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Technical Paper

High Compression Ratio Engine Operation on Biomass Producer Gas

2011-08-30
2011-01-2000
Experimental investigations have been conducted with two identical small scale SI gas engines gen-sets operating on biomass producer gas from thermal gasification of wood. The engines where operated with two different compression ratios, one with the original compression ratio for natural gas operation 9.5:1, and the second with a compression ratio of 18.5:1. It was shown that high compression ratio SI engine operation was possible when operating on biomass producer gas from a TwoStage gasifier. The results showed an increase in the electrical efficiency from 31% to 35% when the compression ratio was increased. The influence of ignition timing on emissions was investigated during high compression ratio operation. It was shown that for λ=1.4 the NOx emission decreases by almost a factor 3, when the timing is retarded from 13° to 7° before top dead center.
Technical Paper

Reduction of UHC-emissions from Natural Gas Fired SI-engine - Production and Application of Steam Reformed Natural Gas

2000-10-16
2000-01-2823
Application of a known hydrogen containing fuel called reformed natural gas (RNG) has been realized in a stationary combustion engine with success. The aim for this is to reduce unburned hydrogen emissions (UHC) from the engine together with an increase in efficiency. The fuel contains mainly methane, hydrogen and minor amounts of carbon dioxide. A small-scale unit for onboard production of RNG has been built in order to avoid the dependence of artificial supplementation of hydrogen. The production is carried out through means of steam reforming of natural gas. The RNG-unit together with theoretical considerations for estimating fuel composition and issues of caution are described. Theoretical studies show a potential for varying the hydrogen content between 8 and 30 vol%. Studies also show potential for remarkable increases in the methane number relative to that of the natural gas. A test engine has been fueled with RNG.
Technical Paper

Strategies on Methane Slip Mitigation of Spark-Ignition Natural Gas Engine during Transient Motion

2021-06-02
2021-01-5062
The liquefied natural gas (LNG)-fueled ships were provisioned to meet the strict emission legislation in the marine application since 2000. However, the scientific approach of burning the low-emission natural gas in lean combustion uncovered that the engine suffers from high methane slip emission. Serious questions are raised about the quantity of methane slip during marine conditions when the load varies in multiple frequencies and amplitudes. Previous studies by these authors explained how methane slip increases during load oscillation. This paper examined several practical methods to reach stable combustion in transient conditions to reduce the methane slip. Employing Proportional-Integral-Derivative (PID) controllers in a closed loop, implementing open-loop lookup tables, model predictive controller (MPC), and an innovated solenoid method are performed in a high-fidelity medium-speed natural gas spark-ignition (SI) engine model.
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