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Technical Paper

On Road vs. Off Road Low Load Cycle Comparison

2024-04-09
2024-01-2134
Reducing criteria pollutants while reducing greenhouse gases is an active area of research for commercial on-road vehicles as well as for off-road machines. The heavy duty on-road sector has moved to reducing NOx by 82.5% compared to 2010 regulations while increasing the engine useful life from 435,000 to 650,000 miles by 2027 in the United States (US). An additional certification cycle, the Low Load Cycle (LLC), has been added focusing on part load operation having tight NOx emissions levels. In addition to NOx, the total CO2 emissions from the vehicle will also be reduced for various model years. The off-road market is following with a 90% NOx reduction target compared to Tier 4 Final for 130-560 kW engines along with greenhouse gas targets that are still being established. The off-road market will also need to certify with a Low Load Application Cycle (LLAC), a version of which was proposed for evaluation in 2021.
Technical Paper

Performance Comparison Analysis between Biodiesel and Diesel over a Commercial DOC Catalyst

2024-04-09
2024-01-2707
Biodiesel is a promising alternative to traditional diesel fuel due to its similar combustion properties to diesel and lower carbon emissions on a well-to-wheel basis. However, combusting biodiesel still generates hydrocarbon (HC), CO, NOx and particulate matter (PM) emissions, similar to those from traditional diesel fuel usage. Therefore, aftertreatment systems will be required to reduce these emissions to meet increasingly stringent emission regulations to minimize the impact to the environment. Diesel oxidation catalysts (DOC) are widely used in modern aftertreatment systems to convert unburned HC and CO, to partially convert NO to NO2 to enhance downstream selective catalytic reaction (SCR) catalyst efficiency via fast SCR and to periodically clean-up DPF via controlled soot oxidation. In this work, we focus on the performance difference between biodiesel and diesel over a commercial DOC catalyst to identify the knowledge gap during the transition from diesel fuel to biodiesel.
Technical Paper

Sulfur Impact on Methane Steam Reforming over the Stoichiometric Natural Gas Three-Way Catalyst

2024-04-09
2024-01-2633
The steam reforming of CH4 plays a crucial role in the high-temperature activity of natural gas three-way catalysts. Despite existing reports on sulfur inhibition in CH4 steam reforming, there is a limited understanding of sulfur storage and removal dynamics under various lambda conditions. In this study, we utilize a 4-Mode sulfur testing approach to elucidate the dynamics of sulfur storage and removal and their impact on three-way catalyst performance. We also investigate the influence of sulfur on CH4 steam reforming by analyzing CH4 conversions under dithering, rich, and lean reactor conditions. In the 4-Mode sulfur test, saturating the TWC with sulfur at low temperatures emerges as the primary cause of significant three-way catalyst performance degradation. After undergoing a deSOx treatment at 600 °C, NOx conversions were fully restored, while CH4 conversions did not fully recover.
Technical Paper

Analysis of Real-World Preignition Data Using Neural Networks

2023-10-31
2023-01-1614
1Increasing adoption of downsized, boosted, spark-ignition engines has improved vehicle fuel economy, and continued improvement is desirable to reduce carbon emissions in the near-term. However, this strategy is limited by damaging preignition events which can cause hardware failure. Research to date has shed light on various contributing factors related to fuel and lubricant properties as well as calibration strategies, but the causal factors behind an individual preignition cycle remain elusive. If actionable precursors could be identified, mitigation through active control strategies would be possible. This paper uses artificial neural networks to search for identifiable precursors in the cylinder pressure data from a large real-world data set containing many preignition cycles. It is found that while follow-up preignition cycles in clusters can be readily predicted, the initial preignition cycle is not predictable based on features of the cylinder pressure.
Technical Paper

Effect of Split-Injection Strategies on Engine Performance and Emissions under Cold-Start Operation

2023-04-11
2023-01-0236
The recently concluded partnership for advancing combustion engines (PACE) was a US Department of Energy consortium involving multiple national laboratories focused on addressing key efficiency and emission barriers in light-duty engines. Generation of detailed experimental data and modeling capabilities to understand and predict cold-start behavior was a major pillar in this program. Cold-start, as defined by the time between first engine crank and three-way catalyst light-off, is responsible for a large percentage of NOx, unburned hydrocarbon, and particulate matter emissions in light-duty engines. Minimizing emissions during cold-start is a trade-off between achieving faster three-way catalyst light-off, and engine out emissions during that period. In this study, engine performance, emissions, and catalyst warmup potential were monitored while the engine was operated using a single direct injection (baseline case) as well as a two-way-equal-split direct injection strategy.
Technical Paper

