Curriculum Vitaes

Emir Yilmaz

  (Yilmaz Emir)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Assistant Professor, Faculty of Science and Technology Department of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Sophia University
Degree
Bachelors of Science(Jun, 2014, Sabanci University)
Master of Science(Sep, 2017, Sophia University)
Doctorate(Mar, 2020, Sophia University)

Researcher number
10881112
ORCID ID
 https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3173-1853
J-GLOBAL ID
202001004977557579
researchmap Member ID
R000004564

External link

Major Research Interests

 3

Papers

 34
  • Hiromi Usuda, Mitsuhisa Ichiyanagi, Emir Yilmaz, Yue Yu, Mariko Watanabe, Willyanto Anggono, Takashi Suzuki
    International Journal of Engine Research, Feb 6, 2026  Peer-reviewed
    With the decarbonization of internal combustion engines, alternative fuels have gained increasing attention. When using fuels with low combustibility, such as ammonia, detailed analysis of the intake system and in-cylinder flow is essential for improving combustion efficiency. Proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) has been widely used to extract coherent structures in flow fields within internal combustion engines. However, most previous studies have focused on analyzing cycle-to-cycle variations in gasoline engines, while time-resolved analysis within a single cycle of diesel engines has rarely been conducted. In this study, the effect of tangential port opening on in-cylinder flow characteristics was investigated using an optical single-cylinder diesel engine equipped with two intake ports and two exhaust ports. The opening area of the tangential port was varied under five conditions using different gaskets, and in-cylinder velocities were measured using particle image velocimetry. POD was applied to the acquired velocity data to evaluate the flow structures of the higher modes and their correlations with the mean flow and turbulence intensity. The results showed that in POD mode 1, a swirl flow was formed during the compression stroke when the tangential port opening exceeded 25%. Evaluation of the correlation between POD mode 1 and the ensemble-averaged flow using the relevance index revealed a strong correlation during the compression stroke. In POD mode 2, complex flows were observed during the intake stroke, and structures different from the mean flow were also confirmed during the compression stroke. A moderate correlation was observed between POD mode 2 and turbulence intensity under all conditions. Energy contribution analysis indicated that in the early intake stroke, the variation in mode 1 was large, and the flows represented by mode 2 and higher modes were dominant, whereas in the late compression stroke, mode 1 consistently accounted for a higher proportion.
  • Lijia Fang, Mitsuhisa Ichiyanagi, Masato Sanno, Shuaifeng Wang, Hardeep Singh, Emir Yilmaz, V. Baiju, Takashi Suzuki
    Applied Thermal Engineering, 285 129019-129019, Feb, 2026  Peer-reviewed
  • Emir Yilmaz, Takashi Suzuki, Kota Suzuki, Shota Ishii, Minato Suzuki, Kodai Kato, Mayu Watanabe, Mitsuhisa Ichiyanagi
    Experimental Heat Transfer, 1-21, Jan 22, 2026  Peer-reviewedLead author
  • Takanobu Okada, Mitsuhisa Ichiyanagi, Emir Yilmaz, Takashi Suzuki, Hikaru Shiraishi, Eric Le Roy Ngwompe Souop, Evan Widjaja, Jason Sutedjo, Christian Dennis Marcelo, Ferdinand Ronaldo Tjiotijono, Gabriel Jeremy Gotama, Willyanto Anggono
    Journal of Engineering and Technological Sciences, 57(6) 735-746, Oct 28, 2025  Peer-reviewed
    Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the primary contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. Ammonia (NH3) has emerged as a promising alternative fuel due to its high energy density, ease of transportation, and carbon-free molecular structure. However, its practical application is challenged by slow combustion characteristics and high ignition temperatures. This study investigates the combustion behaviour of ethanol-ammonia mixtures using a high-compression-ratio engine (17.7:1) equipped with a sub-chamber. The engine operated at a constant speed of 1000 rpm. Ammonia energy ratios of 40%, 50%, and 60% were tested across ignition timings of 0°, 2°, 4°, 6°, and 8° crank angle (CA) before top dead center (BTDC). Results indicate that advancing the ignition timing increases in-cylinder pressure and heat release rate while reducing combustion duration. Lower ammonia energy ratios yielded higher thermal efficiency. Conversely, higher ammonia content and advanced ignition timings led to increased NOx emissions.
  • Mo Chen, Mayu Ogasawara, Edyta Dzieminska, Emir Yilmaz, Shuang Gao, Wenjing Cao
    2025 SICE Festival with Annual Conference, 779-782, Sep, 2025  Peer-reviewedInvited

Misc.

 3

Presentations

 41

Teaching Experience

 6

Research Projects

 1