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Influence of gasoline fuel formulation on lean autoignition in a mixed-mode-combustion (deflagration/autoignition) engine

Singh, Eshan S.; Vuilleumier, David; Kim, Namho K.; Sjoberg, Carl M.

Stoichiometric spark-ignition engines suffer efficiency penalties due to throttling losses at low loads, a low specific-heat ratio of the stoichiometric working fluid, and limits on compression ratio due to end-gas autoignition leading to undesirable knocking. Mixed-Mode Combustion (MMC) mitigates these shortcomings by using a lean working fluid where a spark-initiated pilot-stabilized deflagrative flame front is followed by controlled end-gas autoignition. This MMC study investigates the effects of initial conditions (intake air temperature, intake pressure, equivalence ratio, and intake oxygen fraction) on autoignition tendency of four gasoline-range fuels with varying properties and composition. The use of fuels with varying octane sensitivity (S) allowed exploring the importance of low-temperature heat release in triggering autoignition. Fuels with high S were less reactive for conditions that promote low-temperature chemistry (operation at high intake air pressure or without N2 dilution). Conversely, an Alkylate fuel with low S showed a greater autoignition resistance at operating conditions that were unfavorable for low-temperature chemistry. Next, the effect of residual gas composition on autoignition tendency of fuels was examined with a chemical-kinetics model. Among the various molecules in the residual gas, nitric oxide (NO) enhanced the low-temperature chemistry and increased the autoignition tendency most significantly. The fuels’ autoignition response to increasing NO amount corroborates the experimental observations. Next, the sequential autoignition of the end-gas was assessed to be less impacted by thermal stratification because of lean mixtures showing relatively less low-temperature chemistry, when compared to stoichiometric mixtures. Next, the effect of changing equivalence ratio on the autoignition was found to be similar for all fuels, regardless of their S. With changing intake air temperature, the response of fuels’ autoignition tendency depended on the dilution level used. At high dilution (i.e. low intake [O2]), fuels’ reactivity increased with increasing intake air temperature. In contrast, for operation without dilution, the autoignition tendency of the low-S Alkylate fuel decreased with increasing intake air temperature, while that of high-S High Cycloalkane fuel still increased with increasing intake air temperature. In conclusion, conventional octane metrics (RON and MON) have utility in assessing the autoignition tendency under lean MMC operation. Moreover, the fuel requirements for MMC align with that of stoichiometric operation: i.e., high RON and high S fuels are desirable for stable non-knocking operation.