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Emission characteristics of modified inlet poppet valve
Author(s) -
G Mahesh,
Hiregoudar Yerrennagoudar,
R H M Somanath Swamy,
Sunny Kumar
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of physics. conference series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.21
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1742-6596
pISSN - 1742-6588
DOI - 10.1088/1742-6596/2054/1/012009
Subject(s) - inlet , diesel engine , nox , homogeneous charge compression ignition , exhaust gas recirculation , combustion chamber , automotive engineering , valve timing , four stroke engine , ignition system , cylinder , environmental science , internal combustion engine , combustion , materials science , mechanical engineering , engineering , chemistry , aerospace engineering , organic chemistry
In the case of a diesel engine, air is very important for increasing and decreasing engine parameters. On IC engines, air enters through an inlet valve passage, which is more critical. This is a promising combustion strategy for achieving homogeneity that combines the benefits of both SI and CI engines. Turbulence must be created in engines to achieve homogeneity, and as a result, swirl flow will be activated in the ignition chamber. In light of the stream properties of air streaming in different structures of the CI engine’s air inlet channel, many types are available to create swirl flow for enhancing engine efficiency and lowering emissions. The advantages of an HCCI engine is that it produces low NOx emissions by burning a lean mixture of charge. Working in cylinder with emission in exhaust gas are HC, CO, CO 2 and Nox of CI engine, this is based on chamber pressure, temperature, loss of heat transfer on chamber surfaces, and working in cylinder with HC, CO, CO 2 and Nox of CI engine. Changes to the inlet route must be performed to create turbulent conditions in order to improve IC engine characteristics. Turbulent will improve the uniformity of the air/fuel mixture at all ignition chamber entry points. This research is aimed at lowering emissions by modifying the inlet poppet valve of a four-stroke single-cylinder diesel engine. For modified inlet poppet valves of HC, CO for modified (masking) inlet poppet valve (4M), and CO 2 for modified (masking) inlet poppet valve (4M), emission levels are lowered (2M).

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