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Technical Paper

Experimental Investigation of Combustion Stability and Particle Emission from CNG/Diesel RCCI Engine

2020-04-14
2020-01-0810
This paper presents the experimental investigation of combustion stability and nano-particle emissions from the CNG-diesel RCCI engine. A modified automotive diesel engine is used to operate in RCCI combustion mode. An open ECU is used to control the low and high reactivity fuel injection events. The engine is tested for fixed engine speed and two different engine load conditions. The tests performed for various port-injected CNG masses and diesel injection timings, including single and double diesel injection strategy. Several consecutive engine cycles are recorded using in-cylinder combustion pressure measurement system. Statistical and return map techniques are used to investigate the combustion stability in the CNG-diesel RCCI engine. Differential mobility spectrometer is used for the measurement of particle number concentration and particle-size and number distribution. It is found that advanced diesel injection timing leading to higher cyclic combustion variations.
Journal Article

Effect of Start of Injection on the Particulate Emission from Methanol Fuelled HCCI Engine

2011-12-06
2011-01-2408
New combustion concepts developed in internal combustion engines such as homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) have attracted serious attention due to the possibilities to simultaneously achieve higher efficiency and lower emissions, which will impact the environment positively. The HCCI combustion concept has potential of ultra-low NOX and particulate matter (PM) emission in comparison to a conventional gasoline or a diesel engine. Environmental Legislation Agencies are becoming increasingly concerned with particulate emissions from engines because the health and environmental effects of particulates emitted are now known and can be measured by sophisticated instruments. Particulate emissions from HCCI engines have been usually considered negligible, and the measurement of mass emission of PM from HCCI combustion systems shows their negligible contribution to PM mass. However some recent studies suggest that PM emissions from HCCI engines cannot be neglected.
Journal Article

Particulate Morphology and Toxicity of an Alcohol Fuelled HCCI Engine

2014-04-15
2014-01-9076
Homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) engines are attracting attention as next-generation internal combustion engines mainly because of very low NOx and PM emission potential and excellent thermal efficiency. Particulate emissions from HCCI engines have been usually considered negligible however recent studies suggest that PM number emissions from HCCI engines cannot be neglected. This study is therefore conducted on a modified four cylinder diesel engine to investigate this aspect of HCCI technology. One cylinder of the engine is modified to operate in HCCI mode for the experiments and port fuel injection technique is used for preparing homogenous charge in this cylinder. Experiments are conducted at 1200 and 2400 rpm engine speeds using gasoline, ethanol, methanol and butanol fuels. A partial flow dilution tunnel was employed to measure the mass of the particulates emitted on a pre-conditioned filter paper.
Technical Paper

Experimental Investigations of Gasoline HCCI Engine during Startup and Transients

2011-12-15
2011-01-2445
The homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) combustion process is capable of providing both high ‘diesel-like’ efficiencies and very low NOx and particulate emissions. However, among several technical challenges, controlling the combustion phasing, particularly during transients is a major issue, which must be resolved to exploit its commercial applications. This study is focused on the experimental investigations of behavior of combustion timing and other combustion parameters during startup and load transients. The study is conducted on a gasoline fuelled HCCI engine by varying intake air temperature and air-fuel ratio at different engine speeds. Port fuel injection technique is used for preparing homogeneous mixture of gasoline and air. For fueling startup transient test, fuel injection was turned off, and the engine was motored for several minutes until the fire-deck, intake and exhaust temperatures stabilized.
Technical Paper

Experimental Investigation of Close-Loop Control of HCCI Engine Using Dual Fuel Approach

2013-04-08
2013-01-1675
Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI) offers great promise for excellent fuel economy and extremely low emissions of NOx and PM. HCCI combustion lacks direct control on the "start of combustion" such as spark timing in SI engines and fuel injection timing in CI engines. Auto ignition of a homogeneous mixture is very sensitive to operating conditions of the engine. Even small variations of the load can change the timing from "too early" to "too late" combustion. Thus a fast combustion phasing control is required since it sets the performance limitation of the load control. Crank angle position for 50% heat release is used as combustion phasing feedback parameter. In this study, a dual-fuel approach is used to control combustion in a HCCI engine. This approach involves controlling the combustion heat release rate by adjusting fuel reactivity according to the conditions inside the cylinder. Two different octane fuels (methanol and n-heptane) are used for the study.
Technical Paper

