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Technical Paper

Validation Test on a Light Duty Vehicle Equipped with a GDI Engine to Meet China 6b RDE Regulation for PN

2022-08-30
2022-01-1020
China 6 (CN6) emission legislation for light duty vehicles was published in 2016, which introduced real driving emissions (RDE) requirements for new type-approval content. Nitrogen oxides (NOx) and particle number (PN) of RDE test are required to be monitored and reported from July 2020 in CN6a phase, fulfilled from July 2023 in CN6b phase. To meet the PN limitation of CN6 RDE, the optimized engine combustion and advanced emission control system like gasoline particle filter (GPF) are encouraged. Compared to traditional vehicle platform emission compliance which could be done in lab, much more vehicle development and validation efforts are expected on the open road for RDE compliance. High cost and complexity are expected to conduct a complete validation test matrix covering all the RDE critical boundary conditions on the open road.
Technical Paper

The New Changan Inline 4 Cylinder 1.6 L Gasoline Naturally Aspirated GDI Engine

2018-04-03
2018-01-1129
Changan has upgraded its 1.6 L naturally aspirated GDI engine to meet future fuel economy and emission regulation base on its previous 1.6 L naturally aspirated GDI engine, the major upgrades include a high compression ratio of 13, 35Mpa direct injection system, cooled external EGR, thermo management module,and extensive measures to reduce friction. With this new engine, the vehicle fuel consumption is reduced by 9%, and meet the China 6b emission standard without GPF.
Journal Article

Influence of Biodiesel/Diesel Blends on Particulate Emissions in a Turbocharged Common Rail Diesel Engine

2014-09-30
2014-01-2368
Experiments were conducted in a turbocharged, high-pressure common rail diesel engine to investigate particulate emissions from the engine fueled with biodiesel and diesel blends. An electrical low-pressure impactor (ELPI) was employed to measure the particle size distribution and number concentration. Heated dilution was used to suppress nuclei mode particles and focus on accumulation mode particles. The experiment was carried out at five engine loads and two engine speeds. Biodiesel fractions of 10%, 20%, 40%, 60% and 80% in volume were tested. The study shows that most of the particles are distributed with their diameters between 0.02 and 0.2 μm, and the number concentration becomes quite small for the particles with the diameters larger than 0.2 μm. With the increase of biodiesel fraction, engine speed and/or engine load, particle number concentration decreases significantly, while the particle size distribution varies little.
Technical Paper

Experimental Study on Injector Spray Pattern Optimization for a Turbocharged GDI Engine Combustion System

2014-04-01
2014-01-1439
Changan Automobile Company recently develops a new 1.0L turbocharged GDI engine for its future vehicle as an affordable fuel-saving option. Fuel direct injection and turbo-charging are integrated to significantly improve fuel economy and power. Injection spray pattern plays an important role on GDI engine combustion system because of its critical influences on combustion and oil dilution. In this paper, four injector patterns were tested in an optical engine with Planar, double sided Laser Induced Fluorescence (LIF) with fuel & tracer and flame imaging methods to evaluate spray, mixture formation and combustion process in cylinder. Spray pattern and mixture formation are studied using LIF, while flame and combustion characteristics are studied by flame natural luminosity. The pictures of piston crown and glass liner are also evaluated for fuel spray impingement. Four types of multi-hole injectors are prepared.
Journal Article

Effect of Injection Pressure on Ignition, Flame Development and Soot Formation Processes of Biodiesel Fuel Spray

2010-09-28
2010-32-0053
The effect of injection pressure ranging from 100 to 300MPa on the ignition, flame development and soot formation characteristics of biodiesel fuel spray using a common rail injection system for direct injection (D.I.) diesel engine was investigated. Experiments were carried out in a constant volume vessel under conditions similar to the real engine condition using a single hole nozzle. Biodiesel fuels from two sources namely; palm oil (BDFp) and cooked oil (BDFc) with the commercial JIS#2diesel fuel were utilized in this research. The OH chemiluminescence technique was used to determine the ignition and the lift-off length of the combusting flame. The natural luminosity technique was applied to study the flame development and the two color pyrometry was applied for the soot formation processes. Ignition delay decreased as the injection pressure progressed from 100 to 300MPa. This was as a result of the enhanced mixing achieved at higher injection pressures.
Technical Paper

Comparative Analysis on Performance and Particulate Emissions of a Turbocharged Common-Rail Engine Fueled with Diesel and Biodiesels

2014-10-13
2014-01-2838
Performance and particulate emissions of a modern common-rail and turbocharged diesel engine fueled with diesel and biodiesel fuels were comparatively studied. An electrical low-pressure impactor (ELPI) was employed to measure particle size distribution and number concentration. Two biodiesel fuels, BDFs (biodiesel from soybean oil) and BDFc (biodiesel from used cooking oil), as well as ultra-low sulfur diesel were used. The study shows that biodiesels give higher thermal efficiency than diesel. Biodiesels give obviously lower exhaust gas temperature than diesel under high engine speed. The differences in fuel consumption, thermal efficiency and exhaust gas temperature between BDFs and BDFc are negligible. The first peaks of heat release rate for biodiesels are lower than that of diesel, while the second peaks are higher and advanced for biodiesels. BDFs show slightly slower heat release than BDFc during the first heat release stage at low engine speed.
Journal Article

A Comparative Study of Two Kinds of Biodiesels and Biodiesel-DEE Blends in a Common Rail Diesel Engine

2011-04-12
2011-01-0640
Ultrafine particles and NOx emissions of two kinds of biodiesels and their blends with diethyl ether (DEE) as an additive were compared under two engine speeds and three loads on a turbocharged, high-pressure, common rail diesel engine. A single spray injection and equivalence ratio distribution are used to explain the results. The study shows that biodiesel and biodiesel-DEE blend consume more fuels than diesel but slight variation in thermal efficiency. NOx emissions of waste cooking oil biodiesel are less than those of soybean biodiesel. At low and medium loads, DEE blending reduces the NOx emission. At all engine loads and speeds, the shape of ultrafine particle number distribution curve is unimodal, and fuel type slightly affects the shape of distribution curves. The number/mass distribution curves shift to fewer particles when operating on biodiesel and the curves further move to downward when DEE is added.
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