Guillaume De Sercey
University of Brighton
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Featured researches published by Guillaume De Sercey.
SAE 2001 World Congress | 2001
Martin Gold; J. Stokes; Robert Morgan; Morgan Heikal; Guillaume De Sercey; Steve Begg
For optimum efficiency, the direct injection (DI) gasoline engine requires two operating modes to cover the full load/speed map. For lower loads and speeds, stratified charge operation can be used, while homogeneous charge is required for high loads and speeds. This paper has focused its attention on the latter of these modes, where the performance is highly dependent on the quality of the fuel spray, evaporation and the air-fuel mixture preparation. Results of quantitative and qualitative Laser Induced Fluorescence (LIF) measurements are presented, together with shadow-graph spray imaging, made within an optically accessed DI gasoline engine. These are compared with previously acquired air flow measurements, at various injection timings, and with engine performance and emissions data obtained in a fired single cylinder non-optical engine, having an identical cylinder head and piston crown geometry.
ILASS2017 - 28th European Conference on Liquid Atomization and Spray Systems | 2017
J. Turner; Dan Sykes; Guillaume De Sercey; V. Stetsyuk; Martin Gold; Richard Pearson; Cyril Crua
In a fuel injector at the end of the injection, the needle descent and the rapid pressure drop in the nozzle leads to discharge of large, slow-moving liquid structures. This unwanted discharge is often referred as fuel ‘dribble’ and results in near-nozzle surface wetting, creating fuel-rich regions that are believed to contribute to unburnt hydrocarbon emissions. Subsequent fluid overspill occurs during the pressure drop in the expansion stroke when residual fluid inside the nozzle is displaced by the expansion of trapped gases as the pressure through the orifices is equalised, leading to further surface wetting. There have been several recent advancements in the characterisation of these near nozzle fluid processes, yet there is a lack of quantitative data relating the operating conditions and hardware parameters to the quantity of overspill and surface-bound fuel. In this study, methods for quantifying nozzle tip wetting after the end of injection were developed, to gain a better understanding of the underlying processes and to study the influence of engine operating conditions. A high-speed camera with a longdistance microscope was used to visualise fluid behaviour at the microscopic scale during, and after, the end of injection. In order to measure the nozzle tip temperature, a production injector was used which was instrumented with a type K thermocouple near one of the orifices. Image post-processing techniques were developed to track both the initial fuel coverage area on the nozzle surface, as well as the temporal evolution and spreading rate of surface-bound fluid. The conclusion presents an analysis of the area of fuel coverage and the rate of spreading and how these depend on injection pressure, in-cylinder pressure and in-cylinder temperature. It was observed that for this VCO injector, the rate of spreading correlates with the initial area of fuel coverage measured after the end of injection, suggesting that the main mechanism for nozzle wetting is through the impingement of dribble onto the nozzle. However, occasional observations of the expansion of orifice-trapped gas were made that lead to a significant increase in nozzle wetting.
international conference on industrial informatics | 2016
Donato Pirozzi; Vittorio Scarano; Steven Begg; Guillaume De Sercey; Andrew Fish; Andrew Harvey
This paper introduces a minimum viable software product to filter large datasets of engine data recorded during laboratory experiments of combustion engines. The aim is to support analysts in the identification and analysis of specific physical phenomenon within hours of recorded engine experimental data. Specifically, the tool has been designed considering the use case of identifying Low Speed Pre-Ignition events. This work describes the tools graphical user interface and its scalable architecture based on mainstream web and big-data technologies as well as the practical application to pre-ignition events identification. The paper provides details on the architectures performance, providing evidence of its scalability by increasing the number of available computing workers.
Archive | 2012
Cyril Crua; Guillaume De Sercey; Morgan Heikal; Martin Gold
Journal of Visualization | 2016
M. I. Siddiqui; Shahzad Munir; Morgan Heikal; Guillaume De Sercey; A. Rashid A. Aziz; Sarat C. Dass
Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology | 2015
Shahzad Munir; M. I. Siddiqui; Morgan Heikal; Abdul Rashid Abdul Aziz; Guillaume De Sercey
Annual Conference on Liquid Atomization and Spray Systems | 2014
Mansour Al Qubeissi; Sergei Sazhin; Guillaume De Sercey; Cyril Crua
Archive | 2013
Cyril Crua; Guillaume De Sercey; Martin Gold; Morgan Heikal
Archive | 2004
Guillaume De Sercey
Archive | 2009
Steven Begg; Guillaume De Sercey; Morgan Heikal; R. Gilchrist; Y. Noda; Y. Mamiya