Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1179446
The Influence of Intake Pressure and Ethanol Addition to Gasoline on Single- and Dual-Stage Autoignition in an HCCI Engine
The Influence of Intake Pressure and Ethanol Addition to Gasoline on Single- and Dual-Stage Autoignition in an HCCI Engine // Energy & fuels, 32 (2018), 9; 9822-9837 doi:10.1021/acs.energyfuels.8b00887 (međunarodna recenzija, članak, znanstveni)
CROSBI ID: 1179446 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
The Influence of Intake Pressure and Ethanol
Addition to Gasoline on Single- and Dual-Stage
Autoignition in an HCCI Engine
Autori
Vuilleumier, David ; Atef, Nour ; Kukkadapu, Goutham ; Wolk, Benjamin ; Selim, Hatem ; Kozarac, Darko ; Saxena, Samveg ; Wang, Zhaowen ; Sung, Chih- Jen ; Dibble, Robert ; Sarathy S.Mani
Izvornik
Energy & fuels (0887-0624) 32
(2018), 9;
9822-9837
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u časopisima, članak, znanstveni
Ključne riječi
HCCI ; Face fuels ; Ethanol ; Gasoline
Sažetak
Autoignition in HCCI engines is known to be controlled by the combustion kinetics of the in- cylinder fuel/air mixture which is highly influenced by the amount of low-temperature and intermediate-temperature heat release (LTHR and ITHR) that occurs. At lower intake pressures (typically <1.4 bar absolute), it has been observed that gasoline behaves as a single-stage heat release fuel, while at higher intake pressures (typically >1.8 bar absolute) gasoline behaves as a two-stage heat release fuel. Furthermore, ethanol blending strongly affects heat release characteristics, and this warrants further investigation. This paper experimentally investigates the conditions under which gasoline transitions from a single-stage heat release fuel to a two-stage heat release fuel as intake pressure is increased. Experiments were performed in single-cylinder HCCI engine fueled with two research-grade gasolines, FACE A and FACE C. These gasolines were tested neat, with 10% and 20% (by volume) ethanol addition. In addition, these results were compared to results previously obtained for PRF 85, and new results for PRF 84 with 10% and 20% ethanol addition. Moreover, the engine experiments were supported by rapid compression machine (RCM) ignition delay data for the same fuels. The engine experiments revealed that there were minimal differences between the heat release profiles of the two gasolines, FACE A and FACE C, which was confirmed by the RCM experiments that showed similar ignition delay data for the two FACE fuels and PRF 84. On the other hand, with ethanol addition to these gasolines and PRF 84, the occurrence of LTHR shifted to higher intake pressures compared to ethanol-free cases, precisely from 1.4 bar intake pressure for neat fuel to 2.2 bar with 20% ethanol. Consequently, the intake temperatures required to achieve constant combustion phasing for all mixtures were drastically altered. Simulations using a detailed chemical kinetic model were utilized to understand the effects of ethanol blending on the ignition characteristics of PRF 84. The addition of ethanol was found to act as a radical sink where it inhibits the radical pool formation during the low (<850 K) and intermediate (850−1050 K) temperature chemistry regimes resulting in lower reactivity. These results help explain ethanol’s significant antiknock qualities under boosted conditions in spark-ignition engines.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Strojarstvo
POVEZANOST RADA
Ustanove:
Fakultet strojarstva i brodogradnje, Zagreb
Profili:
Darko Kozarac
(autor)