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Technical Paper

Improvement of the EGR Dilution Tolerance in Gasoline Engines by the Use of a HSASI Pre-Chamber Spark Plug

2023-10-24
2023-01-1805
Charge dilution in gasoline engines reduces NOx emissions and wall heat losses by the lower combustion temperature. Furthermore, under part load conditions de-throttling allows the reduction of pumping losses and thus higher engine efficiency. In contrast to lean burn, charge dilution by exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) under stoichiometric combustion conditions enables the use of an effective three-way catalyst. A pre-chamber spark plug with hot surface-assisted spark ignition (HSASI) was developed at the UAS Karlsruhe to overcome the drawbacks of charge dilution, especially under part load or cold start conditions, such as inhibited ignition and slow flame speed, and to even enable a further increase of the dilution rate. The influence of the HSASI pre-chamber spark plug on the heat release under EGR dilution and stoichiometric conditions was investigated on a single-cylinder gasoline engine.
Technical Paper

Hydrogen Admixture Strategies for Small-Scale Cogeneration Gas Engines: A Comparison between different Engine Combustion Processes

2023-06-26
2023-01-1206
Cogeneration represents a key element within the energy transition by enabling a balancing of the long-term fluctuations of regeneratives. Regarding the expected increase of hydrogen share in natural gas pipelines in Germany, this work deals with investigations of hydrogen-associated advantages for the lean and stoichiometric operations of natural gas cogeneration engines, in relation to numerous challenges, such as the efficiency-NOx trade-off. Charge dilution is commonly regarded as one of the most effective ways for improving thermal efficiency of spark-ignition gas engines. While excess air serves as a diluent in the lean combustion process, stoichiometric combustion dilution may be obtained by exhaust gas recirculation (EGR). Combining hydrogen addition with mixture dilution is an appealing approach for a better handling of the efficiency-emissions trade-off.
Technical Paper

Effects of different prechamber spark plug geometries on combustion anomalies in an internal combustion engine

2022-01-09
2022-32-0023
Operating an Otto-Engine with hydrogen as fuel the probability of combustion anomalies like knocking, pre-ignition and backfiring increases significantly. Knocking is strongly dependent on the operating point, while the cause for preignition is still investigated. Literature as well as preliminary investigations to this work suggest that especially the spark plug has a significant influence on the occurrence of preignition and backfiring. Hence, the scope of this paper is to identify and understand the influence of the spark plug on preignition in order to reduce their occurrence and receive more mechanical power from the engine. In the first step, the operating conditions leading to preignition and backfiring are determined experimentally using a naturally aspirated single cylinder gas engine and a state-of-the-art prechamber spark plug.
Journal Article

Extension of the Lean Limit of Gasoline Engines Under Part Load by Using Hot Surface Assisted Spark Ignition (HSASI)

2022-01-09
2022-32-0051
Charge dilution by lean-burn is one way to increase the efficiency of spark ignition engines while reducing NOx emissions. This work focuses on increasing the flammability of lean mixtures inside a passive pre-chamber spark plug by elevating its temperature with the help of a controllable hot surface integrated into the pre-chamber. Thus, an extension of the lean limit under part load is aimed for. A pre-chamber spark plug prototype with an integrated, controllable glow plug was developed, called Hot Surface Assisted Spark Ignition (HSASI). Experimental investigations were conducted on a single-cylinder engine at the Karlsruhe University of Applied Sciences. Operating modes with an active glow plug (HSASI) and a non-active glow plug were compared. The lean limit for both operation modes were determined under part load. NOx, CO and THC emissions were measured for different air-fuel equivalence ratios λ. The lean limit is extended by more than 0.1 in λ at low loads with HSASI operation.
Journal Article

Hot Surface Assisted Compression Ignition (HSACI) as an Approach to Extend the Operating Limits of a Natural Gas Fueled HCCI Engine

