The Flow Characteristics of a Piston-Cylinder Assembly with an Off-Centre, Open Port
- 1 June 1980
- journal article
- other
- Published by SAGE Publications in Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers
- Vol. 194 (1) , 291-299
- https://doi.org/10.1243/pime_proc_1980_194_035_02
Abstract
Laser-Doppler anemometry has been used to measure the mean and r.m.s. values of the velocity components of the flow in a reciprocating assembly containing an off-centre, open port in the cylinder head and a flat piston. The port was inclined at an angle of 60° to the head and gave rise to a three-dimensional flow with no significant compression. The rotational speed was 200 rev/min, ensuring fully turbulent flow. The measurements were restricted to the axial and circumferential velocity components and were made on three radial planes in order to describe the flow in sufficient detail. The results are presented in the form of radial profiles and vector diagrams in both the axial and cross-stream planes. The main flow pattern on the intake stroke is of the same general shape as that previously obtained with a symmetric port, a large vortex occupying the space bounded by the indrawn jet with a much smaller vortex in the corner between the cylinder head and wall. These vortices are however no longer symmetrical about the cylinder axis, but vary in both size and intensity with circumferential position. In the cross-stream plane, the primary vortex is characterized by the presence of a stress-induced swirling motion on either side of the plane of symmetry with velocities significantly greater than the circumferential velocity of the jet. At mid-stroke, these vortices rotate counter to the jet, but at 144° ATDC, the direction of rotation reverses over part of the length of the vortex and is in the same sense as the jet motion. On the exhaust stroke, the flow patterns are relatively simple with quasi-parallel axial flow and little swirl until the port is approached, when the outgoing jet accelerates and begins to rotate in a direction opposite to its motion on the intake stroke.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- The creation and destruction of vortices in unsteady flowsLetters in Heat and Mass Transfer, 1980
- Turbulent Flow Measurements by Laser-Doppler Anemometry in Motored Piston-Cylinder AssembliesJournal of Fluids Engineering, 1979
- Flow Visualization Study of the Intake Process of an Internal Combustion EngineSAE International Journal of Advances and Current Practices in Mobility, 1979
- Axisymmetric Flow in a Motored Reciprocating EngineProceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, 1978
- Mapping of Airflow Patterns in Engines with Induction SwirlSAE International Journal of Advances and Current Practices in Mobility, 1966