Modeling and Detailed Numerical Simulation of the Primary Breakup of a Gasoline Surrogate Jet under Non-Evaporative Operating Conditions
Bo Zhang, Stephane Popinet, Yue Ling

TL;DR
This study uses detailed numerical simulations to analyze the primary breakup of a gasoline surrogate jet under non-evaporative conditions, revealing azimuthal asymmetries and droplet size distributions influenced by injection angle.
Contribution
The paper introduces a modeling approach that incorporates a nonzero injection angle to better simulate primary breakup dynamics and droplet distributions in gasoline sprays.
Findings
Injection angle affects jet penetration and deflection.
Droplet size PDFs exhibit self-similar profiles across azimuthal angles.
Asymmetric breakup leads to azimuthal variation in droplet sizes.
Abstract
In the present study, detailed numerical simulations are performed to investigate the primary breakup of a gasoline surrogate jet under non-evaporative "Spray G" operating conditions. The Spray G injector and operating conditions, developed by the Engine Combustion Network (ECN), represent the early phase of spray-guided gasoline injection. To focus the computational resources on resolving the primary breakup, simplifications have been made on the injector geometry. The effect of the internal flow on the primary breakup is modeled by specifying a nonzero injection angle at the inlet. The nonzero injection angle results in an increase of the jet penetration speed and also a deflection of the liquid jet. A parametric study on the injection angle is performed, and the numerical results are compared to the experimental data to identify the injection angle that best represents the Spray G…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer · Combustion and flame dynamics · Plant Surface Properties and Treatments
