Research on the Performance and Emission of a Port Fuel Injection Hydrogen Internal Combustion Engine

Author(s):  
Dawei Sun ◽  
Fushui Liu
2013 ◽  
Vol 768 ◽  
pp. 250-254
Author(s):  
N. Balakrishnan ◽  
K. Mayilsamy ◽  
N. Nedunchezhian

Biomass derived vegetable oil is a promising alternative fuel for an internal combustion engine. Direct use of vegetable oil has inferior performance with higher emission due to its higher viscous in nature. This can be overcome by transesterification process with its byproduct which is called as used vegetable oil methyl ester. While blending this biodiesel with fossil diesel upto maximum of 30:70, will give the higher performance and lower emission than the fossil diesel alone. In this present study biodiesel in the form of B23 is used in a four stroke water cooled variable compression ratio engine without any modifications. The performance and emission characteristics are studied with different compression ratio and compared with a base line fossil diesel mode operation. This study reveals that the compression ratio of 18 is the optimum in the view of ignition delay, maximum pressure crank angle, exhaust gas temperature and Smoke emission.


Author(s):  
Boon-Keat Chui ◽  
Harold J. Schock ◽  
Andrew M. Fedewa ◽  
Dan E. Richardson ◽  
Terry Shaw

The cylinder-kit assembly of an internal combustion engine experiences severe conditions during engine operation. The top compression ring, in particular, undergoes extreme stress directly from cylinder gas pressure, inertial and thermal loads. The top compression ring is often the most significantly affected piston ring, and one of the common resultant phenomena is high wear on the ring/bore surfaces. In many previous studies, the modeling of tribological phenomena at the top compression ring/bore region involves hydrodynamic and boundary lubrication, friction and wear. This present work accounts for an additional factor that may affect the piston ring/bore lubrication — the lubricant evaporative effect. A three-dimensional oil evaporative analysis is coupled into the calculation of mixed lubrication in a cyclic engine computation. The presence of the evaporation analysis allows the study of the temperature influence on the piston ring/bore lubrication in addition to its effect on oil viscosity. A prospective application of this model is in diesel engine analysis. Considering the broad operating range of modern diesel fuel injection systems, the injection timing can be made throughout the compression/expansion process. It is well demonstrated that certain areas of fuel injection operation can result in potential adverse consequences such as increased bore wear. A well known example is “bore wall fuel wetting.” Given concerns around the potential for wear-inducing interactions between the fuel injection plumes and the bore wall, we have explored a particular interaction: bore wear in response to an imposed local heating of the bore wall. The simulation result provides valuable insights on this interaction, in which higher bore wear is predicted around bore wall area with locally imposed wall heating.


2011 ◽  
Vol 144 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-48
Author(s):  
Karol CUPIAŁ ◽  
Wojciech TUTAK ◽  
Arkadiusz JAMROZIK ◽  
Arkadiusz KOCISZEWSKI

The results of numerical analysis the combustion process in turbocharged CI engine 6CT107 are presented in the paper. Engine was installed on the ANDORIA’s power generator of 100 kVA/80 kW. The results of modelling the combustion process for different angle setting fuel injection, compared with the results obtained by indicating the real engine. Numerical analysis was performed in two programs, designed for three-dimensional modelling of the thermal cycle the piston internal combustion engine, namely AVL FIRE and the KIVA-3V.


10.14311/1540 ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrej Chríbik ◽  
Marián Polóni ◽  
Ján Lach

This paper deals with the use of the internal combustion piston engine, which is a drive unit for micro-cogeneration units. The introduction is a brief statement of the nature of gas mixture compositions that are useful for the purposes of combustion engines, together with the basic physical and chemical properties relevant to the burning of this gas mixture. Specifically, we will discuss low-energy gases (syngases) and mixtures of natural gas with hydrogen. The second section describes the conversion of the Lombardini LGW 702 combustion engine that is necessary for these types of combustion gases. Before the experimental measurements, a simulation in the Lotus Engine simulation program was carried out to make a preliminary assessment of the impact on the performance of an internal combustion engine. The last section of the paper presents the experimental results of partial measurements of the performance and emission parameters of an internal combustion engine powered by alternative fuels.


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