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Journal Article

Evaluation of the Effect of Low-Carbon Fuel Blends’ Properties in a Light-Duty CI Engine

2022-08-30
2022-01-1092
De-fossilization is an increasingly important trend in the energy sector. In the transport sector the de-fossilization efforts have been centered in promoting the electrification of vehicles, nonetheless other pathways, like the use of carbon neutral or carbon-offsetting fuels under current vehicle fleets, are also worth considering. Low-carbon fuels (LCF) can be synthetized from sources that can take advantage of the carbon already present in the atmosphere (either by technologies like direct carbon capture or biological processes like photosynthesis in biofuels) and use energy from renewable sources for the necessary industrial processes. Although, LCFs can be compared to fossil fuels as energy sources for internal combustion engines, their composition is not the same and their properties can modify the engine combustion and emissions.
Technical Paper

Evaluation of Neat Methanol as Fuel for a Light-Duty Compression Ignition Engine

2023-08-28
2023-24-0047
Methanol is currently being evaluated as a promising alternative fuel for internal combustion engines, due to being attainable by carbon neutral or negative pathways (renewable energy and carbon capture technology). The low ignitability of methanol has made it attractive mostly as a fuel for spark ignition engines, however the low sooting properties of the fuel could potentially reduce the NOx-soot tradeoff present in compression ignition engines. In this work, using a 4-cylinder engine with compression ratio modified from 16:1 to 19:1, methanol combustion is evaluated under five operating conditions in terms of fuel consumption, criteria pollutants, CO2 emissions and engine efficiency in addition to the qualitative assessment of the combustion stability. It was found that combustion is stable at medium to high loads, with medium load NOx emissions levels at least 30% lower than the original diesel engine and comparable emissions at maximum load conditions.
Journal Article

Downsized Boosted Dilute Combustion, Exhaust Compounded (DBDC+EC) Experimental Engine Design, Thermodynamic Model Comparison, and Performance Potential Predictions

2021-04-06
2021-01-0443
An experimental piston compounded engine was designed with guidance from thermodynamic modeling, then was built and tested to compare the model predictions to measured results. The piston-compounded concept has shown great potential for improvements in efficiency over current state-of-the-art light-duty engines through the use of an efficient second expansion process to more fully recover energy still present in the exhaust gasses, and was further developed into the Downsized Boosted Dilute Combustion, Exhaust Compounded (DBDC+EC) engine presented here. This paper documents some of the more unique design elements of this engine as well as a performance comparison between test data and modeling expectations. Ultimately, an experimental stoichiometric spark-ignited piston compounded engine was designed, five blocks were built, and collectively they were run for thousands of hours.
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