methane slip
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2021 ◽  
pp. 146808742110350
Author(s):  
Hubert Winter ◽  
Kevin Aßmus ◽  
Christoph Redtenbacher ◽  
Dimitar Dimitrov ◽  
Andreas Wimmer

The greenhouse gas saving potential of using gaseous fuels with high methane content (e.g. natural gas) in internal combustion engines instead of conventional liquid fossil fuels (e.g. petrol, diesel) is considerable due to the comparatively low emission of carbon dioxide resulting from the low C/H ratio of methane. However, to fully exploit this potential, it is of utmost importance to keep methane slip at a very low level. In contrast to mixture aspirated gas engines and diesel-gas engines, the gas-diesel combustion concept avoids methane slip nearly completely since the gaseous fuel is directly injected into the combustion chamber at the end of the high-pressure phase of the engine cycle, resulting in mixing-controlled combustion with low emission of unburned hydrocarbons. An advanced high-speed large engine concept based on the gas-diesel combustion process was developed. An effective and reliable virtual design methodology was applied during the development of the concept. The methodology comprehensively combines 3D CFD and 1D simulation tools in the combustion concept predesign phase with experiments on a single-cylinder research engine in the concept validation phase. A major challenge in the virtual design of this dual fuel combustion process is the large number of degrees of freedom that result in particular from the use of a fully flexible combined gas/diesel injector. This paper describes in detail the role of 3D CFD simulation in this approach, which allows precise prediction of the optimal geometries and operating strategies for high-efficiency and low-emission engine operation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 111
Author(s):  
Kati Lehtoranta ◽  
Päivi Koponen ◽  
Hannu Vesala ◽  
Kauko Kallinen ◽  
Teuvo Maunula

Liquefied natural gas (LNG) use as marine fuel is increasing. Switching diesel to LNG in ships significantly reduces air pollutants but the methane slip from gas engines can in the worst case outweigh the CO2 decrease with an unintended effect on climate. In this study, a methane oxidation catalyst (MOC) is investigated with engine experiments in lean-burn conditions. Since the highly efficient catalyst needed to oxidize methane is very sensitive to sulfur poisoning a regeneration using stoichiometric conditions was studied to reactivate the catalyst. In addition, the effect of a special sulfur trap to protect the MOC and ensure long-term performance for methane oxidation was studied. MOC was found to decrease the methane emission up to 70–80% at the exhaust temperature of 550 degrees. This efficiency decreased within time, but the regeneration done once a day was found to recover the efficiency. Moreover, the sulfur trap studied with MOC was shown to protect the MOC against sulfur poisoning to some extent. These results give indication of the possible use of MOC in LNG ships to control methane slip emissions.


2021 ◽  
pp. 146808742098404
Author(s):  
Vinícius B Pedrozo ◽  
Xinyan Wang ◽  
Wei Guan ◽  
Hua Zhao

The use of natural gas (NG) in dual-fuel heavy-duty engines has the potential to reduce pollutant and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the transport sector when compared to the conventional diesel engines. However, NG composition and methane slip are of interest because both can adversely affect the benefits of NG as an alternative fuel, especially when considering GHG emissions. Therefore, this study experimentally investigated the effects of NG fuel properties on the performance and emissions of both conventional dual-fuel and reactivity-controlled compression ignition (RCCI) engine operations. Three different gas mixtures were selected to simulate typical NG compositions available in the world market, with methane numbers (MN) of 80.9, 87.6 and 94.1. These fuels were tested in a single-cylinder compression ignition engine operating at 0.6, 1.2 and 1.8 MPa net indicated mean effective pressure (IMEP). A high-pressure common rail system allowed for the use of various diesel injection strategies while a variable valve actuation system enabled the effective compression ratio to be adjusted via late intake valve closing (LIVC). The RCCI combustion was found to be more sensitive to changes in MN than the conventional NG-diesel dual-fuel operation. The gas mixture with the lowest MN reduced both total unburned hydrocarbons emissions and methane slip at the expense of higher nitrogen oxides (NOx) emissions. The effects of MN on the net indicated efficiency were more significant at 0.6 MPa IMEP, yielding differences of up to 4.9% between the RCCI operations with the lowest and highest MN fuels. Overall, this work revealed that the combination of the RCCI combustion and LIVC can achieve up to 80% lower methane slip and NOx emissions and relatively higher net indicated efficiency than the conventional dual-fuel regime, independent of the NG composition.


2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 1308-1325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey Ushakov ◽  
Dag Stenersen ◽  
Per Magne Einang

2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 293-299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jerzy Herdzik

Abstract In this paper was presented the problems of methane leakages during cargo operations on LNG carriers. Also the leakages are possible on LNG fueled vessels. Due to green-house effect from methane on the atmosphere it should be done some measures to avoid it. Building the cargo tanks with very high capacity, utilization of better thermal insulations limits the quantity of boil-off (BOG). It is used as a fuel in marine power plant, only the overage should be liquefied again. The leakages attend all cargo operations which methane goes directly to the atmosphere through pressure-vacuum valves and gas freeing installation to mast riser or by the ventilation system from cargo pump or compressor room. To minimize the slip on LNG carriers the re-liquefaction systems are installed. They are based on cooling systems which boil-off gas (mainly methane) is liquefied at ambient pressure in temperature about −161.5°C by pre-cooled nitrogen gas at temperature about −180°C. Compressed nitrogen to a pressure about 25MPa through multistage compressors with intercooling systems is expanded step by step (in intercoolers) to pressure about ambient reaches the temperature about −180°C. The re-liquefaction system needs delivering a lot of electric energy. The total level of methane leakages from mining to the last consumer may be different and sometimes very high. The leakage level starts as minimal 1% and may be raised up to 10%. It was indicated the undertaken actions and next possibilities of methane slip limitations.


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