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Journal Article

Particle Size Distribution Measurements from Early to Late Injection Timing Low Temperature Combustion in a Heavy Duty Diesel Engine

2010-04-12
2010-01-1121
The use of early and late injection diesel Low Temperature Combustion (LTC) strategies in the low to mid load operating range are becoming increasingly popular options for production diesel engines to reduce oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and particulate matter (PM) emissions. Although opacity-based filter smoke number (FSN) PM measurements in these operating conditions have been reduced to near zero for many instruments (which are standard and very useful in most engine combustion research laboratories), significant changes can still be seen in the particle size and number measurements (such as a 2.5 - 4.5 fold variation in total particle number concentration, depending on engine operating condition). The current work presents particle size distribution measurements from early to late injection timing LTC, varying the start of injection (SOI) by three crank angle degrees (CAD) per data point, for two exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) rates, 45% and 50%.
Journal Article

Investigation on Multiple Injection Strategies for Gasoline PPC Operation in a Newly Designed 2-Stroke HSDI Compression Ignition Engine

2015-04-14
2015-01-0830
Partially Premixed Combustion (PPC) of fuels in the gasoline octane range has proven its potential to achieve simultaneous reduction in soot and NOX emissions, combined with high indicated efficiencies; while still retaining proper control over combustion phasing with the injection event, contrary to fully premixed strategies. However, gasoline fuels with high octane number as the commonly available for the public provide a challenge to ensure reliable ignition especially in the low load range, while fuel blends with lower octane numbers present problems for extending the ignition delay in the high load range and avoid the onset of knocking-like combustion. Thus, choosing an appropriate fuel and injection strategy is critical to solve these issues, assuring successful PPC operation in the full engine map.
Technical Paper

Closed-Loop Combustion Control by Extremum Seeking with the Passive-Chamber Ignition Concept in SI Engines

2020-04-14
2020-01-1142
The passive pre-chamber ignition concept has shown the potential of increasing the combustion efficiency at high load by allowing more advanced combustion phasing due to its rapid combustion. The optimization of the spark advance and the dilution rate is currently a challenging task that would allow these types of engines to maintain spark ignited (SI) engines pollutants with even higher combustion efficiencies than diesel engines. This paper is focused on the automatic calibration of a SI engine, when using the passive-chamber ignition concept. The sensitivity of the combustion efficiency to spark advance and dilution rate has been studied and an extremum seeking approach has been designed to optimize the control inputs by rejecting disturbances and maintaining certain limitations of cycle-to-cycle variability and misfires.
Technical Paper

Experimental and Numerical Analysis of Passive Pre-Chamber Ignition with EGR and Air Dilution for Future Generation Passenger Car Engines

2020-04-14
2020-01-0238
Nowadays the combination of strict regulations for pollutant and CO2 emissions, together with the irruption of electric vehicles in the automotive market, is arising many concerns for internal combustion engine community. For this purpose, many research efforts are being devoted to the development of a new generation of high-performance spark-ignition (SI) engines for passenger car applications. Particularly, the PC ignition concept, also known as Turbulent Jet Ignition (TJI), is the focus of several investigations for its benefits in terms of engine thermal efficiency. The passive or un-scavenged version of this ignition strategy does not require an auxiliary fuel supply inside the PC; therefore, it becomes a promising solution for passenger car applications as packaging and installation are simple and straightforward.
Journal Article

Effect of Intake Oxygen Concentration on Particle Size Distribution Measurements from Diesel Low Temperature Combustion

2011-04-12
2011-01-1355
Concepts of premixed diesel Low Temperature Combustion (LTC) have been shown to be advantageous in greatly reducing engine-out nitrogen oxide (NOx) and particulate matter (PM) emissions, even below the minimum detection limit of standard opacity-based PM mass instruments. Previous research has revealed that significant changes to the PM size and number emissions still occur for changes to the LTC engine operating conditions. This work investigates the influence of reductions in intake oxygen concentration on PM (mass, size, and number), NOx, hydrocarbon (HC), and carbon monoxide (CO) emissions from select LTC engine operating conditions. Exhaust particle size distributions were measured for multiple engine operating conditions of premixed diesel LTC within a range of five intake oxygen concentrations from 9% to 13% (by volume) at three intake pressures from 1.325 to 1.6 bar.
Journal Article

