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Effect of Start of Injection on the Combustion Characteristics in a Heavy-Duty DICI Engine Running on Methanol

Pucilowski, Mateusz LU ; Jangi, Mehdi LU ; Shamun, Sam LU ; Li, Changle LU orcid ; Tuner, Martin LU and Bai, Xue Song LU (2017) In SAE Technical Papers 2017-March(March).
Abstract

Methanol as an alternative fuel in internal combustion engines has an advantage in decreasing emissions of greenhouse gases and soot. Hence, developing of a high performance internal combustion engine operating with methanol has attracted the attention in industry and academic research community. This paper presents a numerical study of methanol combustion at different start-of-injection (SOI) in a direct injection compression ignition (DICI) engine supported by experimental studies. The aim is to investigate the combustion behavior of methanol with single and double injection at close to top-dead-center (TDC) conditions. The experimental engine is a modified version of a heavy duty D13 Scania engine. URANS simulations are performed for... (More)

Methanol as an alternative fuel in internal combustion engines has an advantage in decreasing emissions of greenhouse gases and soot. Hence, developing of a high performance internal combustion engine operating with methanol has attracted the attention in industry and academic research community. This paper presents a numerical study of methanol combustion at different start-of-injection (SOI) in a direct injection compression ignition (DICI) engine supported by experimental studies. The aim is to investigate the combustion behavior of methanol with single and double injection at close to top-dead-center (TDC) conditions. The experimental engine is a modified version of a heavy duty D13 Scania engine. URANS simulations are performed for various injection timings with delayed SOI towards TDC, aiming at analyzing the characteristics of partially premixed combustion (PPC). The simulations are based on a relatively detailed chemical kinetic mechanism and a well-stirred reactor (WSR) approach, accelerated using a so-called chemistry coordinate mapping (CCM). The injection of the fuel is treated with Lagrangian Particle Tracking (LPT) method. A baseline case with SOI of -20 after TDC (ATDC) was studied experimentally; this case was chosen to validate the model and a good agreement between the experiments and the simulation is found after adjustment of the initial pressure and temperature condition. In all injection conditions the combustion phasing is kept the same, i.e. with the 50-percentage heat release at the same crank angle (CA50) by adjusting the intake temperature. It is shown that as SOI is delayed the combustion characteristics changes significantly leading to a high maximal pressure-rise-rate (MPRR). The SOIs between -20 and -7 ATDC results in a combustion process governed by auto-ignition with propagating ignition fronts. The MPRR increases with SOI due to the rapid heat release caused by ignition at lean but increasingly richer conditions towards stoichiometry. The diffusion controlled, diesel like combustion (CDC), starts to occur around SOI -3 ATDC. The first portion of injected fuel ignites with a delay at leaner conditions, and then forms a diffusion flame. The amount of fuel consumed in the ignition process is larger than the amount of fuel consumed in the diffusion flame. Thus, contribution to the total heat release from the ignition process is larger and more rapid from that when using diesel or gasoline in the same CDC injection. Such behavior is attributed to a longer ignition delay time, large latent heat value and higher stoichiometric mixture fraction for methanol than hydrocarbon fossil fuels. It is concluded that a single main injection strategy of methanol may not be preferable due to the high MPRR thus other injection strategies, e.g., multiple injections should be used.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
SAE Technical Papers
volume
2017-March
issue
March
article number
2017-01-2194
publisher
Society of Automotive Engineers
external identifiers
  • scopus:85019035456
  • scopus:85030865561
ISSN
0148-7191
DOI
10.4271/2017-01-0560
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
9ae41bac-804b-42f4-8379-5f5e5a9f0374
date added to LUP
2017-06-08 09:57:54
date last changed
2024-04-14 12:47:03
@article{9ae41bac-804b-42f4-8379-5f5e5a9f0374,
  abstract     = {{<p>Methanol as an alternative fuel in internal combustion engines has an advantage in decreasing emissions of greenhouse gases and soot. Hence, developing of a high performance internal combustion engine operating with methanol has attracted the attention in industry and academic research community. This paper presents a numerical study of methanol combustion at different start-of-injection (SOI) in a direct injection compression ignition (DICI) engine supported by experimental studies. The aim is to investigate the combustion behavior of methanol with single and double injection at close to top-dead-center (TDC) conditions. The experimental engine is a modified version of a heavy duty D13 Scania engine. URANS simulations are performed for various injection timings with delayed SOI towards TDC, aiming at analyzing the characteristics of partially premixed combustion (PPC). The simulations are based on a relatively detailed chemical kinetic mechanism and a well-stirred reactor (WSR) approach, accelerated using a so-called chemistry coordinate mapping (CCM). The injection of the fuel is treated with Lagrangian Particle Tracking (LPT) method. A baseline case with SOI of -20 after TDC (ATDC) was studied experimentally; this case was chosen to validate the model and a good agreement between the experiments and the simulation is found after adjustment of the initial pressure and temperature condition. In all injection conditions the combustion phasing is kept the same, i.e. with the 50-percentage heat release at the same crank angle (CA50) by adjusting the intake temperature. It is shown that as SOI is delayed the combustion characteristics changes significantly leading to a high maximal pressure-rise-rate (MPRR). The SOIs between -20 and -7 ATDC results in a combustion process governed by auto-ignition with propagating ignition fronts. The MPRR increases with SOI due to the rapid heat release caused by ignition at lean but increasingly richer conditions towards stoichiometry. The diffusion controlled, diesel like combustion (CDC), starts to occur around SOI -3 ATDC. The first portion of injected fuel ignites with a delay at leaner conditions, and then forms a diffusion flame. The amount of fuel consumed in the ignition process is larger than the amount of fuel consumed in the diffusion flame. Thus, contribution to the total heat release from the ignition process is larger and more rapid from that when using diesel or gasoline in the same CDC injection. Such behavior is attributed to a longer ignition delay time, large latent heat value and higher stoichiometric mixture fraction for methanol than hydrocarbon fossil fuels. It is concluded that a single main injection strategy of methanol may not be preferable due to the high MPRR thus other injection strategies, e.g., multiple injections should be used.</p>}},
  author       = {{Pucilowski, Mateusz and Jangi, Mehdi and Shamun, Sam and Li, Changle and Tuner, Martin and Bai, Xue Song}},
  issn         = {{0148-7191}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{03}},
  number       = {{March}},
  publisher    = {{Society of Automotive Engineers}},
  series       = {{SAE Technical Papers}},
  title        = {{Effect of Start of Injection on the Combustion Characteristics in a Heavy-Duty DICI Engine Running on Methanol}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/2017-01-0560}},
  doi          = {{10.4271/2017-01-0560}},
  volume       = {{2017-March}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}