Litcius/Paper detail

Time-resolved 3D imaging of two-phase fluid flow inside a steel fuel injector using synchrotron X-ray tomography

Aniket Tekawade, Brandon Sforzo, Katarzyna Matusik, Kamel Fezzaa, Alan Kastengren, Christopher F. Powell

2020Scientific Reports42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The multiphase flow inside a diesel injection nozzle is imaged using synchrotron X-rays from the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory. Through acquisitions performed at several viewing angles and subsequent tomographic reconstruction, in-situ 3D visualization is achieved for the first time inside a steel injector at engine-like operating conditions. The morphology of the internal flow reveals strong flow separation and vapor-filled cavities (cavitation), the degree of which correlates with the nozzle's asymmetric inlet corner profile. Micron-scale surface features, which are artifacts of manufacturing, are shown to influence the morphology of the resulting liquid-gas interface. The data obtained at 0.1 ms time resolution exposes transient flow features and the flow development timescales are shown to be correlated with in-situ imaging of the fuel injector's hydraulically-actuated valve (needle). As more than 98.5% of the X-ray photon flux is attenuated within the steel injector body itself, we are posed with a unique challenge for imaging the flow within. Time-resolved imaging under these low-light conditions is achieved by exploiting both the refractive and absorptive properties of X-ray photons. The data-processing strategy converted these images with a signal-to-noise ratio of ~ 10 into a meaningful dataset for understanding internal flow and cavitation in a nozzle of diameter 200 μm enclosed within 1-2 millimeters of steel.

Topics & Concepts

NozzleSynchrotronInjectorAdvanced Photon SourceMaterials scienceCavitationTomographyOpticsFlow visualizationFlow (mathematics)Tomographic reconstructionMechanicsPhysicsParticle acceleratorBeam (structure)ThermodynamicsNuclear Physics and ApplicationsLaser-Plasma Interactions and DiagnosticsAdvanced X-ray Imaging Techniques