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Technical Paper

The Influence of Nitric Oxide on the Occurrence of Autoignition in the End Gas of Spark Ignition Engines

2002-10-21
2002-01-2699
Full cycle simulations of a spark ignition engine running on a primary reference fuel have been performed using a two-zone model. A detailed kinetic mechanism is taken into account in each of the zones, while the propagating flame front is calculated from a Wiebe function. The initial conditions for the unburned gas zone were calculated as a mixture of fresh gas and rest gas. The composition of the burned gas zone at the end of the last engine cycle, including nitric oxide emissions, was taken as rest gas. The simulations confirm that the occurrence of autoignition in the end gas is sensitive on the amount of nitric oxide in the rest gas of the spark ignition engine. The comparison of autoignition timings calculated for a single cylinder test engine are getting more accurate if the nitric oxide in the initial gases is taken into account.
Technical Paper

Measurement of Knock and Ion Current in a Spark Ignition Engine with and without NO Addition to the Intake Air

2003-03-03
2003-01-0639
Several studies have shown that NO has a strong influence on engine knock. This paper reports an experimental study that addresses the connection between SI engine knock and the level of nitric oxide, NO, in the intake manifold gas under various conditions of engine operation. Some theories explain the second ion-current peak as thermal ionisation of NO. Both temperature and NO concentration is of importance. By advancing the ignition angle the NO concentration can be increased, but the temperature is also increased. Addition of NO in the inlet manifold increases the NO concentration but has less effect on the temperature. SI engine experiments were conducted over a number of different ignition timings, air/fuel ratios, engine speeds and intake manifold pressures. The NO level in the intake manifold was altered from 100 to 1600 ppm, increasing the amount by doubling. The study confirms that there is an increasing tendency of early knock when the NO amount increases.
Technical Paper

The Effect of Unconventional Piston Movement on SI Engine Combustion and Emissions

2005-04-11
2005-01-1170
A major trend in current automotive research is hybridization of the power supply. This combination of electrical machine and combustion engine results, in some hybridization topologies, in a total decoupling of the combustion engine from the transmission. When the engine is decoupled from the transmission a new degree of freedom arises in engine design. The piston movement does not have to follow an evenly rotating shaft any more. It can be altered by the generator to achieve a movement found to be better from the point of efficiency or environmental concerns. Modelling work showed a potential of lowered NO emissions if the expansion could be delayed. The experimental study, conducted in a two piston Alvar engine, showed that the state of the art electrical machine (EM) propelling one of the crankshafts was too weak to change the crankshaft speed in an extent to give the fast volume changes required to change the emissions of the internal combustion engine (ICE).
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