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Technical Paper

Experimental Study of Spark-Ignition Combustion Using the Anode Off-Gas from a Solid Oxide Fuel Cell

2020-04-14
2020-01-0351
Hybridizing Solid Oxide Fuel Cells (SOFCs) with internal combustion engines is an attractive solution for power generation at high electrical conversion efficiency while emitting significantly reduced emissions than conventional fossil fueled plants. The gas that exits the anode of an SOFC operating on natural gas is a mixture of H2, CO, CO2, and H2O vapor, which are the products of the fuel reforming and the electrochemical process in the stack. In this study, experiments were conducted on a single-cylinder, spark-ignited Cooperative Fuel Research Engine using the anode off-gas as the fuel, at compression ratio of 11:1 and 13:1, engine speed of 1200 rev/min and intake pressure of 75 kPa, to investigate the combustion characteristics and emissions formation. A comparison was drawn with combustion with Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) at the same engine operating conditions.
Journal Article

Efficiency and Emissions Characteristics of an HCCI Engine Fueled by Primary Reference Fuels

2018-04-03
2018-01-1255
This article investigates the effects of various primary reference fuel (PRF) blends, compression ratios, and intake temperatures on the thermodynamics and performance of homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) combustion in a Cooperative Fuels Research (CFR) engine. Combustion phasing was kept constant at a CA50 phasing of 5° after top dead center (aTDC) and the equivalence ratio was kept constant at 0.3. Meanwhile, the compression ratio varied from 8:1 to 15:1 as the PRF blends ranged from pure n-heptane to nearly pure isooctane. The intake temperature was used to match CA50 phasing. In addition to the experimental results, a GT-Power model was constructed to simulate the experimental engine and the model was validated against the experimental data. The GT-Power model and simulation results were used to help analyze the energy flows and thermodynamic conditions tested in the experiment.
Technical Paper

Effects of Mass, Pressure, and Timing of Injection on the Efficiency and Emissions Characteristics of TSCI Combustion with Direct Water Injection

2018-04-03
2018-01-0178
A CFD investigation has been conducted to study the efficiency and emissions characteristics of Thermally Stratified Compression Ignition (TSCI) combustion with direct water injection. The motivation for using this new low temperature combustion mode is its ability to control the heat release process by introducing a forced and controlled thermal stratification beyond what would occur naturally. In this case, TSCI is enabled using direct water injection. The added degree of control over the combustion process allows for a significantly broader operable load range compared to HCCI. The effects of injection parameters including the pressure, start of injection (SOI) timing, and spray pattern have been shown previously to affect the heat release of TSCI and its induced thermal stratification. In the present work, the efficiency and emissions considerations were investigated in detail, and the effects of injected mass are presented.
Technical Paper

Effects of Single versus Two-Stage Heat Release on the Load Limits of HCCI Using Primary Reference Fuels

2019-04-02
2019-01-0950
Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI) enables combustion with high efficiency and low emissions. Control over the combustion process and its narrow operating range are still the biggest challenges associated with HCCI. To expand the operable load ranges of HCCI, this paper explores the effects of single versus two-stage ignition fuels by studying the Primary Reference Fuels (PRF) in a variable compression ratio Cooperative Fuel Research (CFR) engine. The PRF fuels, iso-octane and n-heptane, are blended together at various concentrations to create fuel blends with different autoignition characteristics. Experiments were conducted using these PRF blends to explore the extent to which the load range can be extended with two-stage ignition fuels at various compression ratios and intake temperatures. The reactivity of the PRF blends increases with the fraction of n-heptane and so does the amount of low temperature heat release (LTHR).
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