Pre-chamber Combustors: An Enabling Technology for High Efficiency, Low CO2 Engine Operation

Author(s):  
Michael Bunce ◽  
Hugh Blaxill ◽  
Nathan Peters ◽  
Sai Krishna Pothuraju Subramanyam ◽  
Adrian Cooper ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Jerald A. Caton

Thermodynamics is the key discipline for determining and quantifying the elements of advanced engine designs which lead to high efficiency. In spite of its importance, thermodynamics is often not given full consideration in understanding engine operation for high efficiency. By fully utilizing the first and second laws of thermodynamics, detailed understanding of the engine features that provide for high efficiency may be determined. Of all the possible features that contribute to high efficiency, the results of this study show that highly diluted engines with high compression ratios provide the greatest impact for high efficiencies. Other important improvements which increase the efficiency include reduced heat losses, optimal combustion phasing, reduced friction, and reduced combustion duration. Thermodynamic quantification of these concepts is provided. For one comparison, the brake thermal efficiency increased from about 34% for the conventional engine to about 48% for the engine with one set of the above features. One aspect that contributes to these improvements is the importance of the ratio of specific heats (“gamma”). In addition, these design features often result in low emissions due to the low combustion temperatures.


Author(s):  
Seyed Navid Shahangian ◽  
Mojtaba Keshavarz ◽  
Ghasem Javadirad ◽  
Nader Bagheri ◽  
Seyed Ali Jazayeri

HCCI engines have low emission and high efficiency values compared to the conventional internal combustion engines. These engines can operate on most alternative fuels such as dimethyl ether (DME), which has been tested as a possible diesel fuel for its simultaneously reduced NOx and PM emissions. HCCI combustion of both DME and n-heptane fuels display a distinct two-stage ignition reaction with the first stage taking place at fairly low temperatures and the second stage taking place at high temperatures. The second stage is responsible for the main stage of the heat release process. In this study, a single-zone, zero-dimensional, thermo-kinetic combustion model has been developed. MATLAB software is used to predict engine performance characteristics of HCCI engines using two types of diesel fuel: Dimethyl ether and N-heptane. The effects of intake temperature and pressure, fuel loading and addition of EGR gases on auto-ignition characteristics, optimum combustion phasing, and performance of the HCCI engines are considered in this study. Simultaneous effects of these variables for finding the most appropriate regime of HCCI engine operation, considering knock and misfire boundaries, are also investigated.


Author(s):  
Ke Li ◽  
Chen Zhang ◽  
Zongxuan Sun

The free piston engine (FPE) is a type of internal combustion engine (ICE) with no crankshaft, so that its piston motion is no longer constrained by mechanical linkages. The FPE has a high potential in terms of energy saving given its simple structure, high modularity and high efficiency. One of the technical barriers that prevents the wide spread of the FPE technology, is the lack of precise piston motion control. Previously, a robust repetitive controller is designed and implemented to form a virtual crankshaft that would provide a precise and stable engine operation. The experimental data of engine motoring tests with virtual crankshaft demonstrates the effectiveness of the controller. However, the presence of a transient period after a single combustion event prevents the engine from continuous firing. This paper presents a modified control scheme, which utilizes a reference and control signal shifting technique to modify the tracking error and the control signal to reduce the transient period.


2020 ◽  
pp. 146808742095308
Author(s):  
Shui Yu ◽  
Ming Zheng

To meet the future requirements of fuel economy and exhaust emissions, high-efficiency gasoline engines tend to employ diluted combustion concepts along with intensified charge motion and stratified mixtures. Securing the ignition of such mixtures over the full engine operation range is challenging, because of the lowered mixture reactivity and increased discrepancy of stoichiometry. In recent years, increasing research efforts have been spending on innovations of ignition technologies to tackle the challenges. In this paper, the directions of ignition improvement are highlighted based on the fundamental understanding of the ignition mechanisms. The working principles of the primary types of advanced ignition systems are introduced; and relevant engine and combustion vessel test results are reviewed. The ignition systems are categorized as: (1) high-energy spark ignition, (2) pulsed nanosecond discharge ignition, (3) radio-frequency plasma ignition, (4) laser-induced plasma ignition, and (5) pre-chamber ignition. The advanced ignition systems are commented, regarding the ignition effectiveness and the implementation challenges, according to the literatures and the extensive empirical work at the authors’ laboratory.


