waves; ejectors; pipes; rails; design Résumé : In multijet common rail (CR) systems, the capability to manage multiple injections with full flexibility in the choice of the dwell time (DT) between consecutive solenoid current pulses is one of the most relevant design targets. Pressure oscillations triggered by the nozzle closure after each injection event induce disturbances in the amount of fuel injected during subsequent injections. This causes a remarkable dispersion in the mass of fuel injected when DT is varied. The effects of the hydraulic circuit layout of CR systems were investigated with the objective to provide design rules for reducing the dependence of the injected fuel amount on DT. A multijet CR of the latest solenoid-type generation was experimentally analyzed at different operating conditions on a high performance test bench. The considerable influence that the injector-supplying pipe dimensions can exert on the frequency and amplitude of the injection-induced pressure oscillations was widely investigated and a physical explanation of cause-effect relationships was found by energetics considerations, starting from experimental tests. A parametric study was performed to identify the best geometrical configurations of the injector-supplying pipe so as to minimize pressure oscillations. The analysis was carried out with the aid of a previously developed simple zero-dimensional model, allowing the evaluation of pressure-wave frequencies as functions of main system geometric data. Pipes of innovative aspect ratio and capable of halving the amplitude of injected-volume fluctuations versus DT were proposed. Purposely designed orifices were introduced into the rail-pipe connectors of a commercial automotive injection system, so as to damp pressure oscillations. Their effects on multiple-injection performance were experimentally determined as being sensible. The resulting reduction in the injector fueling capacity was quantified. It increased by lowering the orifice diameter. The application of the orifice to the injector inlet-pipe with innovative aspect ratio led to a hydraulic circuit solution, which coupled active and passive damping of the pressure waves and minimized the disturbances in injected fuel volumes. Finally, the influence of the rail capacity on pressure-wave dynamics was studied and the possibility of severely reducing the rail volume (up to one-fourth) was assessed. This can lead to a system not only with reduced overall sizes but also with a prompter dynamic response during engine transients. En ligne : http://fluidsengineering.asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/Issue.aspx?issueID=27349 [...]