Effect of Fuel Injection Timing Relative to Ignition Timing on the Natural-Gas Direct-Injection Combustion

Author(s):  
Zuohua Huang ◽  
Seiichi Shiga ◽  
Takamasa Ueda ◽  
Nobuhisa Jingu ◽  
Hisao Nakamura ◽  
...  

Abstract Effect of fuel injection timing relative to ignition timing on natural gas direct-injection combustion was studied by using a rapid compression machine. The ignition timing was fixed at 80 ms from the compression start. When the injection timing was relatively earlier (injection start at 60 ms), the heat release pattern showed slower burn in the initial stage and faster burn in the late stage, which is similar to that of flame propagation of a premixed gas. In contrast to this, when the injection timing was relatively later (injection start at 75 ms), the heat release rate showed faster burn in the initial stage and slower burn in the late stage, which is similar to that of diesel combustion. The shortest duration was realized at the injection end timing of 80 ms (the same timing as the ignition timing) over the wide range of equivalence ratio. The degree of charge stratification and the intensity of turbulence generated by the fuel jet is considered to cause these behaviors. Earlier injection leads to longer duration of the initial combustion, whereas the later injection does longer duration of the late combustion. Earlier injection showed relatively lower CO emission while later injection produces relatively lower NOx emission. It was suggested that earlier injection leads to lower mixture stratification combustion and later injection leads to higher mixture stratification combustion. Combustion efficiency maintained high value over the wide range of equivalence ratio.

2003 ◽  
Vol 125 (3) ◽  
pp. 783-790 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Huang ◽  
S. Shiga ◽  
T. Ueda ◽  
H. Nakamura ◽  
T. Ishima ◽  
...  

The effect of fuel injection timing relative to ignition timing on natural gas direct-injection combustion was studied by using a rapid compression machine (RCM). The ignition timing was fixed at 80 ms after the compression start. When the injection timing was relatively early (injection start at 60 ms), the heat release pattern showed a slower burn in the initial stage and a faster burn in the late stage, which is similar to that of flame propagation of a premixed gas. In contrast to this, when the injection timing was relatively late (injection start at 75 ms), the heat release rate showed a faster burn in the initial stage and a slower burn in the late stage, which is similar to that of diesel combustion. The shortest duration was realized at the injection end timing of 80 ms (the same timing as the ignition timing) over a wide range of equivalence ratio. The degree of charge stratification and the intensity of turbulence generated by the fuel jet are considered to cause this behavior. Early injection leads to longer duration of the initial combustion, whereas late injection leads to a longer duration of the late combustion. Early injection showed relatively lower CO concentration in the combustion products while late injection gave relatively lower NOx. It was suggested that early injection leads to combustion with weaker stratification, and late injection leads to combustion with stronger stratification. Combustion efficiency was kept at a high value over a wide range of equivalence ratio.


Author(s):  
Z Huang ◽  
S Shiga ◽  
T Ueda ◽  
H Nakamura ◽  
T Ishima ◽  
...  

The characteristics of natural-gas direct-injection combustion under various fuel injection timings were studied by using a rapid compression machine. Results show that natural-gas direct injection can result in combustion that is much faster than homogeneous combustion while shortening the time interval between injection timing and ignition timing can markedly decrease the combustion duration. Unburned hydrocarbon would increase over a wide range of equivalence ratios, shortening the time interval between injection timing and ignition timing can decrease the value to that of homogeneous-mixture combustion. The NOx level is high but the CO level is low over a wide range of equivalence ratios and is little affected by fuel injection timing. High values of pressure rise due to combustion can be realized and it is insensitive to the variation in fuel injection timing. High combustion efficiency can be achieved, which is also independent of injection timing.