2022-01-09
2022-32-0027
The concept of hot surface assisted compression ignition (HSACI) was previously shown to allow for control of combustion timing and to enable combustion beyond the limits of pure homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) combustion. This work investigates the potential of HSACI to extend the operating limits of a naturally aspirated single-cylinder natural gas fueled HCCI engine. A zero-dimensional (0D) thermo-kinetic modeling framework was set up and coupled with the chemical reaction mechanism AramcoMech 1.3. The results of the 0D study show that reasonable ignition timings in the range 0-12°CA after top dead center (TDC) in HCCI can be expressed by constant volume ignition delays at TDC conditions of 9-15°CA. Simulations featuring the two-stage combustion in HSACI point out the capability of the initial heat release as a means to shorten bulk-gas ignition delay.
Journal Article

High Efficiency by Miller Valve Timing and Stoichiometric Combustion for a Naturally Aspirated Single Cylinder Gas Engine

2020-01-24
2019-32-0588
Small-scale cogeneration units (Pel < 50 kW) frequently use lean mixture and late ignition timing to comply with current NOx emission limits. Future tightened NOx limits might still be met by means of increased dilution, though both indicated and brake efficiency drop due to further retarded combustion phasing and reduced brake power. As an alternative, when changing the combustion process from lean burn to stoichiometric, a three-way-catalyst allows for a significant reduction of NOx emissions. Combustion timing can be advanced, resulting in enhanced heat release and thus increased engine efficiency. Based on this approach, this work presents the development of a stoichiometric combustion process for a small naturally aspirated single cylinder gas engine (Pel = 5.5 kW) originally operated with lean mixture. To ensure low NOx emissions, a three-way-catalyst is used.
Technical Paper

Impact of Intake Port Water Injection Timing on Mitigating the Tradeoff between Performance and NOx Emissions for a Naturally Aspired Micro-CHP-Engine

2020-01-24
2019-32-0576
Small natural gas cogeneration engines usually operate with lean mixture and late combustion phasing to comply with NOx emission standards, leading to significant losses in engine efficiency. Owing to water evaporation heat and high specific heat capacity of the water vapor, leads the water injection to cooling the combustion chamber charge, which enables earlier combustion phasing, higher compression ratio and thus higher engine efficiency. Therefore, water injection enables mitigating the tradeoff between NOx emissions and engine performance, without loss in engine efficiency. The intake port injection represents, because of the low required injection pressure and the simple injector integration, a cost-effective way to introduce water into the engine. Hence, the purpose of this work is to adapt the intake port water injection timing to the charge mixture flow conditions in the intake port.
Technical Paper

Development of a Climate and Altitude Simulation Test Bench for Handheld Power Tools

2018-10-30
2018-32-0033
A climate and altitude conditioning test bench was developed at the Institute of Energy Efficient Mobility (IEEM) of Karlsruhe University of Applied Sciences to evaluate the overall sustainability of using innovative biofuels in handheld power tools such as chainsaws, trimmers and blowers under any typical operating condition worldwide. The 6 m3 hermetically sealed and thermally insulated test chamber is large enough to fit the entire power tool. A two-stage refrigeration system with intake air drying and electric heating allows for realistic temperature conditions to be set in the test chamber, ranging from arctic cold to tropical heat (-28 to 45 °C). Altitudes of up to 3500 m above sea level can be simulated using a throttle valve at the inlet of the chamber and a pressure-controlled rotary screw compressor positioned downstream the test chamber outlet.
Journal Article

The Effect of Cooled Exhaust Gas Recirculation for a Naturally Aspirated Stationary Gas Engine

2016-11-08
2016-32-0093
Small natural gas cogeneration engines frequently operate with lean mixture and late ignition timing to comply with NOx emission standards. Late combustion phasing is the consequence, leading to significant losses in engine efficiency. When substituting a part of the excess air with exhaust gas, heat capacity increases, thus reducing NOx emissions. Combustion phasing can be advanced, resulting in a thermodynamically more favourable heat release without increasing NOx but improving engine efficiency. In this work, the effect of replacing a part of excess air with exhaust gas was investigated first in a constant volume combustion chamber. It enabled to analyse the influence of the exhaust gas under motionless initial conditions for several relative air-fuel ratios (λ = 1.3 to 1.7). Starting from the initial value of λ, the amount of CH4 was maintained constant as a part of the excess air was replaced by exhaust gas.
Technical Paper

Miller/Atkinson Valve Timing as Full Load Concept for a Naturally Aspirated Cogeneration Engine

