Experimental investigation of iso-butanol/diesel reactivity controlled compression ignition combustion in a non-road diesel engine

2019 ◽  
Vol 242 ◽  
pp. 1307-1319 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duraisamy Ganesh ◽  
P.R. Ayyappan ◽  
Rangasamy Murugan
2014 ◽  
Vol 137 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Fang ◽  
Junhua Fang ◽  
David B. Kittelson ◽  
William F. Northrop

Dual-fuel reactivity-controlled compression ignition (RCCI) combustion using port injection of a less reactive fuel and early-cycle direct injection (DI) of a more reactive fuel has been shown to yield both high thermal efficiency and low NOX and soot emissions over a wide engine operating range. Conventional and alternative fuels such as gasoline, natural gas, and E85 as the lower reactivity fuel in RCCI have been studied by many researchers; however, published experimental investigations of hydrous ethanol use in RCCI are scarce. Making greater use of hydrous ethanol in internal combustion engines has the potential to dramatically improve the economics and life cycle carbon dioxide emissions of using bioethanol. In this work, an experimental investigation was conducted using 150 proof hydrous ethanol as the low reactivity fuel and commercially available diesel as the high reactivity fuel in an RCCI combustion mode at various load conditions. A modified single-cylinder diesel engine was used for the experiments. Based on previous studies on RCCI combustion by other researchers, early-cycle split-injection strategy of diesel fuel was used to create an in-cylinder fuel reactivity distribution to maintain high thermal efficiency and low NOX and soot emissions. At each load condition, timing and mass fraction of the first diesel injection was held constant, while timing of the second diesel injection was swept over a range where stable combustion could be maintained. Since hydrous ethanol is highly resistant to auto-ignition and has large heat of vaporization, intake air heating was needed to obtain stable operations of the engine. The study shows that 150 proof hydrous ethanol can be used as the low reactivity fuel in RCCI through 8.6 bar indicated mean effective pressure (IMEP) and with ethanol energy fraction up to 75% while achieving simultaneously low levels of NOX and soot emissions. With increasing engine load, less intake heating is needed and exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) is required to maintain low NOX emissions.


Author(s):  
Wei Fang ◽  
David B. Kittelson ◽  
William F. Northrop ◽  
Junhua Fang

Dual-fuel reactivity-controlled compression ignition (RCCI) combustion using port injection of a less reactive fuel and early-cycle direct injection of a more reactive fuel has been shown to yield both high thermal efficiency and low NOX and soot emissions over a wide engine operating range. Conventional and alternative fuels such as gasoline, natural gas and E85 as the lower reactivity fuel in RCCI have been studied by many researchers; however, published experimental investigations of hydrous ethanol use in RCCI are scarce. Making greater use of hydrous ethanol in internal combustion engines has the potential to dramatically improve the economics and life cycle carbon dioxide emissions of using bio-ethanol. In this work, an experimental investigation was conducted using 150 proof hydrous ethanol as the low reactivity fuel and commercially-available diesel as the high reactivity fuel in an RCCI combustion mode at various load conditions. A modified single-cylinder diesel engine was used for the experiments. Based on previous studies on RCCI combustion by other researchers, early-cycle split-injection strategy of diesel fuel was used to create an in-cylinder fuel reactivity distribution to maintain high thermal efficiency and low NOX and soot emissions. At each load condition, timing and mass fraction of the first diesel injection was held constant, while timing of the second diesel injection was swept over a range where stable combustion could be maintained. Since hydrous ethanol is highly resistant to auto-ignition and has large heat of vaporization, intake air heating was needed to obtain stable operations of the engine. The study shows that 150 proof hydrous ethanol can be used as the low reactivity fuel in RCCI through 8.6 bar IMEP and with ethanol energy fraction up to 75% while achieving simultaneously low levels of NOX and soot emissions. With increasing engine load, less intake heating is needed and EGR is required to maintain low NOX emissions. Future work will look at stability of hydrous ethanol RCCI at higher engine load.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 470-483 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mojtaba Ebrahimi ◽  
Mohammad Najafi ◽  
Seyed Ali Jazayeri

The aim of this study is to implement the multi-input–multi-output optimization of reactivity-controlled compression-ignition combustion in a heavy-duty diesel engine running on natural gas and diesel fuel. A single-cylinder heavy-duty diesel engine with a modified bathtub piston bowl profile is set on operation at 9.4 bar indicated mean effective pressure and running at a fixed engine speed of 1300 r/min. A certain amount of diesel fuel mass per cycle is fed into the engine at a fixed equivalence ratio without any exhaust gas recirculation. The optimization targets include reduction in engine emissions as much as possible, avoiding diesel knock occurrence, and achieving low temperature combustion concept with the least or no engine power losses. To implement the optimization, the effects of three control factors on the engine performance are assessed by the design of experiment concept—fractional factorial method. These selected control factors are intake temperature and intake pressure (both at intake valve closing) and the diesel fuel start of injection timing. Some randomized treatment combinations of chosen levels from the three selected control factors are employed to simulate reactivity-controlled compression-ignition combustion. Based on the engine’s responses derived from the simulation, reactivity-controlled compression-ignition combustion’s mathematical model is identified directly using an artificial neural network. Next, an optimization process is conducted using two different optimization algorithms, namely, genetic algorithm and particle swarm optimization algorithm. For assessing and validating the obtained optimal results, the obtained data are used to simulate reactivity-controlled compression-ignition combustion as the engine input factors. The results show that the proposed artificial neural network design is effectively capable of identifying reactivity-controlled compression-ignition combustion’s mathematical model. Also, by optimizing reactivity-controlled compression-ignition combustion through different optimization algorithms, the optimal range of the engine operation at 9.4 bar indicated mean effective pressure is well estimated and extended.


2017 ◽  
Vol 19 (7) ◽  
pp. 774-789 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mojtaba Ebrahimi ◽  
Mohammad Najafi ◽  
Seyed Ali Jazayeri ◽  
Ali Reza Mohammadzadeh

The aim of this study is to investigate in details the effects of a number of combustion parameters to optimize the reactivity controlled compression ignition operation running on natural gas and diesel fuel. In the present work, a single-cylinder heavy-duty diesel engine with a specially modified bathtub piston bowl profile for reactivity controlled compression ignition operation is studied and simulated through commercial software. A broad load range from 5.6 to 13.5 bar indicated mean effective pressure at a constant engine speed of 1300 r/min, fixed amount of diesel fuel mass, and with no exhaust gas recirculation is considered. The results from the developed model confirm that the model can accurately simulate the reactivity controlled compression ignition combustion. Also, by focusing on the time of formation of certain important radicals in combustion, the start of combustion and the time of natural gas dissociation are accurately predicted. Furthermore, the influence of some parameters such as different diesel fuel injection strategies, intake temperature, and intake pressure on the reactivity controlled compression ignition combustion is evaluated and the limitation of the engine operation at low temperature combustion is investigated.


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