Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6686164 | Applied Energy | 2015 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
In various research studies, ethanol blended fuels have shown reduced particulate matter (PM) emissions in comparison to gasoline and its surrogate fuels in direct-injection spark-ignition (DISI) engines. However, there are also studies reporting increased particulate concentration for fuels with low ethanol content. In this work the mixture formation and sooting combustion behavior of isooctane and the mixture E20 (20Â vol% of ethanol in isooctane) is analyzed for catalyst heating operation. These operating conditions are critical as they strongly contribute to overall soot emissions in driving cycles. Simultaneous high speed imaging of OHâ-chemiluminescence and natural soot luminosity measurements are performed in combination with primary particle concentration measurements using a laser induced incandescence (LII) sensor in the engine exhaust duct. At these operating conditions E20 exhibits a higher sooting tendency as compared to isooctane. In order to identify the reason for increased soot formation, the mixture formation process is analyzed by planar laser induced fluorescence (LIF) measurements. The results show that soot was formed in fuel rich regions with incomplete evaporated fuel droplets remaining from the injection event. A different evaporation process of E20 fuel spray and mixing behavior is indicated showing a more compact rich mixture cloud with surrounding lean areas near the spark plug region. This mixture stratification is characterized by higher cyclic variations and constitutes a significant source of soot formation.
Keywords
air–fuel ratioLIFaTDCE20IMEPDISIFlame developmentNEDCbTDCLII Research Octane Numberafter top dead centerBioethanoldirect injection spark ignitionExhaust valveCarbon dioxideHydroxyl radicalCrank AngleMixture formationLaser induced fluorescencebefore top dead centerLaser induced incandescenceparticle matterIndicated mean effective pressureOperating pointTEAnew European driving cycleCO2
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Energy Engineering and Power Technology
Authors
Michael Storch, Florian Hinrichsen, Michael Wensing, Stefan Will, Lars Zigan,