2015-11-17
2015-32-0713
Lean burn operation allows small cogeneration engines to achieve both high efficiency and low NOx emissions. While further mixture dilution enables future emission standards to be met, it leads to retarded combustion phasing and losses in indicated engine efficiency. In the case of naturally aspirated engines, IMEP drops due to lower fuel fraction, increasing brake specific fuel consumption. In this work, an alternative engine configuration was investigated that improves the trade-off between engine efficiency, NOx emissions and IMEP. It combines well-established means such as Miller/Atkinson valve timing and optimised intake system for a single-cylinder cogeneration engine, operating with homogenous lean air-natural gas mixture. First, the engine configuration was analysed using a detailed 1D CFD model, implying a significant potential in reaching the project target.
Technical Paper

Effects of Intake Pressure and Air-Fuel Ratio on Controlled Hot Surface Ignition Operating with Natural Gas

2015-11-17
2015-32-0721
In an effort to reduce both maintenance costs and NOx emissions of small cogeneration engines operated with natural gas, an alternative ignition system that allows stable operation at very lean homogeneous air-fuel mixtures has been developed. Combustion is induced by an electrically heated ceramic glow plug, whose temperature is controlled by an ECU. Adjusting hot surface temperature allows shifting the inflammation timing of the mixture and, therefore, the phasing of combustion in the engine cycle. The main aim of this work was to determine the effect of intake pressure and air-fuel ratio on the parameters of hot surface ignition (HSI) and understand which are the factors limiting stable HSI operation in terms of cycle-by-cycle variations.
Journal Article

Experimental Studies on the Occurrence of Low-Speed Pre-Ignition in Turbocharged GDI Engines

2015-04-14
2015-01-0753
In the present paper the results of a set of experimental investigations on LSPI are discussed. The ignition system of a test engine was modified to enable random spark advance in one of the four cylinders. LSPI sequences were successfully triggered and exhibited similar characteristics compared to regularly occurring pre-ignition. Optical investigations applying a high speed camera system enabling a visualization of the combustion process were performed. In a second engine the influence of the physical properties of the considered lubricant on the LSPI frequency was analyzed. In addition different piston ring assemblies have been tested. Moreover an online acquisition of the unburned hydrocarbon emissions in the exhaust gas was performed. The combination of these experimental techniques in the present study provided further insights on the development of LSPI sequences.
Technical Paper

Influence of High Frequency Ignition on the Combustion and Emission Behaviour of Small Two-Stroke Spark Ignition Engines

2013-10-15
2013-32-9144
The two-stroke SI engine is the predominant driving unit in applications that require a high power-to-weight ratio, such as handheld power tools. Regarding the latest regulations in emission limits the main development area is clearly a further reduction of the exhaust emissions. The emissions are directly linked to the combustion processes and the scavenging losses. The optimization of the combustion processes, which represents one of the most challenging fields of research, is still one of the most important keys to enhance the thermal efficiency and reduce exhaust emissions. Regarding future emission regulations for small two-stroke SI engines it is inevitable that the emissions of gases causing the greenhouse effect, like carbon dioxide, need to be reduced. As most small SI engines are carburetted and operate open loop, the mixture formation and the amount of residual gas differs from cycle to cycle [1].
Journal Article

Influence of Fuel Composition on Exhaust Emissions of a DISI Engine during Catalyst Heating Operation

2013-10-14
2013-01-2571
Particle number measurements during different real world and legislative driving cycles show that catalyst heating, cold and transient engine operation cause increased particle number emissions. In this context the quality of mixture formation as a result of injector characteristics, in-cylinder flow, operation & engine parameters and fuel composition is a major factor. The goal of this paper is to evaluate the influence of different biogenic and alkylate fuels on the gaseous and particle number emission behavior during catalyst heating operation on a single-cylinder DISI engine. The engine is operated with a late ignition timing causing a high exhaust enthalpy flow to heat up the catalyst, a slightly lean global air fuel ratio to avoid high hydrocarbon emissions and a late injection right before the ignition to reduce the coefficient of variance of the indicated mean effective pressure.
Journal Article

Premature Flame Initiation in a Turbocharged DISI Engine - Numerical and Experimental Investigations

