In-Cylinder Fuel Blending of Gasoline/Diesel for Improved Efficiency and Lowest Possible Emissions on a Multi-Cylinder Light-Duty Diesel Engine

In-cylinder fuel blending of gasoline/diesel fuel is investigated on a multi-cylinder light-duty diesel engine as a potential strategy to control in-cylinder fuel reactivity for improved efficiency and lowest possible emissions. This approach was developed and demonstrated at the University of Wisconsin through modeling and single-cylinder engine experiments. The objective of this study is to better understand the potential and challenges of this method on a multi-cylinder engine. More specifically, the effect of cylinder-to-cylinder imbalances, heat rejection, and in-cylinder charge motion as well as the potential limitations imposed by real-world turbo-machinery were investigated on a 1.9-liter four-cylinder engine. This investigation focused on one engine condition, 2300 rpm, 4.2 bar brake mean effective pressure (BMEP). Gasoline was introduced with a port-fuel-injection system. Parameter sweeps included gasoline-to-diesel fuel ratio, intake air mixture temperature, in-cylinder swirl number, and diesel start-of-injection phasing. In addition, engine parameters were trimmed for each cylinder to balance the combustion process for maximum efficiency and lowest emissions. An important observation was the strong influence of intake charge temperature on cylinder pressure rise rate. Experiments were able to show increased thermal efficiency along with dramatic decreases in oxides of nitrogen (NOX) and particulate matter (PM). However, indicated thermal efficiency for themore » multi-cylinder experiments were less than expected based on modeling and single-cylinder results. The lower indicated thermal efficiency is believed to be due increased heat transfer as compared to the model predictions and suggest a need for improved cylinder-to-cylinder control and increased heat transfer control.« less

[1]  Takayuki Fuyuto,et al.  Dual-Fuel PCI Combustion Controlled by In-Cylinder Stratification of Ignitability , 2006 .

[2]  Rolf D. Reitz,et al.  An Experimental Investigation of Fuel Reactivity Controlled PCCI Combustion in a Heavy-Duty Engine , 2010 .

[3]  J. Garbak,et al.  Impact of Engine Operating Conditions on Low-NOx Emissions in a Light-Duty CIDI Engine Using Advanced Fuels , 2002 .

[4]  Rolf D. Reitz,et al.  An Optical Investigation of Ignition Processes in Fuel Reactivity Controlled PCCI Combustion , 2010 .

[5]  John M. E. Storey,et al.  Implications of Particulate and Precursor Compounds Formed During High-Efficiency Clean Combustion in a Diesel Engine , 2005 .

[6]  John M. E. Storey,et al.  Simultaneous Low Engine-Out NOx and Particulate Matter with Highly Diluted Diesel Combustion , 2003 .

[7]  Joseph Kazour,et al.  Heated Injectors for Ethanol Cold Starts , 2009 .

[8]  D. Splitter,et al.  Experiments and Modeling of Dual-Fuel HCCI and PCCI Combustion Using In-Cylinder Fuel Blending , 2009 .

[9]  Hanho Yun,et al.  Improvement on Cylinder-to-Cylinder Variation Using a Cylinder Balancing Control Strategy in Gasoline HCCI Engines , 2010 .

[10]  Scott Sluder,et al.  An Estimate of Diesel High-Efficiency Clean Combustion Impacts on FTP-75 Aftertreatment Requirements (SAE Paper Number 2006-01-3311) , 2006 .

[11]  Aamir Shabbir,et al.  Experiments and Modeling , 1991 .

[12]  Scott Sluder,et al.  Fuel Property Effects on Emissions from High Efficiency Clean Combustion in a Diesel Engine (SAE Paper Number 2006-01-0080) , 2006 .