Abstract

The prospect of using methanol as an alternative fuel for vehicles in China is enticing because of its good combustion properties, low production cost, and renewable capacity, but the in-cylinder combustion of methanol also brings extra emissions concerns, such as alcohols and aldehydes. For the impact of methanol–gasoline blends on the pollutant emissions of spark ignition (SI) engines to be investigated, a GEELY MR479Q port fuel injection SI engine was selected for tests of burning different methanol–gasoline blends at wide-open throttle operating conditions, and an AVL Fourier-transform infrared multicomponent gas analyzer was used to measure all of the emissions. Test results show that the methanol-containing fuel blends had positive effects on the engine-out regulated emissions. Nitrogen oxide, carbon monoxide, and nonmethane hydrocarbon emissions were all dramatically reduced when the test engine was fueled with methanol–gasoline blends. Other hydrocarbon emissions such as ethylene, propylene, and s...

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