Fuel Factors Affecting the High-Load Limit of a Temperature Stratified Controlled Auto-Ignition Engine

Author(s):  
Amir Maria ◽  
Wai Cheng ◽  
William Cannella ◽  
Kenneth Kar
Author(s):  
Joshua S. Lacey ◽  
Sakthish R. Sathasivam ◽  
Zoran S. Filipi ◽  
William J. Cannella ◽  
Peter A. Fuentes-Afflick

HCCI combustion is highly dependent on in-cylinder thermal conditions favorable to auto-ignition, for a given fuel. Fuels available at the pump can differ considerably in composition and auto-ignition chemistry, hence strategies intended to bring HCCI to market must account for the fuel variability. To this end, a test matrix consisting of eight gasoline fuels composed of blends made solely from refinery streams was investigated in an experimental, single cylinder HCCI engine. The base compositions were largely representative of gasoline one would expect to find across the United States, although some of the fuels had slightly lower average octane values than the ASTM minimum specification of 87. All fuels had 10% ethanol by volume included in the blend. The properties of the fuels were varied according to research octane number (RON), sensitivity (S=RON−MON) and the volumetric fractions of aromatics and olefins. For each fuel, a sweep of the fuelling was carried out at each speed from the level of instability to excessive ringing to determine the limits of HCCI operation. This was repeated for a range of speeds to determine the overall operability zone. The fuels were kept at a constant intake air temperature during these tests. The variation of fuel properties brought about changes in the overall operating range of each fuel, as some fuels had more favorable low load limits, whereas others enabled more benefit at the high load limit. The extent to which the combustion event changed from the low load limit to the high load limit was examined as well, to provide a relative criterion indicating the sensitivity of HCCI range to particular fuel properties.


Author(s):  
Joshua S. Lacey ◽  
Zoran S. Filipi ◽  
Sakthish R. Sathasivam ◽  
William J. Cannella ◽  
Peter A. Fuentes-Afflick

Homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) combustion is highly dependent on in-cylinder thermal conditions favorable to autoignition, for a given fuel. Fuels available at the pump can differ considerably in composition and autoignition chemistry; hence strategies intended to bring HCCI to market must account for the fuel variability. To this end, a test matrix consisting of eight gasoline fuels composed of blends made solely from refinery streams was investigated in an experimental, single cylinder HCCI engine. The base compositions were largely representative of gasoline one would expect to find across the United States, although some of the fuels had slightly lower average octane values than the ASTM minimum specification of 87. All fuels had 10% ethanol by volume included in the blend. The properties of the fuels were varied according to research octane number (RON), sensitivity (S=RON-MON) and the volumetric fractions of aromatics and olefins. For each fuel, a sweep of the fuelling was carried out at each speed from the level of instability to excessive ringing to determine the limits of HCCI operation. This was repeated for a range of speeds to determine the overall operability zone. The fuels were kept at a constant intake air temperature during these tests. The variation of fuel properties brought about changes in the overall operating range of each fuel, as some fuels had more favorable low load limits, whereas others enabled more benefit at the high load limit. The extent to which the combustion event changed from the low load limit to the high load limit was examined as well, to provide a relative criterion indicating the sensitivity of HCCI range to particular fuel properties.


Fuel ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 99 ◽  
pp. 45-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex Krisman ◽  
Evatt R. Hawkes ◽  
Sanghoon Kook ◽  
Magnus Sjöberg ◽  
John E. Dec

2010 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Scaringe ◽  
Craig Wildman ◽  
Wai K. Cheng
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 231-238
Author(s):  
Jacek Hunicz ◽  
Paweł Kordos ◽  
Michał Gęca
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 231-238
Author(s):  
Jacek Hunicz ◽  
Paweł Kordos ◽  
Michał Gęca
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Prasad Shingne ◽  
Dennis Assanis ◽  
Aristotelis Babajimopoulos ◽  
Alan Mond ◽  
Hakan Yilmaz

Recently, a number of studies have demonstrated that boosting can extend the high load limit of HCCI. This paper compares two two-stage boosting systems for a 4-cylinder, 2.0 liter engine, within the framework of a 1D engine simulation. A series two-stage boosting system wherein both high and low pressure stages are turbochargers (TCTC) is compared with another series two-stage system, where the high pressure stage from TCTC is replaced with a small supercharger (TCSC). The engine model in these configurations is operated in steady state at high load boosted HCCI points (∼ 6.5 bar BMEP) over a range of engine speeds. The comparison has been carried out by two methods: in Method I the intake pressure to the engine has been matched for both TCTC and TCSC; and in Method II, the amount of fresh charge into the engine has been matched for both systems. A detailed energy balance shows that the performance in terms of BSFC for the TCSC system is worse for Method I. However, this changes for Method II, and the TCSC system is comparable or even better than the TCTC system. This is achieved by greatly reducing the pumping losses associated with the TCTC system, while the parasitic losses of the supercharger are minimized by having to boost to lower intake pressures due to lowered back pressures in the TCSC system.


2014 ◽  
Vol 900 ◽  
pp. 763-766
Author(s):  
Si Yu Chen ◽  
Chun Shan Liu ◽  
Ya Qin Li ◽  
Xiao Xia Li ◽  
Jun Fa Wang

The traction characteristics of lubricant is one of the important parameters of the dynamic performance of bearings design .This paper chose three significant factors affecting the traction coefficient:temperature、load and rotate speed. Test results showed that the traction coefficient under the high load is significantly higher than under low load from room temperature to 135 °C. After more than 135 °C, the traction coefficient under the low load is higher than under the high load. It illustrated that the grease was sensitive to temperature but it reflected high temperature stable performance.The optimum conditions were obtained by Design-Expert software optimization : temperature for 235°C、load for 2800.00N、rotate speed for 183.17r/min and in this time the traction coefficient is at 0.547 in this test. It shown that the grease fitted the low speed and heavy load equipment.


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