SAE Technical Paper Series 2013
DOI: 10.4271/2013-01-1610
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Evaluation of Some Important Boundary Conditions for Spray Measurements in a Constant Volume Combustion Chamber

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…The lowest bound of this length is experienced as the quenching distance, and it is a property of the mixture [11][12][13].The minimum ignition energy decreases with an increasing gap size until the gap size reaches the critical value, and, beyond this quenching distance, the minimum ignition energy remains nearly constant over a considerable range of the gap size [5,7,8,14]. The size of the spark kernel at which the rate of heat loss at its surface is precisely balanced by the rate of heat release throughout its volume [15][16][17].A larger spark gap requires greater voltage to go down the gap, an increase in gap width results in increased arc length more current is made along the spark to hold an almost constant voltage across it [6,7].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The lowest bound of this length is experienced as the quenching distance, and it is a property of the mixture [11][12][13].The minimum ignition energy decreases with an increasing gap size until the gap size reaches the critical value, and, beyond this quenching distance, the minimum ignition energy remains nearly constant over a considerable range of the gap size [5,7,8,14]. The size of the spark kernel at which the rate of heat loss at its surface is precisely balanced by the rate of heat release throughout its volume [15][16][17].A larger spark gap requires greater voltage to go down the gap, an increase in gap width results in increased arc length more current is made along the spark to hold an almost constant voltage across it [6,7].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ignition process requires a proper distance between the cathode and anode electrodes, and if they are located too close, although discharge takes place, the mixture does not ignite [8,9]. The lowest bound of this length is experienced as the quenching distance, and it is a property of the mixture [11][12][13].The minimum ignition energy decreases with an increasing gap size until the gap size reaches the critical value, and, beyond this quenching distance, the minimum ignition energy remains nearly constant over a considerable range of the gap size [5,7,8,14].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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