An Investigation of Lean Combustion in a Natural Gas-Fueled Spark-Ignited Engine

Author:

Gupta M.1,Bell S. R.1,Tillman S. T.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL

Abstract

Natural gas has been used extensively as an engine fuel in gas pipeline transmission applications and, more recently, as a fuel for transportation applications including both light-duty and heavy-duty vehicles. The objective of this work was to investigate the performance and emission characteristics of natural gas in an original equipment manufacturer (OEM), light-duty, spark-ignited engine being operated in the lean fueling regime and compare the operation with gasoline fueling cases. Data were acquired for several operating conditions of speed, throttle position, air-fuel equivalence ratio, and spark timing for both fuels. Results showed that for stoichiometric fueling, with a naturally aspirated engine, a power loss of 10 to 15 percent can be expected for natural gas over gasoline fueling. For lean operation, however, power increases can be expected for equivalence ratios below about φ = 0.80 with natural gas fueling as compared to gasoline. Higher brake thermal efficiencies can also be expected with natural gas fueling with maximum brake torque (MBT) timings over the range of equivalence ratios investigated in this work. Coefficient of variation (COV) data based on the indicated mean effective pressure (IMEP) demonstrated that the engine is much less sensitive to equivalence ratio leaning for natural gas fueling as compared to gasoline cases. The lean limit for a COV of 10 percent was about φ = 0.72 for gasoline and φ = 0.63 for natural gas. Lean fueling resulted in significantly reduced NOx levels where a lower plateau for NOx concentrations was reached at φ near or below 0.70, which corresponded to about 220 ppm. For natural gas fueling, this corresponded to about 1.21 gm/(kW-h). Finally, with MBT timings, relatively short heart release durations were obtained for lean fueling with natural gas compared to gasoline.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Fuel Technology,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

Reference12 articles.

1. Beck, N. J., 1990, “Natural Gas—A Rational Approach to Clean Air,” SAE Paper No. 902228, Society of Automotive Engineers, Warrendale, PA.

2. Bells, S. R., Loper Jr., G. A., and Gupta, Manishi, 1993, “Combustion Characteristics of a Natural Gas Fueled Spark Ignited Engine,” ASME Paper No. 93-ICE-17, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, NY.

3. Eghbali, B., 1984, “Natural Gas as a Vehicular Fuel,” SAE Paper No. 841159, SAE Transactions, Society of Automative Engineers, Warrendale, PA.

4. Fleming, R. D., and Allsup, J. R., 1971, “Emission Characteristics of Natural Gas as an Automotive Fuel,” SAE Paper No. 710883, Society of Automotive Engineers, Warrendale, PA.

5. Fritz, S. G., and Egluono, R. I., 1992, “Emissions from Heavy-Duty Trucks Converted to CNG,” ASME Paper No. 92-ICE-10, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, NY.

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