The Influences of Testing Conditions on DOC Light-Off Experiments

2023-04-11
2023-01-0372
Diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) is one of the critical catalyst components in modern diesel aftertreatment systems. It mainly converts unburned hydrocarbon (HC) and CO to CO2 and H2O before they are released to the environment. In addition, it also oxidizes a portion of NO to NO2, which improves the NOx conversion efficiency via fast SCR over the downstream selective catalytic reduction (SCR) catalyst. HC light-off tests, with or without the presence of NOx, has been typically used for DOC evaluation in laboratory. In this work, we aim to understand the influences of DOC light-off experimental conditions, such as initial temperature, initial holding time, HC species, with or without the presence of NOx, on the DOC HC light-off behavior. The results indicate that light-off test with lower initial temperature and longer initial holding time (at its initial temperature) leads to higher DOC light-off temperature.
Technical Paper

Experimental and Modeling Study on the Thermal Aging Impact on the Performance of the Natural Gas Three-Way Catalyst

2023-04-11
2023-01-0375
The prediction accuracy of a three-way catalyst (TWC) model is highly associated with the ability of the model to incorporate the reaction kinetics of the emission process as a lambda function. In this study, we investigated the O2 and H2 concentration profiles of TWC reactions and used them as critical inputs for the development of a global TWC model. We presented the experimental data and global kinetic model showing the impact of thermal degradation on the performance of the TWC. The performance metrics investigated in this study included CH4, NOx, and CO conversions under lean, rich, and dithering light-off conditions to determine the kinetics of oxidation reactions and reduction/reforming/water-gas shift reactions as a function of thermal aging. The O2 and H2 concentrations were measured using mass spectrometry to track the change in the oxidation state of the catalyst and to determine the mechanism of the reactions under these light-off conditions.
Journal Article

Development of a Supercharged Octane Number and a Supercharged Octane Index

2023-04-11
2023-01-0251
Gasoline knock resistance is characterized by the Research and Motor Octane Number (RON and MON), which are rated on the CFR octane rating engine at naturally aspirated conditions. However, modern automotive downsized boosted spark ignition (SI) engines generally operate at higher cylinder pressures and lower temperatures relative to the RON and MON tests. Using the naturally aspirated RON and MON ratings, the octane index (OI) characterizes the knock resistance of gasolines under boosted operation by linearly extrapolating into boosted “beyond RON” conditions via RON, MON, and a linear regression K factor. Using OI solely based on naturally aspirated RON and MON tests to extrapolate into boosted conditions can lead to significant errors in predicting boosted knock resistance between gasolines due to non-linear changes in autoignition and knocking characteristics with increasing pressure conditions.
Journal Article

Laboratory sulfation of an ammonia slip catalyst with a real-world SO2 concentration

2023-04-11
2023-01-0380
Upcoming, stricter diesel exhaust emissions standards will likely require aftertreatment architectures with multiple diesel exhaust fluid (DEF) introduction locations. Managing NH3 slip with technologies such as an ammonia slip catalyst (ASC) will continue to be critical in these future aftertreatment systems. In this study, we evaluate the impact of SO2 exposure on a state-of-the-art commercially available ASC. SO2 is co-fed at 0.5 or 3 ppmv to either approximate or accelerate a real-world exhaust SO2 impact. ASC performance during sulfur co-feeding is measured under a wide variety of simulated real-world conditions. Results indicate that the loss of NO conversion during SCR is dependent on the cumulative SO2 exposure, regardless of the inlet SO2 concentration. Meanwhile, N2O formation under SCR conditions is nonlinearly affected by SO2 exposure, with formation increasing during 0.5 ppmv SO2 exposure but decreasing in the presence of 3 ppmv SO2.
Technical Paper

Impact of Chemical Contaminants on Stoichiometric Natural Gas Engine Three-Way Catalysts with High Mileage History

2022-03-29
2022-01-0542
Stoichiometric natural gas engines with three-way catalysts emit less NOx and CH4 due to their higher efficiency compared to lean-burn natural gas engines. Although hydrothermal aging of three-way catalysts has been extensively studied, a deeper understanding beyond hydrothermal aging is needed to explain real-world performance, especially for natural gas engines with near-zero NOx emissions. In this investigation, field-aged three-way catalysts were characterized to identify the contribution of chemical aging to their overall performance. It was found that the sulfur species on the field-aged TWCs were entirely distributed along the catalyst length, showing a decreasing trend, whereas phosphorous contamination was mainly observed at the inlet section of the three-way catalysts, and the phosphorous concentration declined sharply along the axial length.
Technical Paper