2021 ◽  
pp. 146808742110350
Author(s):  
Hubert Winter ◽  
Kevin Aßmus ◽  
Christoph Redtenbacher ◽  
Dimitar Dimitrov ◽  
Andreas Wimmer

The greenhouse gas saving potential of using gaseous fuels with high methane content (e.g. natural gas) in internal combustion engines instead of conventional liquid fossil fuels (e.g. petrol, diesel) is considerable due to the comparatively low emission of carbon dioxide resulting from the low C/H ratio of methane. However, to fully exploit this potential, it is of utmost importance to keep methane slip at a very low level. In contrast to mixture aspirated gas engines and diesel-gas engines, the gas-diesel combustion concept avoids methane slip nearly completely since the gaseous fuel is directly injected into the combustion chamber at the end of the high-pressure phase of the engine cycle, resulting in mixing-controlled combustion with low emission of unburned hydrocarbons. An advanced high-speed large engine concept based on the gas-diesel combustion process was developed. An effective and reliable virtual design methodology was applied during the development of the concept. The methodology comprehensively combines 3D CFD and 1D simulation tools in the combustion concept predesign phase with experiments on a single-cylinder research engine in the concept validation phase. A major challenge in the virtual design of this dual fuel combustion process is the large number of degrees of freedom that result in particular from the use of a fully flexible combined gas/diesel injector. This paper describes in detail the role of 3D CFD simulation in this approach, which allows precise prediction of the optimal geometries and operating strategies for high-efficiency and low-emission engine operation.


Author(s):  
Weiyang Lin ◽  
Jeff Sterniak ◽  
Stanislav V. Bohac

In the quest for high efficiency IC engine operation, spark assisted compression ignition (SACI) can fill the gap between homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) operation at low load and spark ignited (SI) operation at high load. SACI combustion utilizes a combination of flame propagation and auto-ignition to achieve ignition when unburned temperatures are too low for reliable auto-ignition and the mixture is too dilute for flame propagation with sufficient speed. Stoichiometric SACI combustion with cooled external exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) offers improved thermal efficiency compared to stoichiometric SI operation. It also reduces combustion temperatures and therefore NOx emissions, while still allowing for the use of a three-way catalyst (TWC). This study investigates NOx spikes that can occur during transitions between different SACI operating points as a result of system time lags or mixture deviation from stoichiometry. Load transitions at various stoichiometric SACI operating points are investigated and NOx emissions before and after the TWC are reported. Significant engine-out NOx spikes are observed. A 1200 ppm NOx spike occurs during a load increase from 3 to 6 bar BMEP at 1800 rpm in 2 cycles (0.13 seconds), which is representative of a faster load change in the FTP-75 drive cycle. Observed NOx spikes are attributed to a time lag in external EGR during the transitions. NOx emissions after the TWC are reduced to below 50 ppm, indicating that NOx emissions during these transients can be handled effectively by a TWC.


2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel Martinez-Frias ◽  
Salvador M. Aceves ◽  
Daniel Flowers ◽  
J. Ray Smith ◽  
Robert Dibble

This work investigates a purely thermal control system for HCCI engines, where thermal energy from exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) and compression work in the supercharger are either recycled or rejected as needed. HCCI engine operation is analyzed with a detailed chemical kinetics code, HCT (Hydrodynamics, Chemistry and Transport), which has been extensively modified for application to engines. HCT is linked to an optimizer that determines the operating conditions that result in maximum brake thermal efficiency, while meeting the restrictions of low NOx and peak cylinder pressure. The results show the values of the operating conditions that yield optimum efficiency as a function of torque for a constant engine speed (1800 rpm). For zero torque (idle), the optimizer determines operating conditions that result in minimum fuel consumption. The optimizer is also used for determining the maximum torque that can be obtained within the operating restrictions of NOx and peak cylinder pressure. The results show that a thermally controlled HCCI engine can successfully operate over a wide range of conditions at high efficiency and low emissions.


2013 ◽  
Vol 135 (06) ◽  
pp. S7-S9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ke Li ◽  
Zongxuan Sun

This article explores various functional aspects of hydraulic free piston engine (FPE) enabled by action motion control. Given the potential for high efficiency and flexibility, the FPE is well suited for mobile applications such as on-road vehicles and off-road heavy machinery. The advantage of the active motion controller lies in its ability to precisely track and shape the piston trajectory. FPE has a great potential for energy saving and emission control, but its reliable operation is limited by the complex dynamic coupling among the engine subsystems and the lack of the crankshaft. This inherent technical barrier for FPE could be overcome by active control with today’s sensing, actuation and computing technologies. A prototype hydraulic FPE is used to demonstrate the capabilities of active piston motion control. Experimental results demonstrate the feasibility and promise of the technology. Engine power control will be combined with piston motion control in the future to achieve a wider range of engine operation and higher engine efficiency.


