Volume 28, Issue 11 pp. 977-1002
Research Article

Investigation of the temperature oscillations in the cylinder walls of a diesel engine with special reference to the limited cooled case

C. D. Rakopoulos

Corresponding Author

C. D. Rakopoulos

Internal Combustion Engines Laboratory, Thermal Engineering Section, Mechanical Engineering Department, National Technical University of Athens, 9 Heroon Polytechniou Street, Zografou Campus, Athens 15780, Greece

Internal Combustion Engines Laboratory, Thermal Engineering Section, Mechanical Engineering Department, National Technical University of Athens, 9 Heroon Polytechniou Street, Zografou Campus, Athens 15780, GreeceSearch for more papers by this author
K. A. Antonopoulos

K. A. Antonopoulos

Internal Combustion Engines Laboratory, Thermal Engineering Section, Mechanical Engineering Department, National Technical University of Athens, 9 Heroon Polytechniou Street, Zografou Campus, Athens 15780, Greece

Search for more papers by this author
D. C. Rakopoulos

D. C. Rakopoulos

Internal Combustion Engines Laboratory, Thermal Engineering Section, Mechanical Engineering Department, National Technical University of Athens, 9 Heroon Polytechniou Street, Zografou Campus, Athens 15780, Greece

Search for more papers by this author
E. G. Giakoumis

E. G. Giakoumis

Internal Combustion Engines Laboratory, Thermal Engineering Section, Mechanical Engineering Department, National Technical University of Athens, 9 Heroon Polytechniou Street, Zografou Campus, Athens 15780, Greece

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 04 June 2004
Citations: 23

Abstract

This work investigates the interesting phenomenon of the temperature (cyclic) oscillations in the combustion chamber walls of a diesel engine. For this purpose, a comprehensive simulation code of the thermodynamic cycle of the engine is developed taking into account both the closed and the open parts of it. The energy and state equations are applied, with appropriate combustion, gas heat transfer, and mass exchange with the atmosphere sub-models, to yield cylinder pressure, local temperatures and heat release histories as well as various performance parameters of the engine. The model is appropriately coupled to a wall periodic conduction model, which uses the gas temperature variation as boundary condition throughout the engine cycle after being treated by Fourier analysis techniques. It is calibrated against measurements, at various load and speed conditions, from an experimental work carried out on a direct injection (DI), naturally aspirated, four-stroke, diesel engine located at the authors' laboratory, which has been reported in detail previously. After gaining confidence into the predictive capabilities of the model, it is used to investigate the phenomenon further, thus providing insight into many interesting aspects of transient engine heat transfer, as far as the influence that engine wall material properties have on the values of cyclic temperature swings. These swings can take prohibitive values causing high wall thermal fatigue, when materials of specific technological interest such as thermal insulators (ceramics) are used, and may lead to deterioration in engine performance. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.