Artificial Neural Networks for In-Cycle Prediction of Knock Events

2022-03-29
2022-01-0478
Downsized turbocharged engines have been increasingly popular in modern light-duty vehicles due to their fuel efficiency benefits. However, high power density in such engines is achieved thanks to high in-cylinder pressure and temperature conditions that increase knock propensity. Next-cycle control has been studied as a method to reduce the damaging effects of knock by operating the engine in a low knock probability condition. This exploratory study looks at the feasibility of in-cycle knock prediction as a tool for advanced knock control algorithms. A methodology is proposed to 1) choose in-cycle features of the pressure trace that highly correlate with knock events and 2) train artificial neural networks to predict in-cycle knock events before knock onset. The methodology was validated at different operating conditions and different levels of generalization. Precision and recall were used as metrics to evaluate the binary classifier.
Journal Article

The Effect of Spark-Plug Heat Dispersal Range and Exhaust Valve Opening Timing on Cold-Start Emissions and Cycle-to-Cycle Variability

2021-09-21
2021-01-1180
The partnership for advancing combustion engines (PACE) is a US Department of Energy consortium involving multiple national laboratories and includes a goal of addressing key efficiency and emission barriers in light-duty engines fueled with a market-representative E10 gasoline. A major pillar of the initiative is the generation of detailed experimental data and modeling capabilities to understand and predict cold-start behavior. Cold-start, as defined by the time between first engine crank and three-way catalyst light-off, is responsible for a large percentage of NOx, unburned hydrocarbon and particulate matter emissions in light-duty engines. Minimizing emissions during cold-start is a trade-off between achieving faster light-off of the three-way catalyst and engine out emissions during that period.
Journal Article

Particle Matter Index and Fuel Wall-wetting Relations on Stochastic Pre-ignition

2021-09-21
2021-01-1163
This work explores the effect of the particle matter index (PMI) and aromatic content on fuel wall impingement associated with stochastic pre-ignition (SPI). Statically significant measurements of SPI rates are directly coupled with laser induced florescence (LIF) measurements of fuel dilution from spray-linear impingement. Literature suggests that PMI is could be correlated with the number of SPI events, but the root cause(s) of PMI and SPI are directly causational or are a predicator of SPI. Three fuels have been used in this study with 3 different PMI and two different aromatic contents. The fuels are direct injected at two different injection timings, an earlier injection timing which initially targets the piston crown, 310°CA bTDC, and a later injection timing that the liner, 220°CA bTDC start of injection timings (SOI) respectively. The earlier 310 SOI injection increases soot, whereas the later 220°CA SOI targets the liner and increases wall-wetting.
Journal Article

Fuel Stratification Effects on Gasoline Compression Ignition with a Regular-Grade Gasoline on a Single-Cylinder Medium-Duty Diesel Engine at Low Load

2021-09-21
2021-01-1173
Prior research studies have investigated a wide variety of gasoline compression ignition (GCI) injection strategies and the resulting fuel stratification levels to maintain control over the combustion phasing, duration, and heat release rate. Previous GCI research at the US Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory has shown that for a combustion mode with a low degree of fuel stratification, called “partial fuel stratification” (PFS), gasoline range fuels with anti-knock index values in the range of regular-grade gasoline (~87 anti-knock index or higher) provides very little controllability over the timing of combustion without significant boost pressures. On the contrary, heavy fuel stratification (HFS) provides control over combustion phasing but has challenges achieving low temperature combustion operation, which has the benefits of low NOX and soot emissions, because of the air handling burdens associated with the required high exhaust gas recirculation rates.
Journal Article

Fuel Effects on Advanced Compression Ignition Load Limits

2021-09-21
2021-01-1172
In order to maximize the efficiency of light-duty gasoline engines, the Co-Optimization of Fuels and Engines (Co-Optima) initiative from the U.S. Department of Energy is investigating multi-mode combustion strategies. Multi-mode combustion can be describe as using conventional spark-ignited combustion at high loads, and at the part-load operating conditions, various advanced compression ignition (ACI) strategies are being investigated to increase efficiency. Of particular interest to the Co-Optima initiative is the extent to which optimal fuel properties and compositions can enable higher efficiency ACI combustion over larger portions of the operating map. Extending the speed-load range of these ACI modes can enable greater part-load efficiency improvements for multi-mode combustion strategies.
Journal Article

