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Octane Requirements of Lean Mixed-Mode Combustion in a Direct-Injection Spark-Ignition Engine

Energy and Fuels

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

Here, this study investigates the octane requirements of a hybrid flame propagation and controlled autoignition mode referred to as mixed-mode combustion (MMC), which allows for strong control over combustion parameters via a spark-initiated deflagration phase. Due to the throughput limitations associated with both experiments and 3-D computational fluid dynamics calculations, a hybrid 0-D and 1-D modeling methodology was developed, supported by experimental validation data. This modeling approach relied on 1-D, two-zone engine simulations to predict bulk in-cylinder thermodynamic conditions over a range of engine speeds, compression ratios, intake pressures, trapped residual levels, fueling rates, and spark timings. Those predictions were then transferred to a 0-D chemical kinetic model, which was used to evaluate the autoignition behavior of fuels when subjected to temperature–pressure trajectories of interest. Finally, the predicted autoignition phasings were screened relative to the progress of the modeled deflagration-based combustion in order to determine if an operating condition was feasible or infeasible due to knock or stability limits. The combined modeling and experimental results reveal that MMC has an octane requirement similar to modern stoichiometric spark-ignition engines in that fuels with high research octane number (RON) and high octane sensitivity (S) enable higher loads. Experimental trends with varying RON and S were well predicted by the model for 1000 and 1400 rpm, confirming its utility in identifying the compatibility of a fuel’s autoignition behavior with an engine configuration and operating strategy. However, the model was not effective in predicting (nor designed to predict) operability limits due to cycle-to-cycle variations, which experimentally inhibited operation of some fuels at 2000 rpm. Putting the operable limits and efficiency from MMC in the context of a state-of-the-art engine, the MMC showed superior efficiencies over the range investigated, demonstrating the potential to further improve fuel economy.

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

Combustion and Flame

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.

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The influence of intake flow and coolant temperature on gasoline spray morphology during early-injection DISI engine operation

International Journal of Engine Research

Reuss, David L.; Kim, Namho K.; Sjoberg, Carl M.

Multi-hole gasoline injectors operating at conditions spanning throttled early-intake stroke operation produce spray plumes that either remained separated or merge and collapse due to flash boiling. Flash boiling occurs due to the sudden expansion of gas bubbles in the liquid fuel at high fuel temperature and low ambient pressure. This study records high-speed images of spray-morphology changes due to in-cylinder flow, thereby revealing operating conditions that do and do not affect the self-induced morphology observed in quiescent vessels. Specifically, in a central-injection, four-valve, high-tumble engine, where the thermodynamic state and in-cylinder cross flow are dynamic. Additionally, motivated by cold start and hot restart operation, the fuel pressure, coolant temperature, in-cylinder air pressure, and engine rpm were systematically varied over relevant operating conditions, which bracketed the range from non- to flash-boiling sprays. The results reveal the operating conditions at which the in-cylinder cross flow disrupts the spray morphology as well as the extent of the disruption. At 650 rpm, the spray morphology was similar to that observed in quiescent vessels at nominally equivalent fuel temperature and in-cylinder pressure, indicating that the spray’s self-induced entrainment flow dominated the in-cylinder flow. However, for fuel temperature and ambient pressure near the transition between non- and flash-boiling, the intake cross flow at higher engine speed (1950 rpm) significantly disrupted the spray morphology. The high cross-flow velocity appears to induce plume merging and collapse, whereas none was evident at low rpm (650 rpm). This study led to the postulate that the spray merging and collapse are governed by the rate of atomization near the nozzle exit, presumed to be controlled by either or both aerodynamic atomization and flash-boiling intensity. It would then follow that spray modeling in CFD requires atomization models that blend the effects of both physical processes.

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Effects of Injection Timing and Duration on Fuel-Spray Collapse and Wall-Wetting in a Stratified Charge SI Engine

SAE Technical Papers

Kim, Namho K.; Vuilleumier, David; Sjoberg, Carl M.

