Abstract

A novel, mid-infrared laser-absorption sensor was developed for measurements of biofuel blend (E85) vapor in the intake runner of a single-cylinder internal combustion engine. The sensor used two mid-infrared interband cascade lasers to target a region of strong E85 absorbance near 3.35 µm. The lasers were co-aligned and fiber-coupled into the engine, and a two-color, online-offline differential absorption strategy was used to provide sensitive measurements of E85 vapor mole fraction and reject interference due to beam-steering and fuel droplet spray. An intensity-modulation spectroscopy (IMS) sensing scheme was employed to reject low-frequency additive noise and allow for frequency-domain multiplexing of the two lasers. High-resolution E85 absorption cross-section measurements were conducted in a static cell at a range of intake-relevant conditions. Validation experiments were performed in a laboratory setting to demonstrate sensor accuracy and noise rejection capability. The sensor was deployed on a single-cylinder development engine during dynamometer testing to provide time-resolved E85 vapor mole fraction measurements at a measurement rate of 40 kS/s, which corresponds to one measurement per crank angle degree at 6700 rpm. Time-resolved and average sensor measurements provide key performance insights for the development of intake systems in high-performance internal combustion engines.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call