Numerical Investigation on the Effect of Fuel Injection Timing on Soot Particle Size and Number Characteristics of Diesel Engine

2022-08-30
2022-01-1053
Diesel engines are lucrative in terms of high thermal efficiency and low specific fuel consumption. The major drawbacks of these engines are high NOx and particulate matter (PM) emissions due to heterogeneous combustion. In the current emissions norms (BS-VI), a limit for particle number concentration is also introduced. There are few numerical studies investigating the soot particle size and number characteristics at different engine operating conditions. In this work, a parametric numerical study is conducted to investigate the effect of engine operating parameters on PM characteristics such as number density, size, and volume fraction. Simulations were performed using the Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes equation with renormalization group K-ε turbulence model available in ANSYS FORTE CFD software.
Technical Paper

An Assessment of Cyclic Variations in the Air-Fuel Ratio for RCCI Engine

2022-08-30
2022-01-1057
The potential for simultaneous reduction of soot and NOx emissions and higher fuel conversion efficiency has already been demonstrated for reactivity-controlled compression ignition (RCCI) engines. The RCCI engine has a relatively higher peak pressure rise rate (PPRR) and cyclic variations compared to the conventional diesel engine. The upper and lower operating load boundaries of the RCCI engine are restricted by higher PPRR and cyclic variations, respectively. The cyclic variations in the air-fuel ratio are one of the main factors which govern the variations in combustion parameters. The cyclic variations in combustion need to be controlled for stable engine operation. The present study estimates the cyclic air-fuel ratio from the measured in-cylinder pressure data for the RCCI engine. The RCCI experiments are performed on a modified single-cylinder compression ignition (CI) engine equipped with a development ECU.
Technical Paper

Effect of Fuel Injection Strategy on Nano-Particle Emissions from RCCI Engine

2018-09-10
2018-01-1709
Increase in the air pollution has driven the research towards the cleaner combustion technology for reciprocating engines. To tackle the challenge of the trade-off between the NOx and soot emissions from a conventional diesel engine, premixed low-temperature combustion (LTC) strategies are potential technologies. Among the LTC strategies, reactivity controlled compression ignition (RCCI) strategy has a better combustion phasing control along with higher fuel conversion efficiency and lower NOx and soot emissions. The present study investigated the nano-particle emissions from RCCI engine fueled with a port injection of gasoline/methanol (low reactivity fuel) and direct injection of diesel (high reactivity fuel). The RCCI combustion experiments were performed on a modified single cylinder compression ignition engine with development ECU. The mass of injected fuel per stroke for the port as well as the direct injection is controlled through ECU.
Technical Paper

Effect of Diesel Injection Timing on Peak Pressure Rise Rate and Combustion Stability in RCCI Engine

2018-09-10
2018-01-1731
In the present study, experiments of reactivity control compression ignition (RCCI) combustion mode is performed on a single cylinder automotive diesel engine with development ECU (electronic control unit). For achieving RCCI combustion mode, low reactivity fuel (i.e., gasoline/methanol) is injected into the intake manifold, and high reactivity fuel (i.e., diesel) is directly injected into the engine cylinder. Mass of fuel injection per cycle and their injection events are controlled using ECU. This study presents the experimental investigation on the effect of high reactivity fuel injection timings on peak pressure rise rate (PPRR) and combustion stability in RCCI engine. The combustion parameters, i.e., PPRR, indicated mean effective pressure (IMEP) and total heat release (THR) are calculated from the in-cylinder pressure measurement data. In-cylinder pressure is measured using a piezoelectric pressure transducer installed on the engine cylinder head.
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