Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 5 of 5
Technical Paper

Development of Valve Train Configurations Optimized for Cold Start and Their Effect on Diesel Soot Emission

2019-09-09
2019-24-0161
The continuous pursuit of more efficient diesel engines and the stricter emission regulations with the introduction of the Real Driving Emissions test (RDE) necessitate further investigations of heating strategies and their suitability in terms of series production. Under these circumstances heating strategies of a variable valve train for a single-cylinder research diesel engine have been first simulated and then experimentally tested at the Institute of Internal Combustion Engines of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). By combining statistical experimental design (DoE) and 1-D gas exchange simulations, empirical DoE models for the design of suitable camshaft configurations have been established. After having performed a potential assessment, the most favorable configurations were manufactured and subsequently tested.
Journal Article

Soot and NOx Reduction by Spatially Separated Pilot Injection

2012-04-16
2012-01-1159
To this day, Diesel engines with direct injection are the most efficient internal combustion engines for passenger cars. The major challenge of these engines with a conventional Diesel combustion process is the high level of particulate matter and nitrogen oxide emissions. Diesel engines in passenger cars normally use a pilot injection strategy for NVH reasons, which influences the engine-out soot emissions negatively. The Diesel fuel of the pilot injection is still burning when the main injection takes place, so, liquid components of the main injection interact with the flame of the pilot injection. The time for mixture formation decreases and the combustion takes place under locally very rich conditions which results in high levels of soot formation. For this reason new emission level restrictions cannot be reached without modern exhaust gas aftertreatment systems, which are quite expensive and can have an impact on the gas exchange.
Journal Article

Effect of different nozzle geometries using Pure Rapeseed Oil in a modern Diesel engine on combustion and exhaust emissions

2011-08-30
2011-01-1947
Rapeseed oil can be a possible substitute for fossil fuel in Diesel engines. Due to different physical properties of rapeseed oil like higher viscosity and higher compressibility compared to diesel fuel, rapeseed oil cannot be easily used in conventional Diesel engines without modifications. Especially incomplete combustion leads to deposits in the combustion chamber and higher exhaust gas emissions. These unfavorable characteristics are caused primarily by insufficient mixture preparation. The adjustment of the injection system will improve the mixture preparation and the combustion of a Diesel engine, operated with rapeseed oil. The nozzle geometry is the main parameter of the whole injection system chain to realize a better combustion process and so higher efficiency and lower exhaust gas emissions.
Technical Paper

Influence of Injection Nozzle Hole Diameter on Highly Premixed and Low Temperature Diesel Combustion and Full Load Behavior

2010-10-25
2010-01-2109
Diesel engines face difficult challenges with respect to engine-out emissions, efficiency and power density as the legal requirements concerning emissions and fuel consumption are constantly increasing. In general, for a diesel engine to achieve low raw emissions a well-mixed fuel-air mixture, burning at low combustion temperatures, is necessary. Highly premixed diesel combustion is a feasible way to reduce the smoke emissions to very low levels compared to conventional diesel combustion. In order to reach both, very low NOX and soot emissions, high rates of cooled EGR are necessary. With high rates of cooled EGR the NOX formation can be suppressed almost completely. This paper investigates to what extent the trade-off between emissions, fuel consumption and power of a diesel engine can be resolved by highly premixed and low temperature diesel combustion using injection nozzles with reduced injection hole diameters and high pressure fuel injection.
Journal Article

Investigation of a New Injection Strategy for Simultaneous Soot and NOx Reduction in a Diesel Engine with Direct Injection

2008-06-23
2008-01-1790
An important source for soot formation during the combustion of diesel engines with direct injection is the interaction of liquid fuel or a very rich air/fuel-mixture with the flame. This effect appears especially in modern direct injection engines where the injection is often split in a pre- and a main injection due to noise reasons. After the ignition of the pre-injected fuel a part of the main injection can interact with the flame still in liquid phase as the fuel is injected straight towards the already burning cylinder areas. This leads to high amounts of soot. The injection strategy for this experimental study overcomes this problem by separating the injections spatially and therefore on the one hand reduces the soot formation during the early stages of the combustion and on the other hand increases the soot oxidation later during the combustion. In particular an injection configuration is used which gives the degree of freedom to modify the injection in the described manner.
X