Effects of air jet duration and timing on the combustion characteristics of high-pressure air jet controlled compression ignition combustion mode in a hybrid pneumatic engine

2016 ◽  
Vol 127 ◽  
pp. 392-403 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wuqiang Long ◽  
Xiangyu Meng ◽  
Jiangping Tian ◽  
Hua Tian ◽  
Jingchen Cui ◽  
...  
Fuel ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 258 ◽  
pp. 116115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tung Lam Nguyen ◽  
Camille Hespel ◽  
Dinh Long Hoang ◽  
Christine Mounaïm-Rousselle

2020 ◽  
pp. 146808742096933
Author(s):  
Xiangyu Meng ◽  
Sicheng Liu ◽  
Jingchen Cui ◽  
Jiangping Tian ◽  
Wuqiang Long ◽  
...  

A novel method called high-pressure air (HPA) jet controlled compression ignition (JCCI) based on the compound thermodynamic cycle was investigated in this work. The combustion process of premixed mixture can be controlled flexibly by the high-pressure air jet compression, and it characterizes the intensified low-temperature reaction and two-stage high-temperature reaction. The three-dimensional (3D) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) numerical simulation was employed to study the emission formation process and mechanism, and the effects of high-pressure air jet temperature and duration on emissions were also investigated. The simulation results showed that the NOx formation is mainly affected by the first-stage high-temperature reaction due to the higher reaction temperature. Overall, this combustion mode can obtain ultra-low NOx emission. The second-stage high-temperature reaction plays an important role in the CO and THC formation caused by the mixing effect of the high-pressure air and original in-cylinder mixture. The increasing air jet temperature leads to a larger high-temperature in-cylinder region and more fuel in the first-stage reaction, and therefore resulting in higher NOx emission. However, the increasing air jet temperature can significantly reduce the CO and THC emissions. For the air jet duration comparisons, both too short and too long air jet durations could induce higher NOx emission. A higher air jet duration would result in higher CO emission due to the more high-pressure air jet with relatively low temperature.


Author(s):  
Xiaojian Yang ◽  
Guoming G Zhu

To implement the homogeneous charge compression ignition combustion mode in a spark ignition engine, it is necessary to have smooth mode transition between the spark ignition and homogeneous charge compression ignition combustions. The spark ignition–homogeneous charge compression ignition hybrid combustion mode modeled in this paper describes the combustion mode that starts with the spark ignition combustion and ends with the homogeneous charge compression ignition combustion. The main motivation of studying the hybrid combustion mode is that the percentage of the homogeneous charge compression ignition combustion is a good parameter for combustion mode transition control when the hybrid combustion mode is used during the transition. This paper presents a control oriented model of the spark ignition–homogeneous charge compression ignition hybrid combustion mode, where the spark ignition combustion phase is modeled under the two-zone assumption and the homogeneous charge compression ignition combustion phase under the one-zone assumption. Note that the spark ignition and homogeneous charge compression ignition combustions are special cases in this combustion model. The developed model is capable of simulating engine combustion over the entire operating range, and it was implemented in a real-time hardware-in-the-loop simulation environment. The simulation results were compared with those of the corresponding GT-Power model, and good correlations were found for both spark ignition and homogeneous charge compression ignition combustions.


2020 ◽  
pp. 146808742092345 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akhilendra Pratap Singh ◽  
Nikhil Sharma ◽  
Vikram Kumar ◽  
Avinash Kumar Agarwal

Global warming and stringent emission norms have become the major concerns for the road transport sector globally, which has motivated researchers to explore advanced combustion technologies. Reactivity controlled compression ignition combustion technology has shown great potential to resolve these issues and deliver high brake thermal efficiency and emit ultra-low emissions of oxides of nitrogen and particulate simultaneously. In this experimental study, baseline compression ignition combustion mode and reactivity controlled compression ignition combustion mode experiments were performed in a single-cylinder research engine using mineral diesel as high-reactivity fuel and methanol as low-reactivity fuel. All experiments were carried out at constant engine speed at four engine loads (brake mean effective pressure: 1–4 bar). For efficient combustion and lower emissions, four premixed ratios ( rp = 0, 0.25, 0.50, and 0.75) were tested to assess optimized premixed ratio at different engine loads. In these experiments, primary and secondary fuel injection parameters were maintained identical. Combustion results showed that reactivity controlled compression ignition combustion was more stable compared to compression ignition combustion and resulted in lesser knocking. Reactivity controlled compression ignition combustion delivered higher brake thermal efficiency and lower exhaust gas temperature and oxides of nitrogen emissions, especially at maximum engine loads. Addition of methanol as secondary fuel reduced particulate emissions. Particulate analyses depicted that reactivity controlled compression ignition combustion mode emitted significantly lower accumulation mode particles; however, emission of nucleation mode particles was slightly higher. A significant reduction in particulate mass emitted from reactivity controlled compression ignition combustion was another important finding of this study. Particulate number–mass distributions showed that increasing the premixed ratio of methanol led to a dominant reduction in particulate number concentration compared to particulate mass. Analysis for critical performance and emission characteristics suggested that optimization of the premixed ratio of methanol at each engine load should be done in order to achieve the best results in reactivity controlled compression ignition combustion mode.


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