4.8 Article

Ethanol-fueled low temperature combustion: A pathway to clean and efficient diesel engine cycles

Journal

APPLIED ENERGY
Volume 157, Issue -, Pages 838-850

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2015.01.057

Keywords

Low temperature combustion; Ethanol; PPAC; Dual-fuel; Diesel engine; Exhaust gas recirculation

Funding

  1. University of Windsor
  2. Canada Research Chair Programme
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  4. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  5. Ontario Research Fund
  6. AUTO 21(TM) (a member of the Network of Centres of Excellence of Canada programme)
  7. Ford Motor Company of Canada

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Low temperature combustion (LTC) in diesel engines offers the benefits of ultra-low NOx and smoke emissions but suffers from lowered energy efficiency due to the high reactivity and low volatility of diesel fuel. Ethanol from renewable biomass provides a viable alternate to the petroleum based transportation fuels. The high resistance to auto-ignition (low reactivity) and its high volatility make ethanol a suitable fuel for low temperature combustion (LTC) in compression-ignition engines. In this work, a Premixed Pilot Assisted Combustion (PPAC) strategy comprising of the port fuel injection of ethanol, ignited with a single diesel pilot injection near the top dead centre has been investigated on a single-cylinder high compression ratio diesel engine. The impact of the diesel pilot injection timing, ethanol to diesel quantity ratio and exhaust gas recirculation on the emissions and efficiency are studied at 10 bar IMEP. With the lessons learnt, successful ethanol-diesel PPAC has been demonstrated up to a load of 18 bar IMEP with ultra-low NOx and soot emissions across the full load range. The main challenge of PPAC is the reduced combustion efficiency especially at low loads; therefore, the authors have presented a combustion control strategy to allow high efficiency, clean combustion across the load range. This work entails to provide a detailed framework for the ethanol-fueled PPAC to be successfully implemented. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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