Fuel-lean combustion using late injection during the compression stroke can result in increased soot emissions due to excessive wall-wetting and locally unfavorable air-fuel mixtures due to spray collapse. Multi-hole injectors, most commonly used, experiencing spray collapse, can worsen both problems. Hence, it is of interest to study the contribution of spray collapse to wall-wetting to understand how it can be avoided. This optical-engine study reveals spray characteristics and the associated wall-wetting for collapsing and non-collapsing sprays, when systematically changing the intake pressure, injection duration and timing. High-speed imaging of Mie-scattered light was used to observe changes in the spray structure, and a refractive index matching (RIM) technique was utilized to detect and quantify the area of fuel-film patterns on bottom of the piston bowl. E30 (gasoline blended with 30% ethanol by volume) was used throughout the experiments. E30 is known to be more susceptible to spray collapse and the high heat of vaporization of ethanol tends to exacerbate fuel-film formation. These experimental results highlight the impact of in-cylinder ambient conditions on spray morphology and the influence of spray behavior on fuel-films. Analysis of the spray images reveals that spray collapse is a strong function of in-cylinder density and its evolution in spite of the changes in in-cylinder pressure, temperature, and flow at the operating condition used in this study. This explains similarities in the degree of spray collapse and resultant wall-wetting from various injection timings and intake pressures. It is also found that at operating conditions where the spray undergoes transition from non-collapsing to collapsing spray during an injection event, both fuel-film area and variability in fuel-film pattern increased.

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Ability of Particulate Matter Index to describe sooting tendency of various gasoline formulations in a stratified-charge spark-ignition engine

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

Kim, Namho K.; Vuilleumier, David; He, Xu; Sjoberg, Carl M.

The ability of particulate matter index (PMI) to describe the sooting behavior of various gasoline formulations in a stratified-charge (SC) spark-ignition engine was studied. The engine was operated at 2000 rpm with an intake pressure of 130 kPa where soot formation is known to primarily occur in the bulk gases. Exhaust soot emissions were measured for nine test fuels at various exhaust gas recirculation levels. A comparison between measured soot levels and PMI showed that PMI is a relatively poor predictor of the sooting tendency of the tested fuels under lean SC combustion. Among the fuels, the diisobutylene blend, high olefin, and E30 fuels exhibited measured soot behavior opposite of that predicted by PMI. Optical diagnostics were utilized to further investigate the in-cylinder phenomena for these three fuels. Analysis of natural luminosity and diffused back-illumination extinction imaging indicated that fuel-induced differences in the amount of soot formed are responsible for a majority of the discrepancy in measured versus predicted sooting tendency. Fuel-induced differences in soot oxidation and spray development seem to play minor roles. Because the combustion and air-fuel mixing processes for lean SC combustion are different from conventional stoichiometric operation, it was hypothesized that the PMI correlation needs to be modified to account for differences in stoichiometric air-fuel ratio and level of oxygenation between fuels. Furthermore, the role of fuel volatility in PMI possibly needs to be de-emphasized for SC operation with fuel injection into compression-heated gases.

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Ability of Particulate Matter Index to describe sooting tendency of various gasoline formulations in a stratified-charge spark-ignition engine

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

Kim, Namho K.; Vuilleumier, David V.; He, Xu H.; Sjoberg, Carl M.

This study investigates the ability of Particulate Matter Index (PMI) to describe the sooting behavior of various gasoline formulations in a stratified-charge (SC) spark-ignition engine. Specifically, the engine was operated at 2000 rpm with an intake pressure of 130 kPa where soot formation is known to primarily occur in the bulk gases. Exhaust soot emissions were measured for nine test fuels at various exhaust gas recirculation levels. A comparison between measured soot levels and PMI shows that PMI is a relatively poor predictor of the sooting tendency of the tested fuels under lean SC combustion. Among the fuels, three fuels, namely the diisobutylene blend, High Olefin, and E30 fuels exhibit measured soot behavior opposite of that predicted by PMI. Optical diagnostics were utilized to further investigate the in-cylinder phenomena for these three fuels. Analysis of natural luminosity and diffused back-illumination extinction imaging suggests that fuel-induced differences in the amount of soot formed are responsible for a majority of the discrepancy in measured versus predicted sooting tendency. Fuel-induced differences in soot oxidation and spray development seem to play minor roles. Because the combustion and air-fuel mixing processes for lean SC combustion are different from conventional stoichiometric operation it is hypothesized that the PMI correlation needs to be modified to account for differences in stoichiometric air-fuel ratio and level of oxygenation between fuels. Furthermore, the role of fuel volatility in PMI possibly needs to be de-emphasized for SC operation with fuel injection into compression-heated gases.

