Abstract

The direct-injection hydrogen engine (DI-H2ICE) has demonstrated zero carbon emissions with high brake thermal efficiencies (BTE). Due to the high stoichiometric air–fuel ratio of hydrogen, with a lean burn strategy the gas exchange process of a hydrogen engine is different to a gasoline engine, and the valve timing controlling strategy requires reinvestigation. In this research, the optimal variable valve timing (VVT) is investigated in a 2.0 L DI H2ICE. The intake and exhaust valve timing controlling strategies are analyzed experimentally over the whole operating map. A multi-indicator decision-making method is applied to determine the entropy weight of BTE and NOx emissions. Results indicate that BTE greatly benefits from advanced intake valve timing, and exhaust valve timing affects BTE through pumping losses. Advanced intake and exhaust valve timings are employed in the hydrogen engine to enhance the BTE until the NOx emissions rise rapidly at high loads. The retarded exhaust valve timing helps reduce NOx emissions and avoid the risk of abnormal combustion at high loads. Therefore, earlier IVO and later EVC are applied simultaneously for DI-H2ICE compared to the gasoline engine. A maximum power of 124.8 kW at an engine speed of 4500 rpm and a BTE of 42.57 % is achieved with optimized VVT. Furthermore, NOx emissions are controlled to under 20 ppm over nearly half of the engine operating map. The conclusions are valuable in the development of high-performance H2ICEs, the numerical simulation studies, and hydrogen fuel applications.

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