scholarly journals Combustion Simulation of 130KW Large Cylinder Natural Gas Heater with Intermediate Heat Carrier Medium

Author(s):  
Yazhou Jiang ◽  
Yun Guo
Author(s):  
Yafeng Liu ◽  
Stuart R. Bell ◽  
K. Clark Midkiff

Abstract A phenomenological cycle simulation for a dual fuel engine has been developed to mathematically simulate the significant processes of the engine cycle, to predict specific performance parameters for the engine, and to investigate approaches to improve performance and reduce emissions. The simulation employs two zones (crevice and unburned) during the processes of exhaust, intake, compression before fuel injection starts, and expansion after combustion ends. From the start of fuel injection to the end of combustion, several, zones are utilized to account for crevice flow, diesel fuel spray, air entrainment, diesel fuel droplet evaporation, ignition delay, flame propagation, and combustion quenching. The crevice zone absorbs charge gas from the cylinder as pressure increases, and releases mass back into the chamber as pressure decreases. Some crevice mass released during late combustion may not be oxidized, resulting in emissions of hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide. Quenching ahead of the flame front may leave additional charge unburned, yielding high methane emissions. Potential reduction of engine-out NOx emissions with natural gas fueling has also been investigated. The higher substitution of natural gas in the engine produces less engine-out NOx emissions. This paper presents the development of the model, baseline predictions, and comparisons to experimental measurements performed in a single-cylinder Caterpillar 3400 series engine.


2011 ◽  
Vol 199-200 ◽  
pp. 1472-1476
Author(s):  
Yun Guo

The gas heater, reliable as it is, is nevertheless slow in getting started, and is one of the low-efficiency energy consumption equipments adopting the indirect heating by the intermediate heat carrier medium. Apparently, the form of heat transfer process of the intermediate heat carrier medium, i.e. the flow field organization in the large capacity cylinder, is one of the key elements that can improve the thermal efficiency of gas heater. Experimental investigation and analysis of the flow condition and temperature distribution between the water and ethylene glycol in the cylinder were carried out. Based on the investigations on medium selection and heater’s integral structure and combining with the engineering practical needs, effective measures to improve the efficiency of gas heaters have been brought forward in this article and the technology has got itself the China patents.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 846-858 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Zoldak ◽  
Andrzej Sobiesiak ◽  
David Wickman ◽  
Michael Bergin

Author(s):  
S. Kammerstätter ◽  
T. Sattelmayer

Lean large-bore natural gas engines are usually equipped with gas-scavenged prechambers. After ignition and during combustion in the prechamber hot reacting jets penetrate the main chamber and provide much higher ignition energies than electric spark plugs. Although prechambers stabilize combustion, limitations of the concept are observed at very lean main chamber mixtures and large cylinder diameters, which appear as cycle-to-cycle variations of heat release and pressure. At the Thermodynamics Institute of the Technical University of Munich cycle-to-cycle variations are investigated in an unique periodically chargeable high pressure combustion cell with full optical access to the entire main chamber. Recently, the influence of the ignition timing, the amount of scavenge-gas of the prechamber and the cross section of the prechamber exit orifices on cycle-to-cycle variations have been studied. From the pressure traces characteristic parameters of the combustion process like the ignition probability, the ignition delay and the rate of the pressure rise have been derived. By analysing the emission of OH*-chemiluminescence in terms of reacting area and light emission and on the basis of numerical simulations information on the source of cycle-to-cycle variations is obtained. Finally it is shown that cycle-to-cycle variations can be reduced remarkably by appropriate selection and combination of prechamber geometry and operating parameters.


1886 ◽  
Vol 21 (545supp) ◽  
pp. 8698-8699
Author(s):  
S. A. Ford
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document