Abstract

Advanced Low Temperature Combustion modes, such as the Sandia proposed Additive-Mixing Fuel Injection (AMFI), can unlock significant potential to boost fuel conversion efficiency and ultimately improve the energy conversion of internal combustion engines. This is a novel improved combustion process that is enabled by supplying small (<5%) variable amounts of autoignition improver to the fuel to enhance the engine operation and control. Common, diesel-fuel ignition-quality enhancing additive, 2-ethylexyl nitrate (EHN), is doped into gasoline to enable Sandia LTGC + AMFI combustion. This manuscript focuses on the development of a reduced sub-mechanism for EHN chemical kinetics at engine relevant conditions that is implemented into a skeletal mechanism for chemical kinetic studies of gasoline surrogate fuels. The mechanism validation utilized zero-dimensional numerical simulations and comparison to shock tube ignition-delay data of pure and EHN-doped n-heptane. Additional validation is presented with Homogeneous Charge Compression-Ignition (HCCI) engine data of pure and EHN-doped research-grade E10 gasoline. Then, the mechanism was deployed in a 3-D computational fluid dynamics (CFD) using Large Eddy Simulations (LES) to model the HCCI engine experiments of 0.4% vol EHN additized E10 gasoline at several equivalence ratios. Simulations showed a very good performance of the mechanism, and the model accurately reproduced (a) the ignition point, (b) combustion phasing, (c) combustion duration, and (d) the peak of the heat release rates of the engine experiments. The results show that EHN promotes Low-Temperature Heat Release, ultimately driving the gasoline to autoignite at thermodynamic conditions where the fuel would not otherwise ignite. Overall, this work demonstrates a viable reduced chemical-kinetic mechanism for EHN and shows that it can be combined with a skeletal gasoline mechanism for CFD-LES analysis of well-mixed LTGC that matches well with experimental results. The CFD-LES analysis also shows the spatial distribution of EHN-fuel interactions that control the autoignition throughout the combustion chamber.

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