4.5 Article

Efficient light-duty engine using turbulent jet ignition of lean methane mixtures

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGINE RESEARCH
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 1301-1311

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1468087419889833

Keywords

Prechamber; ignition chamber; combustion; emissions; methane; compressed natural gas

Funding

  1. EU Horizon 2020 project GasOn'' [652816]
  2. Swiss State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation (SERI) [15.0145-1]
  3. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [652816] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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This study examines the impact of different combustion methods used in diesel engines and premixed combustion on fuel efficiency, focusing on the possibility of achieving fast combustion under high pressure conditions by ignition in a prechamber. Experimental results show that, under certain parameter settings, natural gas engines can achieve high efficiency and pressure levels while maintaining low emissions.
Diesel engines use diffusion-controlled combustion of a high-reactivity fuel and offer high efficiencies because they combine lean combustion with a high compression ratio. For low-reactivity fuels such as gasoline or natural gas, premixed combustion is used, which leads to lower efficiency levels as usually stoichiometric combustion is combined with lower compression ratios. Trying to apply diesel-like process parameters to low-reactivity fuels inevitably leads to problems with classical spark ignition systems as they are not able to establish robust flame propagation for such hard-to-ignite conditions. One possibility to enable fast combustion for diluted mixtures at high pressure levels is to establish ignition in a prechamber and ignite the charge of the main combustion chamber using the turbulent jets exiting the prechamber. In this study, the experimental results of a prechamber-equipped four-cylinder natural gas engine with 2 L displacement are discussed in detail. In the majority of the engine map, auxiliary fueling is used in the prechamber and a global air-fuel equivalence ratio lambda is set to 1.7. At full load, a lambda of 1.5 is applied without auxiliary prechamber fueling. The experiments show that such a setup is able to achieve brake efficiency levels of above 45% while maintaining peak brake mean effective pressure levels above 20 bar. At high load conditions, cylinder pressure levels at ignition timing achieve more than 80 bar and cylinder peak pressures of around 180 bars occur. The technology proved to enable robust and very fast combustion at comparably low NOx levels. A remaining challenge for the on-road use of such a technology is the reduction of the methane emissions at lean conditions.

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