Performance Comparison of LPG and Gasoline in an Engine Configured for EGR-Loop Catalytic Reforming

2021-09-21
2021-01-1158
In prior work, the EGR loop catalytic reforming strategy developed by ORNL has been shown to provide a relative brake engine efficiency increase of more than 6% by minimizing the thermodynamic expense of the reforming processes, and in some cases achieving thermochemical recuperation (TCR), a form of waste heat recovery where waste heat is converted to usable chemical energy. In doing so, the EGR dilution limit was extended beyond 35% under stoichiometric conditions. In this investigation, a Microlith®-based metal-supported reforming catalyst (developed by Precision Combustion, Inc. (PCI)) was used to reform the parent fuel in a thermodynamically efficient manner into products rich in H2 and CO. We were able to expand the speed and load ranges relative to previous investigations: from 1,500 to 2,500 rpm, and from 2 to 14 bar break mean effective pressure (BMEP).
Technical Paper

Three-Dimensional CFD Investigation of Pre-Spark Heat Release in a Boosted SI Engine

2021-04-06
2021-01-0400
Low-temperature heat release (LTHR) in spark-ignited internal combustion engines is a critical step toward the occurrence of auto-ignition, which can lead to an undesirable phenomenon known as engine knock. Hence, correct predictions of LTHR are of utmost importance to improve the understanding of knock and enable techniques aimed at controlling it. While LTHR is typically obscured by the deflagration following the spark ignition, extremely late ignition timings can lead to LTHR occurrence prior to the spark, i.e., pre-spark heat release (PSHR). In this research, PSHR in a boosted direct-injection SI engine was numerically investigated using three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD). A hybrid approach was used, based on the G-equation model for representing the turbulent flame front and the multi-zone well-stirred reactor model for tracking the chemical reactions within the unburnt region.
Technical Paper

In Situ Laser Induced Florescence Measurements of Fuel Dilution from Low Load to Stochastic Pre Ignition Prone Conditions

2021-04-06
2021-01-0489
This work employs a novel laser induced fluorescence (LIF) diagnostic to measure fuel dilution in a running single cylinder research engine operated at stochastic pre ignition (SPI) and non-SPI prone conditions. Measurements of LIF based fuel dilution are quantified over a range of engine loads and fuel injection timings for two fuels. The in situ LIF measurements of fuel/lubricant interactions illustrate regions of increased fuel dilution from fuel-wall interactions and is believed to be a fundamental underpinning to generating top ring zone liquid conditions conducive to SPI. A novel level of dye doped in the fuel, between 50 to 500 ppm was used as the fluorescence source, at engine operating speed of 2000r/min from 5 to 18 bar of IMEPg injection timings was swept for two fuels of varying volatility.
Journal Article

Impact of Water Vapor on the Performance of a Cu-SSZ-13 Catalyst under Simulated Diesel Exhaust Conditions

2021-04-06
2021-01-0577
Cu-SSZ-13 selective catalytic reduction (SCR) catalysts are broadly applied in diesel aftertreatment systems for the catalytic conversion of oxides of nitrogen (NO + NO2). Diesel exhaust contains a wide range of water vapor concentrations depending on the operating condition. In this study, we evaluate the impact of water vapor on the relevant SCR catalytic functions including NOx conversion, NO oxidation, NH3 oxidation, and N2O formation under both standard and fast SCR conditions. Reactor-based experiments are conducted in the presence and absence of water vapor. Results indicate that water vapor can have both a positive and negative impact on low temperature NOx conversion for standard SCR reaction. At low inlet NOx concentrations, the presence of water vapor has a negative effect on NOx conversion, whereas, at high inlet NO concentrations, water vapor improves NOx conversion.
Technical Paper

Heavy-Duty Engines Exhaust Sub-23 nm Solid Particle Number Measurements

2021-02-24
2021-01-5024
The measurement of solid particles down to 10 nm is being incorporated into global technical regulations (GTR). This study explores the measurement of solid particles below 23 nm by using both current and proposed particle number (PN) systems having different volatile particle remover (VPR) methodologies and condensation particle counter (CPC) cutoff diameters. The measurements were conducted in dynamometer test cells using ten diesel and eight natural gas (NG) engines that were going under development for a variety of global emission standards. The PN systems measured solid PN from more than 700 test cycles. The results from the preliminary campaign showed a 10-280% increase in PN emissions with the inclusion of particles below 23 nm.
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