An Investigation on Mixing and Auto-ignition using Diesel and Gasoline in a Direct-Injection Compression-Ignition Engine Operating in PCCI Combustion Conditions

2011-06-09
2011-37-0008
Most of the new Diesel combustion concepts are mainly based on reducing local combustion temperatures and enhancing the fuel/air mixing with the aim of simultaneously reducing soot and NOx emissions. In this framework, Premixed Charge Compression Ignition (PCCI) has revealed as one of the best options to combine both low emissions and good combustion controllability. During last years, PCCI strategy has been widely explored using high EGR levels and different early or late injection timings to extend the ignition delay. Recently, the use of lower cetane fuels is under investigation. Despite the great quantity of research work performed, there are still some aspects related to PCCI combustion that are not completely well known. In this paper an experimental and numerical study is carried out focused on understanding the mixing and auto-ignition processes in PCCI combustion conditions using Diesel and Gasoline fuels.
Journal Article

Numerical Methodology for Optimization of Compression-Ignited Engines Considering Combustion Noise Control

2018-04-03
2018-01-0193
It is challenging to develop highly efficient and clean engines while meeting user expectations in terms of performance, comfort, and drivability. One of the critical aspects in this regard is combustion noise control. Combustion noise accounts for about 40 percent of the overall engine noise in typical turbocharged diesel engines. The experimental investigation of noise generation is difficult due to its inherent complexity and measurement limitations. Therefore, it is important to develop efficient numerical strategies in order to gain a better understanding of the combustion noise mechanisms. In this work, a novel methodology was developed, combining computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modeling and genetic algorithm (GA) technique to optimize the combustion system hardware design of a high-speed direct injection (HSDI) diesel engine, with respect to various emissions and performance targets including combustion noise.
Technical Paper

Advanced Injection Strategies to Attain Partially Premixed Combustion Process in a Heavy Duty Diesel Engine

2008-04-14
2008-01-0642
The scope of present study is the analysis of the potential of the highly premixed combustion concept for pollutant control in a HD Diesel engine. Two different approaches to attain this advanced combustion concept are presented in this paper. A narrow angle nozzle configuration is investigated with two different adapted piston bowl geometries. Parametrical tests were performed in a HD single cylinder engine with the aim of appreciating advantages and limitations of these strategies. In each case, results are compared with equivalent conventional single injection strategy. This analysis is focused on NOx-soot emissions and also on engine performance.
Technical Paper

An Insight on the Spray-A Combustion Characteristics by Means of RANS and LES Simulations Using Flamelet-Based Combustion Models

2017-03-28
2017-01-0577
Advanced Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) modeling of reacting sprays provides access to information not available even applying the most advanced experimental techniques. This is particularly evident if the combustion model handles detailed chemical kinetic models efficiently to describe the fuel auto-ignition and oxidation processes. Complex chemistry also provides the temporal evolution of key species closely related to emissions formation, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) that are well-known as soot precursors. In this framework, present investigation focuses on the analysis of the so-called Spray-A combustion characteristics using two different flamelet-based combustion models. Both Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) and Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) predictions are combined to study not only the averaged spray characteristics, but also the relevance of different realizations in this particular problem.
Technical Paper

The Potential of Highly Premixed Combustion for Pollutant Control in an Automotive Two-Stroke HSDI Diesel Engine

2012-04-16
2012-01-1104
An innovative alternative to overcome the load limits of the early injection highly premixed combustion concept consists of taking advantage of the intrinsic characteristics of two-stroke engines, since they can attain the full load torque of a four-stroke engine as the addition of two medium load cycles, where the implementation of this combustion concept could be promising. In this frame, the main objective of this investigation focuses on evaluating the potential of the early injection HPC concept using a conventional diesel fuel combined with a two-stroke poppet valves engine architecture for pollutant control, while keeping a competitive engine efficiency. On a first stage, the HPC concept was implemented at low engine load, where the concept is expected to provide the best results, by advancing the start of injection towards the compression stroke and it was confirmed how it is possible to reduce NOX and soot emissions, but increasing HC and CO emissions.
Technical Paper

