The present paper represents a small piece of an extensive experimental effort investigating the dual-fuel operation of a light-duty spark ignited engine. Natural gas (NG) was directly injected into the cylinder and gasoline was injected into the intake-port. Direct injection of NG was used in order to overcome the power density loss usually experienced with NG port-fuel injection as it allows an injection after intake valve closing. Having two separate fuel systems allows for a continuum of in-cylinder blend levels from pure gasoline to pure NG operation. The huge benefit of gasoline is its availability and energy density, whereas NG allows efficient operation at high load due to improved combustion phasing enabled by its higher knock resistance. Furthermore, using NG allowed a reduction of carbon dioxide emissions across the entire engine map due to the higher hydrogen-to-carbon ratio. Exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) was used to (a) increase efficiency at low and part-load operation and (b) reduce the propensity of knock at higher compression ratios (CR) thereby enabling blend levels with greater amount of gasoline across a wider operating range. Two integral engine parameters, CR and in-cylinder turbulence levels, were varied in order to study their influence on efficiency, emissions and performance over a specific speed and load range. Increasing the CR from 10.5 to 14.5 allowed an absolute increase in indicated thermal efficiency of more than 3% for 75% NG (25% gasoline) operation at 8 bar net indicated mean effective pressure and 2500 RPM. However, as anticipated, the achievable peak load at CR 14.5 with 100% gasoline was greatly reduced due to its lower knock resistance. The in-cylinder turbulence level was varied by means of tumble plates as well as an insert for the NG injector that guides the injection “spray” to augment the tumble motion. The usage of tumble plates showed a significant increase in EGR dilution tolerance for pure gasoline operation, however, no such impact was found for blended operation of gasoline and NG.
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ASME 2017 Internal Combustion Engine Division Fall Technical Conference
October 15–18, 2017
Seattle, Washington, USA
Conference Sponsors:
- Internal Combustion Engine Division
ISBN:
978-0-7918-5831-8
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Influence of Charge Motion and Compression Ratio on the Performance of a Combustion Concept Employing In-Cylinder Gasoline and Natural Gas Blending Available to Purchase
James Sevik,
James Sevik
Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, IL
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Michael Pamminger,
Michael Pamminger
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL
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Thomas Wallner,
Thomas Wallner
Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, IL
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Riccardo Scarcelli,
Riccardo Scarcelli
Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, IL
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Steven Wooldridge,
Steven Wooldridge
Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, MI
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Scott Miers,
Scott Miers
Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI
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Carrie Hall
Carrie Hall
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL
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James Sevik
Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, IL
Michael Pamminger
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL
Thomas Wallner
Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, IL
Riccardo Scarcelli
Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, IL
Steven Wooldridge
Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, MI
Brad Boyer
Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, MI
Scott Miers
Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI
Carrie Hall
Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL
Paper No:
ICEF2017-3661, V001T03A018; 13 pages
Published Online:
November 30, 2017
Citation
Sevik, J, Pamminger, M, Wallner, T, Scarcelli, R, Wooldridge, S, Boyer, B, Miers, S, & Hall, C. "Influence of Charge Motion and Compression Ratio on the Performance of a Combustion Concept Employing In-Cylinder Gasoline and Natural Gas Blending." Proceedings of the ASME 2017 Internal Combustion Engine Division Fall Technical Conference. Volume 1: Large Bore Engines; Fuels; Advanced Combustion. Seattle, Washington, USA. October 15–18, 2017. V001T03A018. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/ICEF2017-3661
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