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Featured researches published by Hideharu Ehara.


Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power-transactions of The Asme | 2012

Quick Response Fuel Injector for Direct-Injection Gasoline Engines

Motoyuki Abe; Noriyuki Maekawa; Yoshihito Yasukawa; Tohru Ishikawa; Yasuo Namaizawa; Hideharu Ehara

We developed a new injector for direct injection gasoline engines that reduce the exhaust emissions and help to reduce fuel consumption. The newly developed actuator in this injector has two features. One is a bounce-less valve closing mechanism, and the second is quick-response moving parts. The first feature, the bounce-less valve closing mechanism, can prevent ejecting a coarse droplet, which causes unburned gas emission. The new actuation mechanism realizes the bounce-less valve closing. We analyzed the valve motion and injection behavior. The second feature, the quick response actuator, achieves a smaller minimum injection quantity. This feature assists in reducing the fuel consumption under low load engine conditions. The closing delay time of the needle valve is the dominant factor of the minimum injection quantity because the injection quantity is controlled by the duration time of the valve opening. The new actuator movements can be operated with a shorter closing delay time. The closing delay time is caused by a magnetic delay and kinematic delay. A compact magnetic circuit of the actuator reduces the closing delay time by 26%. In addition, the kinematic delay was improved when the hydraulic resistance was reduced by 9%. As a result, the new injector realizes reduction of the minimum injection quantity by 25% compared to a conventional injector.Copyright


Volume 2: Emissions Control Systems; Instrumentation, Controls, and Hybrids; Numerical Simulation; Engine Design and Mechanical Development | 2015

Late-Fuel Simulation Near Nozzle Outlet of Fuel Injector During Closing Valve

Eiji Ishii; Kazuki Yoshimura; Yoshihito Yasukawa; Hideharu Ehara

Late fuel during closing of the valve of a fuel-injector and fuel films stuck on the wall around the nozzle outlets are sources of PM. In this study, we focused on effects of the valve motions on the late fuel and the fuel films stuck on the walls around the nozzle outlets. We previously developed a particle/grid hybrid method: fuel flows within the flow paths of fuel injectors were simulated by a front capturing method, and liquid-column breakup at the nozzle outlets was mainly simulated by a particle method. The velocity at the inlet boundary of a fuel injector was controlled in order to affect the valve motions on the late-fuel behavior. The simulated late fuel broke up with surface-tension around the time of zero-stroke position of the valve, then liquid columns and coarse droplets formed after the bounds of the valve, and finally only coarse droplets were left. We found that the late fuel was generated by low-speed fuel-flows through the nozzles during the bounds of the valve. The effect of the bounds of the valve on the fuel films stuck on the wall around the nozzle outlets was also studied with a simulation that removed the bounds of the valve. The volume of the fuel films stuck on the wall of the nozzle outlets decreased without the bounds of the valve.Copyright


Volume 2: Instrumentation, Controls, and Hybrids; Numerical Simulation; Engine Design and Mechanical Development; Keynote Papers | 2014

Advanced Numerical Approach to Simulate GDI Sprays Under Engine-Like Conditions

Eiji Ishii; Motoyuki Abe; Hideharu Ehara; Yoshihito Yasukawa

Gasoline direct-injection (GDI) engines provide both higher engine power and better fuel efficiency than port-injection gasoline engines. However, they emit more particulate matter (PM) than the latter engines. Fuel stuck on walls of pistons and combustion chambers forms a high-density region of fuel in the air/fuel mixture, which becomes a source of PM. To decrease the amount of PM, fuel injectors with short length of spray-penetration are required. A fuel-spray simulation was previously developed; that is, the air/fuel-mixture simulation was integrated with the liquid-column-breakup simulation. The developed fuel-spray simulation was used to optimize the nozzle shapes of fuel injectors for gasoline direct-injection engines.In the present study, the factors that influence spray-penetration length were identified by the numerical simulation. The simulation results were validated by comparing the simulated spray-penetration length with the measured ones and revealing good agreement between them. Angle α was defined as that formed between the direction of flow entering the nozzle inlet and the direction of flow leaving the nozzle outlet; in other words, a indicates a change of flow direction. It was found that α and spray-penetration length was closely related. Velocity that are accelerated with a were studied, and it was found that the velocity within a plane perpendicular to the center axis of the nozzle increases with increasing α.Copyright


Volume 2: Fuels; Numerical Simulation; Engine Design, Lubrication, and Applications | 2013

Short Spray-Penetration for Direct Injection Gasoline-Engines With Numerical Simulation

Eiji Ishii; Motoyuki Abe; Hideharu Ehara; Tohru Ishikawa

Direct injection gasoline-engines have both better engine power and fuel efficiency than port injection gasoline-engines. However, direct injection gasoline-engines also emit more particulate matter (PM) than port injection gasoline-engines do. To decrease PM, fuel injectors with short spray-penetration are required. More effective fuel injectors can be preliminarily designed by numerically simulating fuel spray. We previously developed a fuel-spray simulation. Both the fuel flow within the flow paths of an injector and the liquid column at the injector outlet were simulated by using a grid method. The liquid-column breakup was simulated by using a particle method. The motion of droplets within the air/fuel mixture (secondary-drop-breakup) region was calculated by using a discrete droplet model (DDM). In this study, we applied our fuel-spray simulation to sprays for the direct injection gasoline-engines. Simulated spray penetrations agreed relatively well with measured spray penetrations. Velocity distributions at the outlet of three kinds of nozzles were plotted by using a histogram, and the relationship between the velocity distributions and spray penetrations was studied. We found that shrinking the high-speed region and making the velocity-distribution uniform were required for short spray penetration.Copyright


Archive | 2014

Drive Device for Fuel Injection Device

Ayumu Hatanaka; Ryo Kusakabe; Motoyuki Abe; Toshihiro Aono; Teppei Hirotsu; Hideyuki Sakamoto; Takao Fukuda; Hideharu Ehara; Masahiro Toyohara; Akira Nishioka; Toshio Hori; Kiyoshi Aiki


Archive | 2012

Drive Device for Electromagnetic Fuel Injection Valve

Ryo Kusakabe; Motoyuki Abe; Hideharu Ehara; Tohru Ishikawa; Noriyuki Maekawa; Takuya Mayuzumi


Archive | 2017

Drive unit of fuel injection device

Ryo Kusakabe; Motoyuki Abe; Hideharu Ehara; Tohru Ishikawa; Takuya Mayuzumi; Kenji Hiraku


Archive | 2008

High-pressure fuel supply apparatus and control apparatus for internal combustion engine

Takashi Okamoto; Shinsaku Tsukada; Hideharu Ehara; Masahiro Toyohara


Archive | 2009

FUEL INJECTOR FOR INTERAL COMBUSTION ENGINE

Shinsaku Tsukada; Hideharu Ehara; Takashi Okamoto


Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power-transactions of The Asme | 2017

Effects of Opening and Closing Fuel-injector Valve on Air/Fuel Mixture

Eiji Ishii; Kazuki Yoshimura; Yoshihito Yasukawa; Hideharu Ehara

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