An Investigation of the Engine Combustion Network ‘Spray B’ in a Light Duty Single Cylinder Optical Engine

2018-04-03
2018-01-0220
Engine Combustion Network promotes fundamental investigations on a number of different spray configurations with the goal of providing experimental results under highly controlled conditions for CFD validation. Most of the available experiments up to now have been obtained in spray vessels, which miss some of the interactions governing spray evolution in the combustion chamber of an engine, such as the jet wall interaction and the transient conditions in the combustion chamber. The main aim of the present research is to compare the results obtained with a three-hole, 90 μm injector, known as ECN’s Spray B, in these constant-volume vessels and more recent Heavy-Duty engines with those obtained in a Light Duty Single Cylinder Optical Engine, under inert and reactive conditions, using n-dodecane. In-cylinder conditions during the injection were estimated by means of a 1-D and 0-D model simulation, accounting for heat transfer and in-cylinder mass evolution.
Technical Paper

Influence of Boost Pressure and Injection Pressure on Combustion Process and Exhaust Emissions in a HD Diesel Engine

2004-06-08
2004-01-1842
The scope of this study is the analysis of the influence of boost pressure and injection pressure on combustion process and pollutant emissions. The influence of these parameters is investigated for different engine speeds. Fuel mass was kept constant for all the tests in order to avoid its influence on the analysis. A single cylinder research diesel engine, equipped with a common rail injection system capable of operating up to a maximum pressure of 150 MPa was used. Special attention was paid to NOx, smoke (which are the most important pollutants for legislation) and brake specific fuel consumption.
Technical Paper

A Numerical and Experimental Investigation on Different Strategies to Evaluate Heat Release Rate and Performance of a Passive Pre-Chamber Ignition System

2022-03-29
2022-01-0386
Pre-chamber ignition has demonstrated capability to increase internal combustion engine in-cylinder burn rates and enable the use of low engine-out pollutant emission combustion strategies. In the present study, newly designed passive pre-chambers with different nozzle-hole patterns - that featured combinations of radial and axial nozzles - were experimentally investigated in an optically accessible, single-cylinder research engine. The pre-chambers analyzed had a narrow throat geometry to increase the velocity of the ejected jets. In addition to a conventional inductive spark igniter, a nanosecond spark ignition system that promotes faster early burn rates was also investigated. Time-resolved visualization of ignition and combustion processes was accomplished through high-speed hydroxyl radical (OH*) chemiluminescence imaging. Pressure was measured during the engine cycle in both the main chamber and pre-chamber to monitor respective combustion progress.
Technical Paper

Experimental Evaluation of Methane-Hydrogen Mixtures for Enabling Stable Lean Combustion in Spark-Ignition Engines for Automotive Applications

2022-03-29
2022-01-0471
Economy decarbonization will be one of the main goals for the following years. Research efforts are being focused on reducing carbon-based emissions, by increasing the efficiency of the transport power plants while developing new fuel production methods that reduce the environmental footprint of the refinement process. Consequently, the depletion of conventional fuels derived from petroleum with high carbon content, such as gasoline and diesel, motivated the development of propulsive alternatives for the transportation sector. In this paradigm, methane (CH4) fuel appears as a mid-term solution due to its low carbon content, if compared with traditional fuels, and the low CO2 emissions during its production from renewable sources. However, the intrinsic properties of methane compromise the combustion process, subsequently increasing the emission of CO2.
Technical Paper

Quasi-1D Analysis of n-Dodecane Split Injection Process

2022-03-29
2022-01-0506
Split injection processes have been analyzed by means of a Quasi-1D spray model that has been recently coupled to a laminar tabulated unsteady-flamelet progress-variable (UFPV) combustion model. The modelling approach can predict ignition delay and lift-off for long injection profiles, and it is now extended to a two-pulse injection scheme. In spite of the simplicity of the approach, relevant phenomena are adequately reproduced. In particular, the faster penetration of the second injection pulse compared to the first one is captured by the model both under inert and reacting conditions. The second pulse ignites much faster than the first one due to the injection into the remnants of the first one, where high temperature oxygen-depleted regions can be found. Ignition of the second pulse happens as soon as the first pulse reaches this region, with a faster low- to high-temperature transition.
Technical Paper