2013-04-08
2013-01-0252
This paper presents the results of experimental and numerical investigations on pre-ignition in a series-production turbocharged DISI engine. Previous studies led to the conclusion that pre-ignition can be triggered by auto-ignition of oil droplets generated in the combustion chamber. Analysis of more recent experiments shows that a modification of the engine operation parameters that promotes spray/lubricant interaction also increases pre-ignition frequency, while modifications that enhance the speed of chemical reactions (thereby favoring auto-ignition) have little or no influence. The experimental and numerical findings can be explained if we assume the existence of a substance (originating from lubricant/fuel interaction) that displays extremely short ignition delay times.
Technical Paper

Investigations of Ignition Processes Using High Frequency Ignition

2013-04-08
2013-01-1633
High frequency ignition (HFI) and conventional transistor coil ignition (TCI) were investigated with an optically accessible single-cylinder research engine to gain fundamental understanding of the chemical reactions taking place prior to the onset of combustion. Instead of generating heat in the gap of a conventional spark plug, a high frequency / high voltage electric field is employed in HFI to form chemical radicals. It is generated using a resonant circuit and sharp metallic tips placed in the combustion chamber. The setup is optimized to cause a so-called corona discharge in which highly energized channels (streamers) are created while avoiding a spark discharge. At a certain energy the number of ionized hydrocarbon molecules becomes sufficient to initiate self-sustained combustion. HFI enables engine operation with highly diluted (by air or EGR) gasoline-air mixtures or at high boost levels due to the lower voltage required.
Technical Paper

Controlled Hot Surface Ignition in Stationary Petrol and Natural Gas Operation

2012-10-23
2012-32-0006
An operation with a lean air-fuel mixture enables smaller cogeneration gas engines to operate at both high efficiency and low NOx emissions. Conventionally, the combustion process is induced through spark ignition. However, its small reactive mixture volume sets limits on increasing the air-fuel ratio, as a higher dilution reduces mixture inflammability as well as flame propagation speed. In addition, the spark plug durability is limited due to electrode wear, particularly through spark erosion, causing high maintenance costs. The ignition by means of a hot surface has great potential to extend the frequency of servicing intervals as well as to improve the trade-off between engine efficiency and NOx emissions. Compared to conventional spark ignition, ignition by means of a hot surface is achieved by accelerated combustion. The latter is produced by an increased initial reactive mixture volume.
Technical Paper

Comparison of the Emission Behaviour and Fuel Consumption of a Small Two-Stroke SI Chainsaw under Test-Bed- and Real In-Use Conditions

2012-10-23
2012-32-0070
The emission behaviour of an internal combustion engine under test-bed conditions shows differences to the emission behaviour under real in-use conditions. Because of this fact, the developers of combustion engines and the legislator are focussing on the measurement and optimization of real in-use emissions. To this day, the research, the adjustment of the carburettor and the legislation of small handheld engines is performed under test bench conditions, especially conditioned fuel pressure and temperature, as well as air temperature. Also the engines are laid out for two operation points: rated speed with full open throttle and idle speed. This test-procedure is used for all kinds of handheld off-road applications and does not consider the load profile of the different power tools. Especially applications with transient load profiles, for example chainsaws, work in more than two operating points in real use.
Journal Article

Investigation of the Flow Velocity in the Spark Plug Gap of a Two-Stroke Gasoline Engine using Laser-Doppler-Anemometry

2011-11-08
2011-32-0529
The two-stroke SI engine remains the dominant concept for handheld power tools. Its main advantages are a good power-to-weight ratio, simple mechanical design and low production costs. Because of these reasons, the two-stroke SI engine will remain the dominant engine in such applications for the foreseeable future. Increasingly stringent exhaust emission laws, in conjunction with the drive for more efficiency, have made new scavenging and combustion processes necessary. The main foci are to reduce raw emissions of unburned hydrocarbons via intelligent guidance of the fresh air-fuel mixture and to improve performance to reduce specific emissions. The flow velocity in the electrode gap of the spark plug is of great interest for the ignition of the air-fuel-mixture and the early combustion phase of all kinds of SI engines. In these investigations, the flow velocity in the spark plug gap of a two-stroke gasoline engine with stratified scavenging was measured under various conditions.
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