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Modeling of Heating and Evaporation of FACE I Gasoline Fuel and its Surrogates
Author(s) -
Ahmed Elwardany,
Jihad Badra,
Jaeheon Sim,
Muneeb Khurshid,
S. Mani Sarathy,
Hong G. Im
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
sae technical papers on cd-rom/sae technical paper series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.295
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1083-4958
pISSN - 0148-7191
DOI - 10.4271/2016-01-0878
Subject(s) - gasoline , face (sociological concept) , evaporation , environmental science , automotive engineering , computer science , waste management , engineering , meteorology , sociology , physics , social science
The US Department of Energy has formulated different gasoline fuels called ''Fuels for Advanced Combustion Engines (FACE)'' to standardize their compositions. FACE I is a low octane number gasoline fuel with research octane number (RON) of approximately 70. The detailed hydrocarbon analysis (DHA) of FACE I shows that it contains 33 components. This large number of components cannot be handled in fuel spray simulation where thousands of droplets are directly injected in combustion chamber. These droplets are to be heated, broken-up, collided and evaporated simultaneously. Heating and evaporation of single droplet FACE I fuel was investigated. The heating and evaporation model accounts for the effects of finite thermal conductivity, finite liquid diffusivity and recirculation inside the droplet, referred to as the effective thermal conductivity/effective diffusivity (ETC/ED) model. The temporal variations of the liquid mass fractions of the droplet components were used to characterize the evaporation process. Components with similar evaporation characteristics were merged together. A representative component was initially chosen based on the highest initial mass fraction. Three 6 components surrogates, Surrogate 1-3, that match evaporation characteristics of FACE I have been formulated without keeping same mass fractions of different hydrocarbon types. Another two surrogates (Surrogate 4 and 5) were considered keeping same hydrocarbon type concentrations. A distillation based surrogate that matches measured distillation profile was proposed. The calculated molar mass, hydrogen-to-carbon (H/C) ratio and RON of Surrogate 4 and distillation based one are close to those of FACE I

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