Exhaust piping in diesel engines is subject to severe thermal stress arising from high-temperature, high-pressure gas flows, and spray cooling with atomizing nozzles has become a widely adopted method to safeguard structural reliability. However, at present, the understanding of the spray fragmentation mechanism of two-phase flow under low inlet pressure is still not comprehensive. This study establishes a three-dimensional model of a gas–liquid impinging-jet nozzle and applies a coupled Volume-of-Fluid to Discrete-Phase-Model (VOF–DPM) approach to resolve the liquid breakup process in detail. High-speed imaging experiments were carried out to validate the numerical results. Orthogonal tests were conducted at five pressure levels for both gas and water—0.28, 0.24, 0.20, 0.16, and 0.12 MPa—producing 25 data pairs of spray cone angle and Sauter Mean Diameter (SMD). Within the 0–0.3 MPa air inlet pressure range explored here, raising the pressure consistently reduced the SMD and widened the cone angle, although both trends weakened as the pressure increased. Water inlet pressure exhibited a nonlinear influence, with local extrema appearing in the higher-pressure region. The overall SMD reached a minimum of 34.12 μm and a maximum of 149.04 μm. Using these 25 data points, a genetic algorithm was employed to optimize the pressure ratio under the constraint of total hydraulic power, yielding optimization strategies for different power budgets. An additional outcome of the simulation was the identification of a structural weakness: by reshaping the original flat impingement surface into a full conical surface, atomization quality improved by 29.36% under identical boundary conditions. These findings clarify the atomization mechanism of gas–liquid impinging jets under low inlet pressure and offer practical guidance for nozzle optimization.
Wu et al. (Fri,) studied this question.