On the transcritical mixing of fuels at diesel engine conditions

[Display omitted] •We observed microscopic fuel droplets transitioning to supercritical fluid.•A conceptual model and criteria for the transition to diffusive mixing are proposed.•Surface tension and primary atomization remain important features of diesel mixing.•Transition to diffusive mixing regim...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Fuel (Guildford) Vol. 208; pp. 535 - 548
Main Authors: Crua, Cyril, Manin, Julien, Pickett, Lyle M.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Kidlington Elsevier Ltd 15-11-2017
Elsevier BV
Elsevier
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Summary:[Display omitted] •We observed microscopic fuel droplets transitioning to supercritical fluid.•A conceptual model and criteria for the transition to diffusive mixing are proposed.•Surface tension and primary atomization remain important features of diesel mixing.•Transition to diffusive mixing regime is driven by gas pressure and temperature.•Timescales and fluid morphology for diffusive mixing are driven by fuel properties. Whilst the physics of both classical evaporation and supercritical fluid mixing are reasonably well characterized and understood in isolation, little is known about the transition from one to the other in the context of liquid fuel systems. The lack of experimental data for microscopic droplets at realistic operating conditions impedes the development of phenomenological and numerical models. To address this issue we performed systematic measurements using high-speed long-distance microscopy, for three single-component fuels (n-heptane, n-dodecane, n-hexadecane), into gas at elevated temperatures (700–1200K) and pressures (2–11MPa). We describe these high-speed visualizations and the time evolution of the transition from liquid droplet to fuel vapour at the microscopic level. The measurements show that the classical atomization and vaporisation processes do shift to one where surface tension forces diminish with increasing pressure and temperature, but the transition to diffusive mixing does not occur instantaneously when the fuel enters the chamber. Rather, subcritical liquid structures exhibit surface tension in the near-nozzle region and then, after time surrounded by the hot ambient gas and fuel vapour, undergo a transition to a dense miscible fluid. Although there was clear evidence of surface tension and primary atomization for n-dodecane and n-hexadecane for a period of time at all the above conditions, n-heptane appeared to produce a supercritical fluid from the nozzle outlet when injected at the most elevated conditions (1200K, 10MPa). This demonstrates that the time taken by a droplet to transition to diffusive mixing depends on the pressure and temperature of the gas surrounding the droplet as well as the fuel properties. We summarise our observations into a phenomenological model which describes the morphological evolution and transition of microscopic droplets from classical evaporation through a transitional mixing regime and towards diffusive mixing, as a function of operating conditions. We provide criteria for these regime transitions as reduced pressure–temperature correlations, revealing the conditions where transcritical mixing is important to diesel fuel spray mixing.
Bibliography:SAND-2018-9880J
AC04-94AL85000; EP/K020528/1; EP/M009424/1
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
USDOE National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA)
USDOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE), Vehicle Technologies Office (EE-3V)
ISSN:0016-2361
1873-7153
DOI:10.1016/j.fuel.2017.06.091