2011 ◽  
Vol 110-116 ◽  
pp. 357-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raja Shahzad ◽  
P. Naveenchandran ◽  
A. Rashid ◽  
Amir Aziz

This paper discusses the combustion characteristics of CNG under lean and stochiometric conditions in a direct injection engine. The experiments were carried out on a dedicated CNG-Direct Injection engine with 14:1 compression ratio. Combustion characteristics of CNG have been investigated on various injection timings. Injection timing of the fuel injection timing had significant effects on the engine performance, combustion and emissions. The effects became more significant when injection timing was retarded. Injection timing was set after the closing of intake valve and experiments are conducted at 0% and 50% load conditions. Lean stratified operation experiences faster combustion compared to that of stochiometric. In lean stratified operation, there were fast burn rates at the initial stage and slower burning at the later stage. Whereas in stochiometric conditions there is a slightly slower burn at the initial stage and a moderately faster burn at the later stage. The faster initial combustion in lean stratified operation might be due to rapid burn of the initial mixture due to higher turbulence, while a slower burn in the later stage due to diffusion. In contrary to that in stochiometric operations the initial burn is slightly slower, due to moderately strong turbulence and a faster burn due to moderately proceeding mixture. Thus the main effect of fuel injection timing can be explained by the fuel air mixing and the turbulence produced.


2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 140-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xue-Qing Fu ◽  
Bang-Quan He ◽  
Si-Peng Xu ◽  
Tao Chen ◽  
Hua Zhao ◽  
...  

Lean-burn combustion is effective in reducing fuel consumption of gasoline engines because of the higher specific heat ratio of the fuel lean mixture and reduced heat loss from lower combustion temperature. However, its application to real engines is hampered by the unstable ignition, high cyclic variability, and partial-burn due to slower combustion, as well as the restricted maximum lean-burn air/fuel ratio limit and the insufficiently low nitrogen oxides emission. Multi-point micro-flame-ignited hybrid combustion has been proposed and applied to extend the lean burn limit of premixed gasoline and air mixture. To achieve micro-flame-ignited combustion in premixed lean gasoline mixture formed by port fuel injection, a small amount of dimethyl ether is injected directly into the cylinder of a four-stroke gasoline engine to control and accelerate the ignition and combustion process so that the engine could be operated with the overall excess air coefficient (Lambda) of 1.9. The results show that heat release processes can be grouped into three forms, that is, ramp type, double-peak type, and trapezoid type. Regardless of single or split injections, direct injection timing of dimethyl ether dominates the features of heat release. The ramp type occurs at early injection timing while the double-peak type takes place at late injection timing. Trapezoid type appears between the above two types. Dimethyl ether injection timing controls the ignition timing and has less effect on combustion duration. Single injection of dimethyl ether leads to much earlier ignition timing and slightly longer combustion duration, forming higher nitrogen oxides emissions than the split injections. Ultra-low nitrogen oxides emissions and higher thermal efficiency are achieved in the ramp type combustion compared to the other two types of combustion in both injection approaches.


Author(s):  
Sok Ratnak ◽  
Jin Kusaka ◽  
Yasuhiro Daisho ◽  
Kei Yoshimura ◽  
Kenjiro Nakama

Gasoline Direct Injection Homogeneous Charge Compression (GDI-HCCI) combustion is achieved by closing early the exhaust valves for trapping hot residual gases combined with direct fuel injection. The combustion is chemically controlled by multi-point auto-ignition which its main combustion phase can be controlled by direct injection timing of fuel. This work investigates the effect of single pulse injection timing on a supercharged GDI-HCCI combustion engine by using a four-stroke single cylinder engine with a side-mounted direct fuel injector. Injection of primary reference fuel PRF90 under the near-stoichiometric-boosted condition is studied. The fuel is injected during negative valve overlap (NVO) or recompression period for fuel reformation under low oxygen concentration and the injection is retarded to intake stroke for the homogeneous mixture. It is found that the early fuel injection in NVO period advances the combustion phasing compared with the retarded injection in the intake stroke. Noticeable slower combustion rate from intake stroke fuel injection is obtained compared with the NVO injection due to charge cooling effect. Zero-dimensional combustion simulations with multiple chemical reaction mechanisms are simulated to provide chemical understanding from the effect of fuel injection timing on intermediate species generations. The species such as C2H4, C3H6, CH4, and H2 are found to be formed during the NVO injection period from the calculations. The effects of single pulse injection timings on combustion characteristics such pressure rise rate, combustion stability, and emissions are also discussed in this study.


