Abstract

Due to their ability to simultaneously reduce fuel consumption and NOx emissions, controlled autoignition or homogeneous charge compression ignition combustion processes have been extensively researched over the last decade and adopted on prototype gasoline engines. Despite the fact that they were initially achieved on conventional two-stroke ported gasoline engines, there have been much fewer studies carried out on controlled autoignition combustion in two-stroke engines because of the inherent problems associated with the conventional two-stroke engine with intake and exhaust ports. In the meantime, engine downsizing has been actively researched and developed as an effective means to improve the vehicle’s fuel economy by operating the engine at higher load and more efficient regions and by reducing the number of cylinders. But the aggressive engine downsizing of the current four-stroke gasoline engine is limited by the knocking combustion and high peak cylinder pressure. As an alternative approach to engine downsizing, the boosted two-stroke cycle in a poppet valve engine is proposed and researched. It has been shown that the controlled autoignition combustion in the two-stroke cycle could be readily achieved and it led to significant reduction in carbon monoxide and unburned hydrocarbon emissions than the spark ignition combustion. In this study, extensive engine experiments have been performed to determine the optimum boosting for minimum fuel consumption in a single-cylinder gasoline direct injection camless engine operating in the two-stroke cycle. In order to minimise the air short-circuiting rate, the intake and exhaust valve timings were adjusted. Lean boost was applied to the engine operation, which was found to extend the range of controlled autoignition combustion, result in higher combustion and thermal efficiencies and significantly lower carbon monoxide and hydrocarbon emissions. By means of the cycle-resolved in-cylinder measurements and heat release analysis, the improvement in combustion and thermal efficiencies was attributed to the improved in-cylinder mixture, optimised autoignition and combustion phases.

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