Originally Posted by
Bush65
It seems to me that bee utey is confusing detonation (also called pre-ignition) and diesel knock.
Detonation/pre-ignition can occur in a petrol engine because the fuel enters the cylinder mixed with the intake air. Given fuel with too low an octane rating for the compression ratio and/or a hot spot, such as carbon build up will lead to detonation/pre-ignition before the spark plug fires.
A diesel engine doesn't suffer detonation/pre-ignition because there is no fuel in the intake air during the compression stroke, until the injector opens at the correct timing advance.
There is a delay (called ignition delay) from when the injector opens to when ignition occurs. The diesel fuel is injected into turbulent air in the combustion chamber. It has to undergo a chemical change before it can ignite - heat is required for the chemical change.
When ignition occurs, the temperature in the combustion chamber rises rapidly, which speeds up the chemical change of further diesel fuel being injected.
During the ignition delay period, diesel fuel was still being injected, so there is a lot of fuel mixed with the air when ignition occurs. This leads to combustion of a large amount of fuel almost immediately, resulting in a rapid pressure rise that we know as diesel knock.
Later diesel engines address this issue by having 2 stage injectors (e.g. 300Tdi), or more recently electronic controlled, common rail injection systems have multi injection events per combustion. By these means they reduce the amount of diesel that is injected during the ignition delay period, and inject the bulk of the fuel when the temperature has risen in the combustion so the diesel knock is reduced.
It has been found that the majority of NOx is produced early in the combustion process, so the 2 stage/multi event injection reduces NOx emission.
It should also be noted that combustion only occurs in regions of the combustion chamber where there is fuel and oxygen containing air mixed at the correct stoichiometric ratio.
Not all regions will contain enough oxygen as it is being used and CO2, NOx, etc. produced. The fuel spray from the injector will not burn like a blow torch for this reason - when diesel is mixed with inert gasses like CO2 it can't burn. This is why a diesel must have an excess amount of air for complete combustion to occur - it needs oxygen.