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Using chemical kinetics to understand effects of fuel type and compression ratio on Knock-Mitigation effectiveness of various EGR constituents

SAE Technical Papers

Kim, Namho K.; Vuilleumier, David V.; Sjoberg, Carl M.; Yokoo, Nozomi; Tomoda, Terutoshi; Nakata, Koichi

Exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) can be used to mitigate knock in SI engines. However, experiments have shown that the effectiveness of various EGR constituents to suppress knock varies with fuel type and compression ratio (CR). To understand some of the underlying mechanisms by which fuel composition, octane sensitivity (S), and CR affect the knock-mitigation effectiveness of EGR constituents, the current paper presents results from a chemical-kinetics modeling study. The numerical study was conducted with CHEMKIN, imposing experimentally acquired pressure traces on a closed reactor model. Simulated conditions include combinations of three RON-98 (Research Octane Number) fuels with two octane sensitivities and distinctive compositions, three EGR diluents, and two CRs (12:1 and 10:1). The experimental results point to the important role of thermal stratification in the end-gas to smooth peak heat-release rate (HRR) and prevent acoustic noise. To model the effects of thermal stratification due to heat-transfer losses to the combustion-chamber walls, the initial temperature at the start of the CHEMKIN simulation was successively reduced below the adiabatic core temperature while observing changes in end-gas heat release and its effect on the reactant temperature. The results reveal that knock-prone conditions generally exhibit an increased amount of heat release in the colder temperature zones, thus counteracting the HRR-smoothing effect of the naturally occurring thermal stratification. This detrimental effect becomes more pronounced for the low-S fuel due to its significant Negative Temperature Coefficient (NTC) autoignition characteristics. This explains the generally reduced effectiveness of dilution for the low-S fuel, and higher knock intensity for the cycles with autoignition.

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Effects of EGR Constituents and Fuel Composition on DISI Engine Knock: An Experimental and Modeling Study

SAE Technical Papers

Vuilleumier, David V.; Kim, Namho K.; Sjoberg, Carl M.; Yokoo, Nozomi; Tomoda, Terutoshi; Nakata, Koichi

The use of exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) in spark ignition engines has been shown to have a number of beneficial effects under specific operating conditions. These include reducing pumping work under part load conditions, reducing NOx emissions and heat losses by lowering peak combustion temperatures, and by reducing the tendency for engine knock (caused by end-gas autoignition) under certain operating regimes. In this study, the effects of EGR addition on knocking combustion are investigated through a combined experimental and modeling approach. The problem is investigated by considering the effects of individual EGR constituents, such as CO2, N2, and H2O, on knock, both individually and combined, and with and without traces species, such as unburned hydrocarbons and NOx. The effects of engine compression ratio and fuel composition on the effectiveness of knock suppression with EGR addition were also investigated. A parametric, experimental matrix of diluents, compression ratio, and fuels was tested to measure knock-limited combustion phasing of each combination. The resulting knock limits were evaluated in the context of thermodynamic effects on the closed cycle, chemical interactions between the EGR constituents and the fuel-oxidizer mixture, and the effect of altered pressure-temperature trajectories on fuel-autoignition behavior. This paper provides an overview of the experimental results, and uses chemical-kinetic modeling to investigate the behavior of a particular fuel - diluent combination which had a strong sensitivity to compression ratio variation. The numerical results shed light on the complex interactions between fuel chemistry, the engine's thermodynamic cycle, and the effect of residence times on the autoignition chemistry which leads to knock. An important and fuel-dependent role of thermal stratification in the end-gas is also suggested by the chemical-kinetics modeling of the experimentally observed knock limits.

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24 Results
24 Results