4.7 Article

Combined effects of fuel reactivity, φ-sensitivity, and intake temperature on the performance of low-temperature gasoline/polyoxymethylene dimethyl ethers combustion

Journal

FUEL
Volume 288, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2020.119612

Keywords

Low-temperature gasoline combustion; Polyoxymethylene dimethyl ethers; phi-sensitivity; Reactivity-controlled compression ignition

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51961135105]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study focuses on investigating the combined effects of fuel reactivity, phi-sensitivity, and intake temperature on low-temperature gasoline combustion. It found that lower intake temperature plays a greater role than higher reactivity of P20G80 under premixed operation, leading to lower combustion rate and NOx emissions. Meanwhile, the higher reactivity of P20G80 dominates the combustion process under fuel stratification operation, contributing to shorter burn duration. Gasoline/PODEn RCCI presents the highest efficiency while maintaining low NOx and soot emissions.
This study focuses on investigating the combined effects of fuel reactivity, equivalence ratio (phi)-sensitivity, and intake temperature (T-in) on the performance of low-temperature gasoline combustion. To achieve this goal, the combustion characteristics of pure gasoline and gasoline/polyoxymethylene dimethyl ethers (PODEn) blend with the volume fraction of 80%/20% (P20G80) were first investigated under premixed and fuel stratification operations. It is found that compared with pure gasoline, the required lower T-in of P20G80 plays a greater role than its higher reactivity under premixed operation, and thereby results in lower combustion rate and nitrogen oxides (NOx) emissions. However, the lower T-in simultaneously yields decreased combustion efficiency. Unlike premixed operation, the higher reactivity of P20G80 dominates the combustion process of fuel stratification operation, contributing to shorter burn duration. However, the faster combustion rate does not significantly raise the combustion temperature of P20G80 in stratification operation. Then, the performance of dual-fuel reactivity-controlled combustion ignition (RCCI) fueled with gasoline/P20G80 and gasoline/PODEn was investigated. For gasoline/P20G80 RCCI, although the higher phi-sensitivity of P20G80 allows more advanced 50% burn point (CA50) without the occurrence of knock, the increased heat transfer losses yield lower engine efficiency than gasoline stratification operation. Only gasoline/PODEn RCCI takes full advantage of the higher phi-sensitivity and the lower required T-in of PODEn allowing more advanced CA50 to increase the expansion work, as well as weaker stratification to avoid the formation of local over-rich regions. Therefore, gasoline/PODEn RCCI presents the highest efficiency while keeping the NOx and soot emissions far below the Euro VI limit.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available