Affiliation:
1. The University of Alabama Department of Mechanical Engineering Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA
2. University of Kansas School of Engineering Lawrence, Kansas, USA
Abstract
Diesel engines may be converted readily to operate primarily on natural gas using the injection of a diesel pilot to achieve ignition. Advanced low-pilot-ignited natural gas (ALPING) engines show significant potential to match diesel engines in their part-load and full-load efficiencies. Experiments were performed to study the effects of pilot injection timing (- 15 to - 60° ATDC), pilot quantity, intake manifold pressure and intake charge temperature on the performance and emissions from an ALPING engine under half-load (21 kW at 1700 r/min) and full-load (42 kW at 1700 r/min) conditions. Low NOx emissions (below 0.03 g/kW h at - 60° ATDC) with satisfactory fuel conversion efficiency (31 per cent) for half-load and NOx emissions of 0.2 g/kW h at -60° ATDC with fuel conversion efficiency of 40 per cent could be obtained for full-load engine operation. High HC emissions, 96 g/kW h at - 20° ATDC for half-load and 21 g/kW h at -60° ATDC for full-load operation, were recorded. The NOx emissions showed an interesting trend for varied injection timings with maximum NOx emissions occurring at -35° ATDC and minimum at - 60° ATDC injection timing. Increased pilot quantity, intake charge temperature and lower intake manifold pressures resulted in increased NOx emissions and fuel conversion efficiency, and decreased HC emissions.
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Ocean Engineering,Aerospace Engineering,Automotive Engineering
Cited by
44 articles.
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