2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2006.11.011
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The effects of tumble and swirl flows on flame propagation in a four-valve S.I. engine

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Cited by 107 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…shown that an increase in turbulence due to intake-generated swirl and tumble in SI engines increases flame speed [85,86,88,89,92]. These studies also demonstrated a strong relationship between engine speed and flame speed, with Lancaster et al [88] finding that flame speed nearly doubled when increasing the speed of a CFR engine from 1000rpm to 2000rpm.…”
Section: Fired Enginementioning
confidence: 48%
“…shown that an increase in turbulence due to intake-generated swirl and tumble in SI engines increases flame speed [85,86,88,89,92]. These studies also demonstrated a strong relationship between engine speed and flame speed, with Lancaster et al [88] finding that flame speed nearly doubled when increasing the speed of a CFR engine from 1000rpm to 2000rpm.…”
Section: Fired Enginementioning
confidence: 48%
“…Lower bore-to-stroke ratios favor high tumble generation in modern SI LDVs, which ensures more complete in-cylinder mixing (Mattarelli et al, 2013). Therefore, the reductions in bore-to-stroke ratios suggest an attempt by SI engine designers to reduce emissions and increase efficiencies (Lee, Bae, & Kang, 2007).…”
Section: Engine Geometrymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some results related to the isolated or synergic effect of squish and swirl on flame propagation in various combustion chamber layouts are already analyzed and published [1,2] but results concerning the isolated or combined effect of the third type of organized flow i.e. tumble are relatively less presented and sometimes ambiguous [3,4]. For instance some authors [5] intake valve configurations and found that when both inlet valves are opened no defined tumble flow structure was created rendering quick vortices dissipation before BDC.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%