A Methodology for Studying the Relationship Between Heat Release Profile and Fuel Stratification in Advanced Compression Ignition Engines

被引:3
|
作者
DelVescovo, Dan A. [1 ]
Kokjohn, Sage L. [2 ]
Reitz, Rolf D. [2 ]
机构
[1] Oakland Univ, Dept Mech Engn, Rochester, MI 48063 USA
[2] Univ Wisconsin, Engine Res Ctr, Madison, WI USA
关键词
RCCI; HCCI; fuel stratification; auto-ignition; 0-D analysis; THERMAL STRATIFICATION; RCCI COMBUSTION; BOOSTED HCCI; LIGHT-DUTY; N-HEPTANE; REACTIVITY; EFFICIENCY; BLENDS; MODEL; RATES;
D O I
10.3389/fmech.2020.00028
中图分类号
TH [机械、仪表工业];
学科分类号
0802 ;
摘要
Low temperature combustion strategies have demonstrated high thermal efficiency with low pollutant emissions (e. g., oxides of nitrogen and particulate matter), resulting from reduced heat transfer losses and lean air-fuel mixtures. One such advanced compression ignition combustion strategy, Reactivity Controlled Compression Ignition (RCCI), has demonstrated improved control over the heat release event due to the introduction of in-cylinder stratification of equivalence ratio and chemical reactivity via direct injection of a high-reactivity fuel into a premixed low-reactivity fuel/air mixture. The nature of the RCCI strategy provides inherent fuel flexibility, however, the direct injection strategy must be tailored to the combination of premixed and direct injected fuel chemistry and engine operating conditions to optimize efficiency and emissions. In this work, a 0-D methodology for predicting the required fuel stratification for a desired heat release rate profile for kinetically controlled stratified-charge combustion strategies is proposed. The methodology, referred to as Fuel Stratification Analysis (FSA), was inspired by a similar approach which utilized ignition predictions calculated via a Livengood-Wu integral approach correlated with experimental heat release profiles to determine in-cylinder temperature stratification in homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) combustion. The methodology proposed in this work expands upon this method to include strategies involving fuel stratification (such as RCCI). Reacting and non-reacting CFD simulations were performed with the KIVA3V release 2 code to validate the CFD. Reacting simulations were validated against published experimental HCCI and RCCI data, and non-reacting simulations were used to generate fuel distribution profiles to compare to the FSA results. The results of this validation showed that the FSA method was able to provide good overall agreement in the predicted fuel distribution compared to the actual fuel distributions from CFD simulations within the range of injection timings of interest in RCCI combustion (-140 degrees to about -35 degrees after top-dead-center). For later injection timings, FSA predictions are not able to capture the actual fuel distributions present at the start of combustion, likely due to a transition into a mixing dominated, as opposed to a kinetically dominated, combustion regime, thereby violating one or more inherent method assumptions.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 31 条
  • [1] A framework for heat release predictions in compression ignition engines with multiple injection events
    Pamminger, Michael
    Hall, Carrie M.
    Wang, Buyu
    Wallner, Thomas
    Kumar, Raj
    2019 3RD IEEE CONFERENCE ON CONTROL TECHNOLOGY AND APPLICATIONS (IEEE CCTA 2019), 2019, : 406 - 411
  • [2] Autoignition of straight-run naphtha: A promising fuel for advanced compression ignition engines
    Alabbad, Mohammed
    Issayev, Gani
    Badra, Jihad
    Voice, Alexander K.
    Giri, Binod Raj
    Djebbi, Khalil
    Ahmed, Ahfaz
    Sarathy, S. Mani
    Farooq, Aamir
    COMBUSTION AND FLAME, 2018, 189 : 337 - 346
  • [3] Advanced combustion methods for simultaneous reduction of emissions and fuel consumption of compression ignition engines
    Brijesh, P.
    Chowdhury, A.
    Sreedhara, S.
    CLEAN TECHNOLOGIES AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY, 2015, 17 (03) : 615 - 625
  • [4] Advanced combustion methods for simultaneous reduction of emissions and fuel consumption of compression ignition engines
    P. Brijesh
    A. Chowdhury
    S. Sreedhara
    Clean Technologies and Environmental Policy, 2015, 17 : 615 - 625
  • [5] A kinetic modeling study on octane rating and fuel sensitivity in advanced compression ignition engines
    Tao, Mingyuan
    Wu, Tong
    Ge, Haiwen
    DelVescovo, Dan
    Zhao, Peng
    COMBUSTION AND FLAME, 2017, 185 : 234 - 244
  • [6] Improved model for the analysis of the Heat Release Rate (HRR) in Compression Ignition (CI) engines
    Olanrewaju, Francis O.
    Li, Hu
    Andrews, Gordon E.
    Phylaktou, Herodotos N.
    JOURNAL OF THE ENERGY INSTITUTE, 2020, 93 (05) : 1901 - 1913
  • [7] Emissions-calibrated equilibrium heat release model for direct injection compression ignition engines
    Mattson, Jonathan M. S.
    Depcik, Christopher
    FUEL, 2014, 117 : 1096 - 1110
  • [8] Heat release rates due to autoignition, and their relationship to knock intensity in spark ignition engines
    Bradley, D
    Kalghatgi, GT
    Golombok, M
    Yeo, J
    TWENTY-SIXTH SYMPOSIUM (INTERNATIONAL) ON COMBUSTION, VOLS 1 AND 2, 1996, : 2653 - 2660
  • [9] Numerical study for the comparison between direct dual-fuel stratification and reactivity-controlled compression ignition of ammonia-based engines
    Dahham, Rami Y.
    Wei, Haiqiao
    Zhang, Ren
    Li, Jinguang
    Shu, Gequn
    Pan, Jiaying
    APPLIED THERMAL ENGINEERING, 2025, 258
  • [10] Modeling of specific fuel consumption for compression ignition engines fueled with polymer-based fuel: a response surface methodology approach
    Modi, Maulik A.
    Patel, Tushar M.
    ENGINEERING RESEARCH EXPRESS, 2024, 6 (03):