Publications

6 Results

Search results

Jump to search filters

A computational parametric study of ducted fuel injection implementation in a heavy-duty diesel engine

Fuel

Nyrenstedt, Sven A.G.; Mueller, Charles J.; Liu, Xinlei; Im, Hong G.

Experiments have shown that ducted fuel injection (DFI) effectively reduces soot emissions from direct-injection diesel engines. Although many computational studies have evaluated DFI's spray development and soot reduction mechanisms in constant volume chambers, only limited computational work on internal combustion engines exists. The DFI duct assembly changes the engine's in-cylinder flow, spray, and combustion development. Therefore, current production engine designs might not be optimal for achieving the best engine performance with DFI. This work conducted an extensive numerical study to evaluate how parameter changes affect DFI performance. The parameters include swirl ratio, piston geometry, compression ratio (CR), number of injector orifices, split injection strategy, and exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) in a heavy-duty diesel engine utilizing DFI. The combustion and soot emission data from the Sandia compression ignition optical research engine were used for model validation. Simulations showed that an increased swirl ratio resulted in more intense jet flame-piston interaction, slowing down the combustion heat release during the late combustion stage and leading to lower indicated thermal efficiency (ITE) due to higher exhaust losses. A piston-bowl design with a reentrant inner piston edge yielded the highest thermal efficiency, due to the reduced cylinder head heat transfer loss. Additional injector orifices led to higher efficiency owing to a more advanced combustion phasing. Nevertheless, the maximum pressure rise rate (MPRR) and oxides of nitrogen (NOx) emissions also increased with the number of injector orifices due to more rapid heat release and higher combustion temperature. Implementation of a split injection strategy combined with a higher EGR rate effectively inhibited the excessive MPRR and NOx formation. In general, the study concluded that DFI is not sensitive to most parameter changes but will benefit from future parameter optimization.

More Details

Ducted Fuel Injection Provides Consistently Lower Soot Emissions in Sweep to Full-Load Conditions

SAE International Journal of Engines

Nyrenstedt, Sven A.G.; Mueller, Charles J.; Buurman, Noad J.

Earlier studies have proven how ducted fuel injection (DFI) substantially reduces soot for low- and mid-load conditions in heavy-duty engines, without significant adverse effects on other emissions. Nevertheless, no comprehensive DFI study exists showing soot reductions at high- and full-load conditions. This study investigated DFI in a single-cylinder, 1.7-L, optical engine from low- to full-load conditions with a low-net-carbon fuel consisting of 80% renewable diesel and 20% biodiesel. Over the tested load range, DFI reduced engine-out soot by 38.1-63.1% compared to conventional diesel combustion (CDC). This soot reduction occurred without significant detrimental effects on other emission types. Thus, DFI reduced the severity of the soot-NOx tradeoff at all tested conditions. While DFI delivered considerable soot reductions in the present study, previous DFI studies at low- and mid-load conditions delivered larger soot reductions (>90%) compared to CDC operation at the same conditions. Therefore, the DFI configuration used here has been deemed nonoptimal (in terms of parameters such as the injector-spray and piston geometries), and several improvements are recommended for future studies with high-load DFI. These improvements include employing better spray-duct alignment, a deeper piston bowl with a smaller injector umbrella angle, and a fuel injector that opens and closes faster. The study also suggests future research to make DFI ready for commercialization, such as metal-engine tests to ensure desirable DFI performance over an engine's complete speed/load map. Overall, this study supports the continued development and commercialization of DFI to meet upcoming emissions regulations for heavy-duty vehicles. Specifically, multicylinder engine experiments and CFD simulations should be utilized to optimize the performance and clarify the full potential of DFI.

More Details

Ducted fuel injection with Low-Net-Carbon fuels as a solution for meeting future emissions regulations

Fuel

Nyrenstedt, Sven A.G.; Mueller, Charles J.; Nilsen, Christopher W.; Biles, Drummond E.

Several studies have proven how ducted fuel injection (DFI) reduces soot emissions for compression-ignition engines. Nevertheless, no comprehensive study has investigated how DFI performs over a load range in combination with low-net-carbon fuels. In this study, optical-engine experiments were performed with four different fuels—conventional diesel and three low-net-carbon fuels—at low and moderate load, to measure emissions levels and performance. The 1.7-liter single-cylinder optical engine was equipped with a high-speed camera to capture natural luminosity images of the combustion event. Conventional diesel and DFI combustion were investigated at four different dilution levels (to simulate exhaust-gas recirculation effects), from 14 to 21 mol% oxygen in the intake. At a given dilution level, with commercial diesel fuel, DFI reduced soot by 82% at medium load, and 75% at low load without increasing NOx. The results further show how DFI with dilution reduces soot and NOx without compromising engine performance or other emission types, especially when combined with low-net-carbon fuels. DFI with the oxygenated low-net-carbon blend HEA67 simultaneously reduced soot and NOx by as much as 93 % and 82 %, respectively, relative to conventional diesel combustion with commercial diesel fuel. These soot and NOx reductions occurred while lifecycle CO2 was reduced by at least 70 % when using low-net-carbon fuels instead of conventional diesel. All emissions changes were compared with future emissions regulations for different vehicle sectors to investigate how DFI can be used to facilitate achievement of the regulations. Finally, the results show how the DFI cases fall below several future emissions regulation levels, rendering less need for aftertreatment systems and giving a possible lower cost of ownership.

More Details
6 Results
6 Results