2011 ◽  
Vol 130-134 ◽  
pp. 796-799
Author(s):  
Ming Ming Wu ◽  
Yan Xiang Yang ◽  
Da Guang Xi ◽  
Ping Zhang ◽  
Zhong Guo Jin

This paper presents the feasibility of semi-direct injection on a 50cm3, two-stroke motorcycle gasoline engine, which is applied FAI semi-direct injection fuel system. The structure and fuel injection system is improved based on the original carburetor engine and the FAI injector is easily installed. The results of laboratory and drive test show that, compared with the original carburetor fuel system, through optimization calibration of fuel injection timing and injection quantity can improve power performance and fuel economy.


Author(s):  
S. Juttu ◽  
S. S. Thipse ◽  
N. V. Marathe ◽  
M. K. Gajendra Babu

The objective of this work is to study the effect of different control parameters viz. EGR, fuel injection pressure and start of injection timing on exhaust emissions from diesel fueled HCCI combustion concept. A 4-cylinder LCV engine has been selected for experiments and FIRE 3D CFD software was used for simulation study. The basic idea of the simulation study is to find the suitable EGR ratio to run the engine on HCCI combustion mode so as to avoid any damage to the engine during testing. From simulation study, it was observed that the minimum EGR required for running the engine at 5.6 bar BMEP @ 2500 rpm in HCCI mode is approximately 45%. The trends of simulation results viz. soot and NOx emissions are closely following the experiments. The experiments were conducted at different loads at 2500 rpm and EGR varied from 0% to 60%. With increased EGR ratio, soot bump was observed at 50%, 75% and 100%. The BTE dropped to 24.5% from 33.5%. The effect of fuel injection pressures (750bar, 1000bar and 1500bar) were studied to improve the BTE and to control soot bump over a wide range injection timings EGR ratio. Detailed experiments were conducted at 2.8 bar BMEP @ 2500 rpm to study simultaneous reduction of NOx, SOOT, UHC and CO emissions from diesel HCCI combustion. At injection pressure (1500 bar), advanced fuel injection timing and high EGR ratio, the soot CO and THC emissions were reduced significantly without penalty on NOx emissions. The BTE was improved from 24.5% to 31% against 33.5% of convention diesel combustion.


2021 ◽  
pp. 146808742110469
Author(s):  
Jeremy Rochussen ◽  
Gordon McTaggart-Cowan ◽  
Patrick Kirchen

Natural gas (NG) is an attractive fuel for heavy-duty internal combustion engines because of its potential for reduced CO2, particulate, and NOX emissions and lower cost of ownership. Pilot-ignited direct-injected NG (PIDING) combustion uses a small pilot injection of diesel to ignite a main direct injection of NG. Recent studies have demonstrated that increased NG premixing is a viable strategy to increase PIDING indicated efficiency and further reduce particulate and CO emissions while maintaining low CH4 emissions. However, it is unclear how the combustion strategies relate to one another, or where they fit within the continuum of NG stratification. The objective of this work is to present a systematic evaluation of pilot combustion, NG combustion, and emissions behavior of stratified-premixed PIDING combustion modes that span from fully-premixed to non-premixed conditions. A sweep of the relative injection timing, [Formula: see text], of NG and pilot diesel was performed in a heavy-duty PIDING engine with [Formula: see text] = 140–220 bar, [Formula: see text] = 0.47–0.71, and a constant NG energy fraction of 94%. Apparent heat release rate and emissions analyses identified interactions between the pilot fuel and NG, and qualitatively characterized the impact of NG stratification on combustion and emissions. Changes in the [Formula: see text] resulted in six distinct PIDING combustion regimes, for all considered injection pressures and equivalence ratios: (i) RIT-insensitive premixed, (ii) stratified-premixed (early-cycle injection), (iii) NG jet impingement transition, (iv) stratified-premixed (late-cycle injection), (v) variable premixed fraction, and (vi) minimally-premixed. Parametric definitions for the bounds of each regime of combustion were valid for the wide range of [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] investigated, and are expected to be relevant for other PIDING engines, as previously identified regimes agree with those identified here. This conceptual framework encompasses and validates the findings of previous stratified PIDING investigations, including optimal ranges of operation that provide significantly increased efficiency and lower emissions of incomplete combustion products.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document