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Technical Paper

Combustion Chamber Deposits and PAH Formation in SI Engines Fueled by Producer Gas from Biomass Gasification

2003-05-19
2003-01-1770
Investigations were made concerning the formation of combustion chamber deposits (CCD) in SI gas engines fueled by producer gas. The main objective was to determine and characterise CCD and PAH formation caused by the presence of the light tar compounds phenol and guaiacol in producer gas from an updraft gasifier. The work was based on previous work regarding the assumption that phenol is a soot precursor and therefore could lead to CCD formation. Laboratory experiments were conducted, where pyrolysis products of the single tar components were collected on small aluminium plates. The experiments showed that guaiacol formed significant amount of deposits. The structure observed was a lacquer type of deposit. It was determined that there was no distinct deposit formation due to phenol. Experiments were conducted with a 0.48 litre one-cylinder high compression ratio SI engine fueled by synthetic producer gas.
Technical Paper

High Compression Ratio Engine Operation on Biomass Producer Gas

2011-08-30
2011-01-2000
Experimental investigations have been conducted with two identical small scale SI gas engines gen-sets operating on biomass producer gas from thermal gasification of wood. The engines where operated with two different compression ratios, one with the original compression ratio for natural gas operation 9.5:1, and the second with a compression ratio of 18.5:1. It was shown that high compression ratio SI engine operation was possible when operating on biomass producer gas from a TwoStage gasifier. The results showed an increase in the electrical efficiency from 31% to 35% when the compression ratio was increased. The influence of ignition timing on emissions was investigated during high compression ratio operation. It was shown that for λ=1.4 the NOx emission decreases by almost a factor 3, when the timing is retarded from 13° to 7° before top dead center.
Technical Paper

Investigation of Continuous Gas Engine CHP Operation on Biomass Producer Gas

2005-10-24
2005-01-3778
About 2000 hours of gas engine operation with producer gas from biomass as fuel has been conducted on the gasification combined heat and power (CHP) demonstration and research plant, named “Viking” at the Technical University of Denmark. The plant and engine have been operated continuously and unmanned for five test periods of approximately 400 hours each. Two different control approaches have been applied and investigated: one where the flow rate of the producer gas is fixed and the engine operates with varying excess of air due to variation in gas composition and a second where the excess of air in the exhaust gas is fixed and the flow rate of produced gas from the gasifier is varying. It was seen that the optimal control approach regarding the gasifier operation resulted in engine operation with significant variation of the NOx emissions Producer gas properties and contaminations have been investigated.
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