An Experimental Study on the Performance and Emission of the diesel/CNG Dual-Fuel Combustion Mode in a Stationary CI Engine
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Methodology
2.1. Experimental Setup
- (i)
- Pressure sensor Kistler 6061—range 0–250 bar, linearity < ±0.5% FS;
- (ii)
- Charge amplifier Kistler 5011—range ±10–±999,000 pC for 10V FS, error < ±3%, linearity <± 0.05% FS;
- (iii)
- Data acquisition module, Measurement Computing USB-1608HS—16 bits resolution, sampling frequency 20 kHz;
- (iv)
- Air rotor flowmeter Common CGR-01 G40 DN50—measuring range 0.65–65 m3/h, accuracy class 1;
- (v)
- CNG rotor flowmeter Common CGR-01 G10 DN50—measuring range 0.25 … 25 m3/h, accuracy class 1;
- (vi)
- Bosch BEA 350 analyzer.
2.2. Methodology
2.3. Test Fuels
3. Test Method and Conditions
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Combustion Characteristics
4.2. Engine Stability
4.3. Exhaust Emissions
5. Conclusions
- (i)
- Increasing the energy share of CNG co-combusted with diesel in the CI engine from 0% to 45% increases the maximum combustion pressure, increases the rate of heat release and increases the combustion pressure. Increasing the CNG gas content above 45% causes a decrease in pmax, HRRmax and dp/dφ, due to the significant ignition delay and prolonged combustion.
- (ii)
- Co-combustion of increasing amounts of CNG gas with diesel fuel increases the ignition delay of the combustible mixture in the cylinder of a dual-fuel engine and reduces the total duration of combustion. During the combustion of the mixture with the largest, 95% share of CNG gas, compared to the combustion of diesel alone, a 31.5% increase in ignition delay (ID) and a 55% reduction in the burn duration (BD) was obtained.
- (iii)
- When assessing the stability of a dual-fuel engine co-combusted diesel with natural gas based on the COVpmax coefficient and pmax probability density, it can be seen that the most stable operation similar to diesel fuel combustion is provided by diesel co-combustion with the 30% and 45% energy shares of CNG.
- (iv)
- Increasing the share of CNG co-combusted with diesel fuel causes an increase in nitric oxide emissions of a dual-fuel engine. The highest NO emission value of 242 ppm was obtained for DCNG90.
- (v)
- Compared to diesel fuel supply, co-combustion of this fuel with 30% and 45% CNG energy shares, despite the increase in ignition delay and shortening the combustion process, contributes to the reduction of HC emissions. After exceeding the 45% share of CNG, there is an increase in hydrocarbon emissions.
- (vi)
- Increasing the share of CNG gas co-combusted with diesel causes, compared to the combustion of diesel fuel, a decrease in carbon dioxide emissions by about 26% and an almost complete reduction of carbon monoxide in the exhaust gas of a dual-fuel engine.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
IMEP | indicated mean effective pressure, MPa |
BTE | brake thermal efficiency, % |
BSFC | brake specific fuel consumption, g/kWh |
HRR | heat release rate, J/degree |
COVpmax | coefficient of variation of maximum pressure, % |
STDpmax | standard deviation of maximum pressure, MPa |
ṁCNG | CNG consumption per cycle, mg/cyc |
ṁD | diesel fuel consumption per cycle, mg/cyc |
LHVCNG | lower heating value of CNG, MJ/kg |
LHVD | lower heating value of diesel fuel, MJ/kg |
ID | ignition delay, degrees |
BD | burn duration, degrees |
