Abstract

Zero-carbon fuels are expected to catalyse the decarbonisation of the maritime industry, with hydrogen being considered a long-term solution. This study aimed to investigate the feasibility of using hydrogen as a secondary fuel in marine diesel engines. A marine four-stroke engine with a nominal power output of 10.5 MW at 500 rpm was investigated, whereas the hydrogen injection at the engine port was considered. A CFD model was set up in CONVERGE for both diesel and the diesel-hydrogen operating modes to investigate the effects of 20% hydrogen fuel fraction (by energy) on engine performance, emissions, and combustion characteristics. This model was validated against experimental data for the diesel operating mode. Based on a parametric study, the mesh characteristics were selected to compromise between the prediction error and the computational effort. The impact of 20% hydrogen energy fraction on the heat release rate (HRR) and NOx emissions is comparing with the diesel mode. The results demonstrate that despite the reduction in carbon emissions when using hydrogen, the NOx emissions increase by 2.5 times, whereas the lower compression ratio allows for engine free-knock operation. This study contributes to the identification of efficient and reliable combustion conditions for diesel-hydrogen dual-fuel marine engines.

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