Impact of the Internal Combustion Engine Thermal State during Start-Up on the Exhaust Emissions in the Homologation Test
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
- Direct injection: multi phases, UHP > 35 (50+) MPa;
- Extended Miller and Atkinson cycles;
- Dethrottling: VVT and VVL;
- Combined EGR; water injection;
- Combined boosting (turbocharging; electric booster);
- VCR;
- Homogeneous and/or lean mixture;
- HCCI;
- Thermal management;
- 48 V mild HEV (additionally 20–30 kW);
- Advanced exhaust aftertreatment system.
3. Research Methodology
4. Results and Discussion
5. Analysis of the Empirical Tests Results for a Car in NEDC Tests
6. Conclusions
- The cold engine start was found to have a significant impact on the engine’s operational and emission parameters for spark ignition engines.
- The most important aspects responsible for the increase in fuel consumption and the exhaust emissions for cold engine starts, especially aspects with reducing properties in relation to oxygen, are the fact that the engine was supplied with richer mixtures due to disturbances in the power supply process and—even more so—the combustion process. In addition, the increased exhaust emission was favored by the low temperature of the exhaust aftertreatment systems. Even in the case of nitrogen oxides emission, where the low engine temperature favors a reduction in forming nitrogen oxides, the low temperature of the exhaust aftertreatment systems turned out to be decisive, resulting in the overall exhaust emissions being higher.
- Starting a cold engine has the greatest impact on the increase in the exhaust emissions of organic compounds, nitrogen oxide, and particulate matter, especially the number of particles.
- The carbon monoxide exhaust emission intensity during the engine cold start was several times greater (180 mg/s) than the emission intensity of this compound for a hot engine (20 mg/s); this applied to the first 200 s of the NEDC test. Thermal stabilization of the exhaust aftertreatment systems caused the emission intensity results to become more similar to each other in the later parts of the test. A similar situation occurred in the case of the hydrocarbon emission intensity.
- Increased emission of nitrogen oxides in the NEDC test occurred only during the first seconds after the cold engine start, stabilizing after a period of about 200 s. The last high-speed phase (EUDC) was not significant, since the efficiency of the exhaust aftertreatment system was similar due to the heating of the catalytic reactor.
- A significant increase in the number of emitted particles during the engine cold start (1 × 1012 1/s) was observed for about 150 s after the start of the test. In the rest of the NEDC test, the particle number intensity was similar.
- The obtained values of road emission of exhaust components in the NEDC test indicated that during the engine cold start (compared to the hot one), the following occurred:
- road emission of CO was 63% greater,
- road emission of HC was 1500% greater,
- road emission of NOx was 18% greater,
- number of emitted particles was 37% lower,
- fuel consumption (road emission of CO2) was 6% greater.
7. Further Research
- Conducting research using a greater repetition of tests, thanks to which it would be possible to assess the repeatability of the obtained results.
- Conducting research in accordance with other types of tests, making it possible to determine the impact of various vehicle motion characteristics on the operational properties of engines in the warm-up phase.
- Conducting simulation tests representing the real conditions of vehicle operation, determined using the results of previous empirical tests. These tests could be considered the implementation of vehicle speed processes—stochastic processes in simulated traffic conditions.
- Conducting research on the engine thermal state’s impact on its operational properties for various parameters, which is possible to achieve using various technical solutions. The results of these studies could provide a possibility of proposing practical technical solutions for engine warm up during its start-up phase.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ASC | ammonia slip catalyst |
AV | average value operator |
b | road emissions of gases/road emission of particles |
C | cold (meaning a cold start of an engine) |
CO | carbon monoxide |
CO2 | carbon dioxide |
CLD | chemiluminescence detector |
CPC | condensation particle counter |
E | exhaust emission intensity of gases/exhaust emission intensity of particles |
EGR | exhaust gas recirculation |
EHC | electrically heated catalyst |
Gf | fuel mass consumption |
GPF | gasoline particle filter |
H | hot (meaning a hot start of an engine) |
HCCI | homogeneous charger compression ignition |
HEV | hybrid electric vehicle |
LNT | lean trap NOx |
NDIR | non-dispersive infrared detector |
NEDC | New European Driving Cycle |
NH3 | ammonia |
NOx | nitrogen oxides |
PN | particle number |
qf | road fuel mass consumption |
UHP | ultra-high injection pressure |
HC | hydrocarbons |
TWC | three-way catalyst |
TW GPF | TWC + GPF |
TW LNT | TWC + LNT |
VCR | variable compression ratio |
VVL | variable valves lift |
VVT | variable valves timing |
v | vehicle speed |
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Technical Parameters | Vehicle |
---|---|
Engine | Gasoline, Turbo, R4, 16 V |
Fuel system | direct injection |
Engine displacement | 1984 cm3 |
Max. power | 195 kW at 5000 rpm |
Max. torque | 370 Nm/1600—4200 rpm |
Transmission | automatic, seven gears |
Curb weight | 1770 kg |
Specific power output | 9.1 kg/kW |
Average CO2 emissions | 228 g/km (WLTC) |
Euro standard | Euro 6 |
Technical Parameters | Details |
---|---|
Sample flow rate | 8 dm3/min |
CO2 ranges (NDIR method) | 0–20% |
CO ranges (NDIR method) | 0–10,000 ppm |
HC ranges (FID method) | 0–5000 ppm |
NOx ranges (CLD method) | 0–500 ppm |
PN (CPC method) | 0–10,000 1/cm3 |
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Andrych-Zalewska, M.; Chlopek, Z.; Merkisz, J.; Pielecha, J. Impact of the Internal Combustion Engine Thermal State during Start-Up on the Exhaust Emissions in the Homologation Test. Energies 2023, 16, 1937. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16041937
Andrych-Zalewska M, Chlopek Z, Merkisz J, Pielecha J. Impact of the Internal Combustion Engine Thermal State during Start-Up on the Exhaust Emissions in the Homologation Test. Energies. 2023; 16(4):1937. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16041937
Chicago/Turabian StyleAndrych-Zalewska, Monika, Zdzislaw Chlopek, Jerzy Merkisz, and Jacek Pielecha. 2023. "Impact of the Internal Combustion Engine Thermal State during Start-Up on the Exhaust Emissions in the Homologation Test" Energies 16, no. 4: 1937. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16041937
APA StyleAndrych-Zalewska, M., Chlopek, Z., Merkisz, J., & Pielecha, J. (2023). Impact of the Internal Combustion Engine Thermal State during Start-Up on the Exhaust Emissions in the Homologation Test. Energies, 16(4), 1937. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16041937