Abstract

In a previous work, the effectiveness of late pilot injection on improving combustion behaviour – in terms of fuel conversion efficiency and pollutant emission levels – in a diesel/natural gas dual-fuel engine was assessed. Then, an additional set of experiments was performed, aiming at speeding up the combustion process possibly without penalizing NOx levels. Therefore, hydrogen was added to natural gas in a percentage equal to 10%. Results show that hydrogen addition has a significant effect on the combustion development specially during the early stage of combustion: ignition delay is shortened and combustion centre is advanced, while the combustion duration increases when pilot injection timing is set to conventional values, while remains basically unchanged for late timings. Fuel conversion efficiency is only slightly penalized when hydrogen is added. Moreover, it was confirmed that, in general, combustion strategy with late pilot injection timing does not penalize fuel conversion efficiency; indeed, in some cases, it actually increases. Concerning regulated emission levels, it is again proven that late pilot injection does not penalize pollutant production: the hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide reduce as pilot injection is delayed, probably due to the higher temperatures reached into the cylinder during most part of the expansion stroke. Moreover, adding hydrogen always reduces their levels. Concerning NOx, they are drastically reduced delaying pilot injection; as expected, hydrogen addition promotes NOx formation, but the increase, evident with conventional pilot injection timings, becomes marginal with late injection strategy. Therefore, combustion strategy performance with late pilot injection in dual-fuel diesel/natural gas combustion conditions can be further improved with 10% hydrogen addition to natural gas.

Highlights

  • The continuous increase in energy demand is in contrast with the rapid depletion of crude oil around the world

  • Combustion starts before TDC, while with late timings, combustion starts after TDC, i.e. during the expansion stroke

  • Introducing hydrogen and 90% CNG (HCNG) instead of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) as low reactivity fuel leads to advanced ignition and higher in-cylinder pressure and, Heat Release Rate (HRR) during the early phase of combustion

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Summary

Introduction

The continuous increase in energy demand is in contrast with the rapid depletion of crude oil around the world. The Authors showed that retarding pilot injection helps in obtaining a reduction of pollutant emission levels while keeping unchanged or with only little penalty on engine fuel conversion efficiency of a dual-fuel diesel/natural gas engine [3]. In these conditions, a critical point was shown to be the combustion velocity, because the fuel burns entirely during the expansion stroke. Low fraction of hydrogen in methane can suppress the uncontrolled combustion of hydrogen [5]

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