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Technical Paper

Expansion of Premixed Compression Ignition Combustion Region by Supercharging Operation and Lower Compression Ratio Piston

2007-08-05
2007-01-3614
Various premixed diesel combustion concepts are suggested as the way of simultaneous reduction of NOx and PM emission from diesel engines. However, every combustion concept has common problems, such as difficulty of ignition timing control, a great deal of HC and CO emissions and limiting the operation region to low load operation. The purpose of this study is to expand the operation region of Premixed Compression Ignition (PCI) combustion, which is a premixed diesel combustion concept that realizes the fuel injection around the top dead center. As a result of examining it with EGR, supercharging operation and low compression ratio piston, PCI combustion region was expanded to cover higher load operation. And the high load region was limited by not only stoichiometric air fuel ratio but also permissible maximum in-cylinder pressure.
Technical Paper

Effects of Fuel Injection Rate on Combustion and Emission in a DI Diesel Engine

1998-08-11
981929
Fuel injection rate pattern represents an important factor for emissions reduction. In this study, fuel spray photography, combustion photography and experimental data analysis indicate. 1) effect of pilot injection 2) effect of a gradual shaped injection profile using nozzle needle lift control 3) effect of a boot shaped injection profile using pressure control Common rail type fuel injection equipment was used in these experiments, and the engine was single cylinder naturally aspirated D.I. diesel engine. As a result, we found out that it is important to control the pre-mixed combustion for NOx reduction and to activate the diffusion combustion for smoke, and various fuel injection rate patterns we studied have similar effect on combustion and emissions at the most suitable condition respectively.
Technical Paper

Investigation of Fuel Impurities Effect on DME Powered Diesel Engine System

2010-04-12
2010-01-0468
DME as a fuel for compression ignition (diesel) engines has been actively studied for about ten years due to its characteristically low pollution and reputation as a “smokeless fuel”. During this time, the practical application is taking shape based on necessary tasks such as analysis of injection and combustion, engine performance, and development of experimental vehicles. At this moment, standardization of DME as a fuel was started under ISO in 2007. There are concerns regarding the impurities in DME regarding the mixing during production and distribution as well as their effect on additives for lubricity and odor. In this report, the effect of DME fuel impurities on performance of a DME powered diesel engine was investigated. The platform was a DME engine with common-rail fuel injection and was evaluated under partial load stable mode and Japanese transient mode (JE05) testing parameters.
Technical Paper

Dual Mode Combustion Concept With Premixed Diesel Combustion by Direct Injection Near Top Dead Center

2003-03-03
2003-01-0742
Premixed diesel combustion was performed and various characteristics examined with fuel injection timing near top dead center (TDC). A lean and uniform fuel-air mixture was found to during 25° C.A. with a narrow injection angle (27.5° with respect to horizontal), shallow dish combustion chamber, and low cetane number fuel (CN=19). These conditions enabled low NOx combustion in no exhaust gas re-circulation (EGR), despite fuel injection timing around 25° BTDC. Furthermore, HC emissions were lower than with premixed diesel combustion of the early injection type. Because fuel injection timing was near TDC, the volume of the mixture dispersed to a squish area was decreased. This combustion mode was also achieved with a high-cetane fuel (conventional diesel fuel) and high EGR rate conditions. However, in this case, it was difficult to adjust the ignition timing near top dead center. This combustion system also showed good performance in conventional diesel combustion mode.
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