A Procedure to Achieve 1D Predictive Modeling of Turbochargers under Hot and Pulsating Flow Conditions at the Turbine Inlet

2014-04-01
2014-01-1080
Nowadays turbocharging the internal combustion engine has become an essential tool in the automotive industry to meet downsizing technique requirements. In that context turbocharger unsteadiness is huge since both turbine and compressor work under high pulsating flow conditions, being turbocharger behavior prediction more difficult but still key for matching and predicting ICE performance. The well understanding and modeling of the occurring physical phenomena during turbocharger unsteady and off-design operation seems crucial. In this paper three small radial turbines used in turbochargers from passenger car applications have been tested under high temperature and pulsating flow conditions on the turbine side. A gas stand and a rotary valve installed on the turbine inlet have been used to reproduce pulses with desired characteristics. A beam-forming technique for pressure wave's decomposition has been used to analyze turbine performance in detail.
Technical Paper

Analysis of the Load Effect on the Partially Premixed Combustion Concept in a 2-Stroke HSDI Diesel Engine Fueled with Conventional Gasoline

2014-04-01
2014-01-1291
Partially Premixed Combustion (PPC) of fuels in the gasoline octane range has proven its potential to achieve simultaneous reduction in soot and NOX emissions, combined with high indicated efficiencies, while still retaining control over combustion phasing with the injection event. However, the octane range where the ignition properties of a given fuel are optimum depends on the engine running conditions. Thus, low octane fuels present problems for extending the ignition delay at medium to high engine loads; while too high octane fuels have ignition problems at low engine loads. Two-stroke engines arise as a promising solution to extend the load range of the PPC concept, since it intrinsically provides equivalent torque response with only half the IMEP required in a four-stroke engine.
Technical Paper

Achieving Ultra-Lean Combustion Using a Pre-Chamber Spark Ignition System in a Rapid Compression-Expansion Machine

2019-04-02
2019-01-0236
Combustion processes operating under fuel lean conditions are a promising technology for internal combustion engines, achieving low emissions and very high efficiency. In traditional spark ignition engines, the charge dilution affects the flame propagation speed, leading to a combustion instability. A way to overcome these limits consists on the replacement of the spark with a pre-chamber ignition system. The combustion starts in the pre-chamber and develops in the main chamber through multiple and distributed ignition points, ensuring fast burn rate and stability. This paper focuses on the performance evaluation of a pre-chamber spark ignition system operating under ultra-lean conditions. An experimental campaign is carried out using a rapid compression-expansion machine fueled with liquid iso-octane as a surrogate fuel for gasoline.
Technical Paper

Assessment of the Ignition System Requirement on Diluted Mixture Spark Engines

2020-04-14
2020-01-1116
In order to face the new challenges, spark ignition engines are evolving by following some strategies and technologies. Among them, alternative combustion processes based on the dilution of the homogeneous mixture, either with fresh air or with Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR), are being explored. In a higher or lower extent, these changes modify in-cylinder thermodynamic conditions during the engine operation (pressure, temperature and gas composition) thus conditioning the spark ignition system requirements that will have to evolve to become more reliable and powerful. In this framework, an experimental study on the effect of the key in-cylinder conditions on the ignition system performance has been carried out in a single-cylinder spark-ignition (SI) research engine. The study includes EGR, lambda and energizing time sweeps to assess the behavior of the engine in different operating conditions.
Journal Article

A Quasi-1D Model for the Description of ECN Spray a Combustion Process

2020-04-14
2020-01-0661
An existing one-dimensional (1D) spray model, which successfully captures inert spray processes, has been extended to enable prediction of ignition delay and lift-off length under reacting conditions. For that purpose, an additional transport equation for the progress variable has been incorporated, which includes detailed chemistry effects by means of a tabulation method based upon an external flamelet solver. The transport equation for the progress variable is solved in a quasi-1D fashion, along presumed mixture fraction trajectories, while the 1D approach is retained for the mixture fraction and axial velocity fields. The paper includes the model development, as well as the validation against Spray A measurements from the Engine Combustion Network. In spite of the simplified approach, the model captures some of the experimental trends of the lift-off length and ignition delay with a quite low computational cost.
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