Journ.PowerTech.Petrakides.pdf (2.22 MB)
Download fileOn the combustion of premixed gasoline—Natural gas dual fuel blends in an optical SI engine
journal contribution
posted on 16.07.2019, 12:42 authored by Sotiris Petrakides, Daniel ButcherDaniel Butcher, Antonios PezouvanisAntonios Pezouvanis, Rui ChenRui ChenNatural Gas (NG) is a promising alternative fuel. Historically, the slow burning velocity of NG poses significant challenges for
its utilisation in energy efficient Spark Ignited (SI) engines. It has been experimentally observed that a binary blend of NG
and gasoline has the potential to accelerate the combustion process in an SI engine, resulting in a faster combustion even in
comparison to that of the base fuels. The mechanism of such effects remains unclear. In this work, an optical diagnosis has
been integrated with in-cylinder pressure analysis to investigate the mechanism of flame velocity and stability with the addition
of NG to gasoline in a binary Dual Fuel (DF) blend. Experiments were performed under a sweep of engine load, quantified by
the engine intake Manifold Air Pressure (MAP) (0.44, 0.51. 0.61 bar) and equivalence air to fuel ratio (Φ = 0.8, 0.83, 1, 1.25).
NG was added to a gasoline fuelled engine in three different energy ratios 25%, 50% and 75%. The results showed that
within the flamelet combustion regime, the effect of Markstein length dominates the lean burn combustion process both from
a stability and velocity prospective. The effect of the laminar burning velocity on the combustion process gradually increases
as the air fuel ratio shifts from stoichiometric to fuel rich values.
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School
- Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering
Department
- Aeronautical and Automotive Engineering