A computational study on the effect of exhaust gas recirculation on auto-ignition timing of HCCI engine fuelled with N-heptane, iso-octane, ethanol and methane
posted on 2014-08-20, 11:38authored byNesa Milovanovic, Rui Chen, Don Law, James W.G. Turner
The homogeneous charge compression ignition, HCCI, uses compression ignition to auto-ignite a homogeneous air/fuel mixture. Using internally trapped engine exhaust gas, IEGR, as an indirect control method, HCCI offers superior fuel economy and pollutant emission reductions. Fuel structure has direct impact on its auto-ignition performance. In this research, the effect of IEGR on auto-ignition timing of four typical fuels with distinct Octane number: N-heptane, Iso-octane, Ethanol and Methane have been studied using a single zone adiabatic combustion model and detailed chemical kinetics. It was found that the introduction of internal exhaust gas recirculation, IEGR, delays ignition timing of all four fuels, but differently. N-heptane is the most sensitive fuel to IEGR, iso-octane and ethanol has a much higher endurance, while methane is somewhere in between.
History
School
Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering
Department
Aeronautical and Automotive Engineering
Published in
Proceedings of the 17th Internal Combustion Engine Symposium Paper No. JSAE 20026074
Proceedings of the 17th Internal Combustion Engine Symposium Paper No. JSAE 20026074
Pages
351 - 354
Citation
MILOVANOVIC, N. ... (et al.), 2002. A computational study on the effect of exhaust gas recirculation on auto-ignition timing of HCCI engine fuelled with N-heptane, iso-octane, ethanol and methane. In: Proceedings of 2002 17th JSAE Internal Combustion Engine Symposium, Tokyo, Japan, pp. 351-354.
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