Post-injection strategies for gasoline compression ignition combustion under high load conditions: Understanding the role of premixed, main, and post-injections in soot mitigation and load extension

Fuel ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 233 ◽  
pp. 834-850 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chaitanya Kavuri ◽  
Jordan Paz ◽  
Daniel Staaden ◽  
Sage L. Kokjohn
Author(s):  
Ashwin Salvi ◽  
Reed Hanson ◽  
Rodrigo Zermeno ◽  
Gerhard Regner ◽  
Mark Sellnau ◽  
...  

Gasoline compression ignition (GCI) is a cost-effective approach to achieving diesel-like efficiencies with low emissions. Traditional challenges with GCI arise at low-load conditions due to low charge temperatures causing combustion instability and at high-load conditions due to peak cylinder pressure and noise limitations. The fundamental architecture of the two-stroke Achates Power Opposed-Piston Engine (OP Engine) enables GCI by decoupling piston motion from cylinder scavenging, allowing for flexible and independent control of cylinder residual fraction and temperature leading to improved low load combustion. In addition, the high peak cylinder pressure and noise challenges at high-load operation are mitigated by the lower BMEP operation and faster heat release for the same pressure rise rate of the OP Engine. These advantages further solidify the performance benefits of the OP Engine and demonstrate the near-term feasibility of advanced combustion technologies, enabled by the opposed-piston architecture. This paper presents initial results from a steady state testing on a brand new 2.7L OP GCI multi-cylinder engine. A part of the recipe for successful GCI operation calls for high compression ratio, leading to higher combustion stability at low-loads, higher efficiencies, and lower cycle HC+NOx emissions. In addition, initial results on catalyst light-off mode with GCI are also presented. The OP Engine’s architectural advantages enable faster and earlier catalyst light-off while producing low emissions, which further improves cycle emissions and fuel consumption over conventional engines.


2020 ◽  
pp. 146808742096121
Author(s):  
Bahram Jafari ◽  
Mahdi Seddiq ◽  
Seyyed Mostafa Mirsalim

The present paper aims to assess the impacts of diesel injection timing and two bowl geometries including re-entrant and wide-shallow combustion chambers on the combustion characteristics, emissions formation, and fuel consumption in a reactivity controlled compression ignition diesel engine under low and high load (five and nine bar indicating mean effective pressure) conditions. The results revealed that diesel injection at −60 CA ATDC under low load conditions significantly decreased soot and NOx emissions simultaneously for both piston bowl geometries. The use of the wide-shallow chamber decreased the period of the ignition delay and increased the engine operable load range as a result of more stable combustion under high-load conditions compared to the re-entrant chamber. Moreover, at all diesel injection timings, the indicated specific fuel consumption was decreased by nearly 4.8 and 6.6% under low and high load conditions, respectively when the wide-shallow combustion chamber was used since the heat transfer loss was lower than that of the re-entrant chamber. However, NOx emission under high load conditions at the center of the combustion chamber and more soot emission in the exhaust gas are two disadvantages of the wide-shallow chamber versus the re-entrant combustion chamber.


Fuel ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 290 ◽  
pp. 120071
Author(s):  
Amin Yousefi ◽  
Hongsheng Guo ◽  
Madjid Birouk ◽  
Brian Liko ◽  
Simon Lafrance

2015 ◽  
Vol 137 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyun Kyu Suh

This experimental work describes the operation of a wobble-plate-type fuel pump for the stable supply of dimethyl ether (DME) fuel and evaluates its application possibility in a compression ignition engine. To achieve this, different types of flow control valves (normally open and normally closed types) were installed on the wobble-plate-type fuel pump. At the same time, the variations in fuel flow rate, torque, and temperature variation in the main parts of the pump were investigated under various operating conditions using a pump performance test system. In addition, a dummy-rail, which has half the volume of a common-rail, was installed to analyze pump stability under high flow rate/high load conditions. The wobble-plate-type fuel pump has showed satisfactory performance for DME fuel supply. The maximum flow rate (∼60 kg/h) is two times higher and the maximum torque value (∼32 N m) is three times higher than the required fuel flow and torque for stable driving of the DME engine (∼30 kg/h and ∼10 N m), respectively. Application of dummy-rail in wobble-plate-type fuel pump system would be a good solution to control the instability of pump operation in high flow rate/high load conditions.


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