Vd | displaced cylinder volume, cm3 |
P | pressure, bar |
V | volume, cm3 |
N | engine speed, rpm |
Φ(pmax) | maximum pressure probability density |
CI | compression ignition engine |
CNG | compressed natural gas |
TDC | top dead centre |
SOI | start of injection |
NOx | nitrogen oxides |
NO | nitrogen monoxide |
HC | hydrocarbons |
CO | carbon monoxide |
CO2 | carbon dioxide |
O2 | oxygenGreek letters |
χ | ratio of specific heats |
φ | crank angle, degrees |
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Parameter | Value |
---|---|
Engine | 1CA90 Andoria |
Type of engine | four stroke compression-ignition |
Number of cylinders | 1 |
Bore | 90 mm |
Stroke | 90 mm |
Displaced volume | 573 cm3 |
Number of valves | 2 |
Compression ratio | 17 |
Engine speed | 1500 rpm |
Diesel injection | direct injection |
CNG injection | port injection |
Diesel injection pressure | 210 bar |
CNG injection pressure | 3 bar |
Diesel injection timing | 343° |
Apparatus | Measuring Range | Resolution | Accuracy from Measured Value | Absolute Accuracy |
---|---|---|---|---|
CO | 0.000–10.000% vol. 0.000–5.000% vol. | 0.001% vol. 0.001% vol. | … ±5% | … ±0.06% vol. |
HC | 0–9999 ppm vol. 0–2000 ppm vol. | 1 ppm vol. 1 ppm vol. | … ±5% | … ±12 ppm vol. |
CO2 | 0.00–18.00% vol. 0.00–16.00% vol. | 0.01% vol. 0.01% vol. | … ±5% | … ±0.5% vol. |
O2 | 0.00–22.00% vol. 0.00–21.00% vol. | 0.01% vol. 0.01% vol. | … ±4% | … ±0.1% vol. |
NO | 0–5000 ppm vol. 0–4000 ppm vol. | 1 ppm vol. 1 ppm vol. | ±4% ±8% | ±25 ppm vol. ±50 ppm vol. |
λ | 0.500–9.999 0.700–1.300 | 0.001 0.001 | … ±4% | … … |
Parameter | Diesel | CNG |
---|---|---|
Cetane number | 51 | 0 |
Methane number | - | 82 |
Research octane number | 15–25 | 110–130 |
Density at 1 atm and 15 °C (kg/m3) | 840 | 0.72–0.76 |
Lower heating value (MJ/kg) | 42.5 | 49.15 |
Heat of evaporation (kJ/kg) | 243 | 510 |
Auto-ignition temperature (°C) | 180–230 | 650 |
Stoichiometric air-fuel ratio | 14.6 | 17.05 |
Viscosity at 20 °C (Pa·s) | 2.8 × 10−3 | 1–1.4 × 10−6 |
Boiling point (°C) | 180–360 | −162 |
Carbon content (%) | 85 | 75 |
Component | v/v (%) |
---|---|
Methane CH4 | 96.1 |
Ethane C2H6 | 2.50 |
Propane C3H8 | 0.40 |
Butane C4H10 | 0.14 |
Pentane C5H12 | 0.01 |
Nitrogen N2 | 0.59 |
Carbon dioxide CO2 | 0.15 |
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Jamrozik, A.; Tutak, W.; Grab-Rogaliński, K. An Experimental Study on the Performance and Emission of the diesel/CNG Dual-Fuel Combustion Mode in a Stationary CI Engine. Energies 2019, 12, 3857. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12203857
Jamrozik A, Tutak W, Grab-Rogaliński K. An Experimental Study on the Performance and Emission of the diesel/CNG Dual-Fuel Combustion Mode in a Stationary CI Engine. Energies. 2019; 12(20):3857. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12203857
Chicago/Turabian StyleJamrozik, Arkadiusz, Wojciech Tutak, and Karol Grab-Rogaliński. 2019. "An Experimental Study on the Performance and Emission of the diesel/CNG Dual-Fuel Combustion Mode in a Stationary CI Engine" Energies 12, no. 20: 3857. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12203857
APA StyleJamrozik, A., Tutak, W., & Grab-Rogaliński, K. (2019). An Experimental Study on the Performance and Emission of the diesel/CNG Dual-Fuel Combustion Mode in a Stationary CI Engine. Energies, 12(20), 3857. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12203857