4.5 Article

Cycle-to-cycle variability in spark-assisted compression ignition engines near optimal mean combustion phasing

期刊

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGINE RESEARCH
卷 24, 期 2, 页码 420-436

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/14680874211053061

关键词

Cyclic variability; spark-assisted compression ignition engines; autoignition; low temperature combustion; exhaust gas recirculation

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This paper presents an experimental investigation of the cyclic variability in stoichiometric spark-assisted compression ignition (SACI) combustion under exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) dilute conditions. The study focuses on maintaining optimal thermal efficiency while examining the variability in combustion phasing, and finds a correlation between the variability in combustion phasing and the flame-based heat release fraction.
Stoichiometric spark-assisted compression ignition (SACI) combustion with exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) dilution has demonstrated higher part-load thermal efficiencies compared to spark-ignited engines, while maintaining ultra-low tail-pipe emissions. However, SACI is often characterized by high cyclic variability in heat release or torque output, which poses a challenge to its implementation in light-duty vehicles. This paper presents an experimental investigation of cyclic variability in stoichiometric SACI combustion under EGR-dilute conditions, while maintaining mean combustion phasing (theta(50)) near optimal timing for thermal efficiency. The present work focuses on SACI conditions where the flame-based heat release fraction is between approximately 10% and 40% of the overall heat release, and therefore contributes significantly to the combustion process. For the SACI conditions examined, the variability in theta(50) was driven by variability in autoignition timing, which in turn correlated with the start of measurable heat release (theta(02)). High variability in theta(50) caused unstable work output due to very late combustion with poor or no end-gas autoignition. The use of a high ignition energy dual-coil offset ignition system had negligible impact in reducing theta(50) variability. Analysis of experimental data from close to 1000 operating conditions showed that the magnitude of theta(50) variability correlates with the flame-based heat release fraction (x(B),(theta AI)), for a large range of intake pressures, spark timings and exhaust gas recirculation levels. For the SACI conditions examined, combustion phasing variability was largely determined by flame-based combustion and particularly the initial flame formation (theta(IGN-02)), and minimally by the end-gas autoignition heat release. The analysis also demonstrated that theta(50) variability is amplified as the contribution of the flame to the overall heat release increases.

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