Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 8 of 8
Technical Paper

Universal Rule of Hydrocarbon Oxidation

2009-04-20
2009-01-0948
Hydrocarbon thermal ignition in internal combustion engines is controlled by the balance of heat release rate by chemical reactions and internal energy formation or removal rate by adiabatic compression or expansion. Heat release rate can be described by a simple “Universal Rule”, that the heat release rate during the thermal ignition preparation period is determined by H2O2 loop composed of four elementary reactions. This rule was validated by sensitivity analysis and response analysis to perturbation of intermediate species concentrations. The rule was applied to clarify several subjects with experimental backgrounds, such as ignition characteristics of higher octane number fuels, an old and well-known knocking model and the influence of H2 addition.
Technical Paper

Reduction of Reaction Mechanism for n-Tridecane Based on Knowledge of Detailed Reaction Paths

2016-10-17
2016-01-2238
n-Tridecane is a low boiling point component of gas oil, and has been used as a single-component fuel for diesel spray and combustion experiments. However, no reduced chemical kinetic mechanisms for n-tridecane have been presented for three-dimensional modeling. A detailed mechanism developed by KUCRS (Knowledge-basing Utilities for Complex Reaction Systems), contains 1493 chemical species and 3641 reactions. Reaction paths during ignition process for n-tridecane in air computed using the detailed mechanism, were analyzed with the equivalence ratio of 0.75 and the initial temperatures of 650 K, 850 K, and 1100 K, which are located in the cool-flame dominant, negative-temperature coefficient, and blue-flame dominant regions, respectively.
Journal Article

Ignition Characteristics of Ethane and Its Roles in Natural Gas for HCCI Engine Operation

2015-04-14
2015-01-0811
The ignition characteristics of each component of natural gas and the chemical kinetic factors determining those characteristics were investigated using detailed chemical kinetic calculations. Ethane (C2H6) showed a relatively short ignition delay time with high initial temperature; the heat release profile was slow in the early stage of the ignition process and rapid during the late stage. Furthermore, the ignition delay time of C2H6 showed very low dependence on O2 concentration. In the ignition process of C2H6, HO2 is generated effectively by several reaction paths, and H2O2 is generated from HO2 and accumulated with a higher concentration, which promotes the OH formation rate of H2O2 (+ M) = OH + OH (+ M). The ignition characteristics for C2H6 can be explained by H2O2 decomposition governing OH formation at any initial temperature.
Technical Paper

Heat Release Rate and Cylinder Gas Pressure Oscillation in Low and High Speed Knock

2015-09-01
2015-01-1880
One of the authors has proposed to use the decay rate of EHRR, the effective heat release rate, d2Q/dθ2 as an index for the rapid local combustion [1]. In this study, EHRR profiles and the cylinder gas pressure oscillations of the low and high speed knock are analyzed by using this index. A delayed rapid local combustion, such as an autoignition with small burned mass fraction can be detected. In the cases of the low speed knock, it has been agreed that a rapid local combustion is an autoignition. Although whether the cylinder gas oscillation is provoked by an auto ignition in a certain cycle or not is an irregular phenomenon, the auto ignition takes place in almost all of the cycles in the knocking condition. Mixture mass fraction burned by an auto ignition is large. A small auto ignition may induce a secondary auto ignition, in many cases, mass burned by the secondary auto ignition is extremely large.
Journal Article

Fuel Design Concept for Robust Ignition in HCCI Engine and Its Application to Optimize Methane-Based Blend

2014-04-01
2014-01-1286
A fuel design concept for an HCCI engine based on chemical kinetics to optimize the heat release profile and achieve robust ignition was proposed, and applied to the design of the optimal methane-based blend. Ignition process chemistry of each single-component of natural gas, methane, ethane, propane, n-butane and isobutane, was analyzed using detailed chemical kinetic computations. Ethane exhibits low ignitability, close to that of methane, when the initial temperature is below 800 K, but higher ignitability, close to those of propane, n-butane and isobutane, when the initial temperature is above 1100 K. Furthermore, ethane shows a higher heat release rate during the late stage of the ignition process. If the early stage of an ignition process takes place during the compression stroke, this kind of heat release profile is desirable in an HCCI engine to reduce cycle-to-cycle variation during the expansion stroke.
Technical Paper

Classification of the Reactivity of Alkylperoxy Radicals by Using a Steady-State Analysis

2015-09-01
2015-01-1811
To execute the computational fluid dynamics coupling with fuel chemistry in internal combustion engines, simplified chemical kinetic models which capture the low-temperature oxidation kinetics would be required. A steady-state analysis was applied to see the complicated reaction mechanism of alkylperoxy radicals by assuming the steady state for hydroperoxyalkyl (QOOH) and hydroperoxyalkylperoxy (OOQOOH) radicals. This analysis clearly shows the systematic trend of the reaction rate for the chain-branching and non-branching process of alkylperoxy (ROO) radicals as a function of the chain length and the carbon class. These trends make it possible to classify alkylperoxy radicals by their chemical structures, and suggest a reduced low-temperature oxidation chemistry.
Journal Article

Chemical Kinetics Study on Two-Stage Main Heat Release in Ignition Process of Highly Diluted Mixtures

2013-04-08
2013-01-1657
Some experimental data indicate that an HCCI process of a highly diluted mixture is characterized with a two-stage profile of heat release after the heat release by low-temperature oxidation, and with slow CO oxidation into CO₂ at a low temperature. In the present paper, these characteristics are discussed using a detailed chemical kinetic model of normal heptane, and based on an authors' idea that an ignition process can be divided into five phases. The H₂O₂ loop reactions mainly contribute to heat release in a low-temperature region of the TI (thermal ignition) preparation phase. However, H+O₂+M=HO₂+M becomes the main contributor to heat release in a high-temperature region of the TI preparation phase. H₂O₂ is accumulated during the LTO (low-temperature oxidation) and NTC (negative temperature oxidation) phases, and drives the H₂O₂ loop reactions to increase the temperature during the TI preparation phase.
Journal Article

Chemical Kinetics Study on Small-Alkane Ignition Process to Design Optimum Methane-Based Blend for HCCI

2014-04-01
2014-01-1281
The ignition delay times and heat release profiles of CH4, C2H6, C3H8, i-C4H10, and n-C4H10 and dual-component CH4-based blends with these alkanes in air were determined using a detailed chemical kinetic model. The apparent activation energy of C2H6 in the relationship between initial temperature and ignition delay time is higher than those of the other alkanes because OH formation is dominated by H2O2(+M)=OH+OH(+M) from the beginning over a wide range of initial temperatures. The heat release rate of C2H6 is higher than those of the other alkanes in the late stage of ignition delay time because H2O2 is accumulated with a higher concentration and promotes the OH formation rate of H2O2(+M)=OH+OH(+M). These ignition characteristics are reflected in those of CH4/C2H6.
X