Author(s):  
Mahmoudreza Mirmohammadsadeghi ◽  
Hua Zhao ◽  
Akira Ito

Ever growing population and increased vehicles have resulted in higher atmospheric concentration of the greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane, thus increasing our planet’s average temperature leading to irreversible climate changes, which has led to increasingly demanding and stricter legislations on pollutant emission and CO2, as well as fuel economy targets for the automotive industry. As a result, a great deal of efforts and resources has been spent on the research and development of high efficiency and low emission engines for automotive applications in the attempt to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and levels of nitrogen oxides and soot emissions, which affect the air quality. This research has developed strategies to investigate the combustion characteristics, engine performance and exhaust emission of diesel–gasoline dual-fuel operation in a Ricardo Hydra single-cylinder optical engine running at 1200 r/min, equipped with a high-pressure common rail injection system for diesel fuel delivery, and a port fuel injection system, designed and manufactured by the author, for gasoline fuel delivery, in order to allow for dual-fuel operations. In-cylinder pressure measurement is used for calculating all engine parameters, heat release rate and efficiency. In addition to the thermodynamic analysis of the combustion parameters, high-speed imaging of spray and combustion chemiluminescence was used for the optical analysis of the effect of the above-mentioned parameters on auto-ignition and combustion processes. Effects of different substitution ratios and diesel injection strategies at low engine loads were studied when the total fuel energy was kept constant. The three main substitution ratios used in this study include 45%, 60% and 75%, which also indicates the amount of fuel energy from port-injected gasoline, where the rest is provided by the direct injection of diesel. Depending on the testing conditions, such as injection strategy and intake conditions, some dual-fuel operations were able to deliver high efficiency and improved emissions compared to that of a pure diesel engine operation, with the diesel–gasoline operation offering more consistency in improved thermal efficiency. The optical analysis of the combustion illustrates the main difference in the flame propagation, distribution and quality for each substitution percentage, as well as the condition under examination. It was observed that combustions with higher concentration of diesel fuel having more diffusion-like combustion, especially with diesel injection timings closer to the top dead centre, where there is less time for the two fuel and air to properly mix before combustion occurs, resulted in higher temperature and levels of NOx due to the pockets of high diesel concentrations within the combustion chamber, whereas higher concentration of gasoline, especially at earlier diesel injection timings, resulted in more homogeneous fuel mixture and thus lower combustion temperatures. In other words, when the gasoline substitution ratio is lower, optimised start of injection is advanced further, so that richer diesel mixture needs longer ignition delay to have proper combustion timing, and combustion is milder and peak heat release rate is slightly lower due to less local diesel rich mixture area by means of earlier injection timing, and in terms of emissions, lower gasoline substitution ratio, decreases NOx with more homogeneous diesel mixture, and same can be said for total hydrocarbon. Performing the thermodynamics testing with an all metal piston alongside the optical testing allowed for the confirmation of these outcomes. This study not only delivers an insight to the benefits of dual-fuel engine operation, it also represents the benefits of optical engines in providing better understanding of engine operation and ways of improving it.


2021 ◽  

Meeting the increasingly stringent emission and fuel efficiency standards is the primary objective of the automotive research. Lean/diluted combustion is a promising avenue to realize high-efficiency combustion and reduce emissions in SI engines. Under the diluted conditions, the flame propagation speed is reduced because of the reduced charge reactivity. Enhancing the in-cylinder charge motion and turbulence, and thereby increasing the flame speed, is a possible way to harness the combustion process in SI engines. However, the charge motion can have a significant effect on the spark ignition process because of the reduced discharge duration and frequent restrikes. A longer discharge duration can aid in the formation of the self-sustained flame kernel and subsequent stable ignition. Therefore, an empirical study is undertaken to investigate the effect of the discharge duration and ignition timing on the ignition and early combustion in a port fueled SI engine, operated under lean conditions. The discharge duration is modulated from 1 ms to 8 ms through a continuous discharge strategy. The discharge current and voltage measurements are recorded during the engine operation to characterize the discharge process. The in-cylinder charge is diluted using fresh air to achieve lean combustion. The in-cylinder pressure measurement and heat release analysis are used to investigate the ignition and combustion characteristics of the engine. Preliminary results indicate that while the discharge duration has a marginal effect on the ignition delay, cyclic variations are notably impacted.


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