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Quantitative liquid and vapor distribution measurements in evaporating fuel sprays using laser-induced exciplex fluorescence

Todd D Fansler et al 2009 Meas. Sci. Technol. 20 125401 (13pp)   doi: 10.1088/0957-0233/20/12/125401  Help

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Todd D Fansler1, Michael C Drake1, Boguslaw Gajdeczko2,3, Isabell Düwel4,5, Wieland Koban4,6, Frank P Zimmermann4,7 and Christof Schulz4
1 Propulsion Systems Research Laboratory, General Motors Global Research & Development, 30500 Mound Road, Mail Code 480-106-252, Warren, MI 48090-9055, USA
2 Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering Department, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA
3 ASML, 77 Danbury Road, Wilton, CT 06897, USA
4 IVG, University of Duisburg-Essen, Lotharstrasse 1, 47057 Duisburg, Germany
5 PMDM GmbH, Auf Herdenen 10, 78052 Villingen-Schwenningen, Germany
6 BASF SE, GCT/H-L544, 67056 Ludwigshafen, Germany
7 Daimler AG, Department TP/PME, HPC 019-C207, D-70327 Stuttgart, Germany
E-mail: todd.d.fansler@gm.com

Abstract. Fully quantitative two-dimensional measurements of liquid- and vapor-phase fuel distributions (mass per unit volume) from high-pressure direct-injection gasoline injectors are reported for conditions of both slow and rapid vaporization in a heated, high-pressure spray chamber. The measurements employ the coevaporative gasoline-like fluorobenzene (FB)/diethylmethylamine (DEMA)/hexane exciplex tracer/fuel system. In contrast to most previous laser-induced exciplex-fluorescence (LIEF) experiments, the quantitative results here include regions in which liquid and vapor fuel coexist (e.g. near the injector exit). A unique aspect is evaluation of both vapor- and liquid-phase distributions at varying temperature and pressure using only in situ vapor-phase fluorescence calibration measurements at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. This approach draws on recent extensive measurements of the temperature-dependent spectroscopic properties of the FB–DEMA exciplex system, in particular on knowledge of the quantum efficiencies of the vapor-phase and liquid-phase (exciplex) fluorescence. In addition to procedures necessary for quantitative measurements, we discuss corrections for liquid–vapor crosstalk (liquid fluorescence that overlaps the vapor-fluorescence bandpass), the unknown local temperature due to vaporization-induced cooling, and laser-sheet attenuation by scattering and absorption.

Keywords: spray, exciplex, fluorescence, engine, combustion, optical

Print publication: Issue 12 (December 2009)
Received 19 May 2009, in final form 31 July 2009
Published 29 October 2009

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