Recently, an integrated theoretical and experimental investigation was carried out to evaluate the effects that the Delivery Valve Fuel Injection Pump can produce on the performance of a pump-line-nozzle fuel injection
system with a distributor type pump for automotive diesel engines.

Four
distinct delivery valves, one constant-pressure valve, one reflux-hole
and two relief-volume valves, were separately fitted to the pump and for
each configuration of the delivery assembly the system behavior was
analyzed under full-load steady-state operations in a wide pump
angular-speed range. Fuel injection-rate as well as local pressure
time-histories was investigated, paying specific attention to the
occurrence and temporal evolution of cavitations phenomena in the
pressure pipe and injector nozzle, after the valve closure. The flow
across the Fuel Pump Delivery Valve Holder was theoretically examined in order to ascertain any instability sources as possible causes of cyclic fluctuations.
Moreover,
the previously developed NAIS code, based on a novel implicit numerical
algorithm of the second-order accuracy, was employed for theoretical
analysis. The potentialities of the simulation program as a powerful
research and design tool complementary to experimentation were shown by
the reliable prediction of the cause and effect relationship in some
anomalies of the injection system behavior.
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