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Potential of Thermal Stratification and Combustion Retard for Reducing Pressure-Rise Rates in HCCI Engines, Based on Multi-Zone Modeling and Experiments

252

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34

References

2005

Year

Abstract

<div class="htmlview paragraph">This work investigates the potential of in-cylinder thermal stratification for reducing the pressure-rise rate in HCCI engines, and the coupling between thermal stratification and combustion-phasing retard. A combination of computational and experimental results is employed. The computations were conducted using both a custom multi-zone version and the standard single-zone version of the Senkin application of the CHEMKIN III kinetics-rate code, and kinetic mechanisms for iso-octane.</div> <div class="htmlview paragraph">This study shows that the potential for extending the high-load operating limit by adjusting the thermal stratification is very large. With appropriate stratification, even a stoichiometric charge can be combusted with low pressure-rise rates, giving an output of 16 bar IMEP<sub>g</sub> for naturally aspirated operation. For more typical HCCI fueling rates (<i>ϕ</i> = 0.38 - 0.45), the optimal charge-temperature distribution is found to depend on both the amount of fuel and the combustion phasing. For combustion phasing in the range of 7 - 10°CA after TDC, a linear thermal distribution is optimal since it produces a near-linear pressure rise. For other combustion phasings, non-linear distributions are required to achieve a linear pressure rise. Also, the total thermal width must be greater at higher fueling rates to avoid excessive pressure-rise rates. The study also shows that increasing the natural thermal width of the charge by 50% would allow the equivalence ratio to be increased from 0.44 to 0.60, with an associated increase of the IMEP<sub>g</sub> from 524 to 695 kPa for naturally aspirated operation.</div> <div class="htmlview paragraph">It was also found that the naturally occurring thermal stratification plays a major role in producing the experimentally observed benefit of combustion-timing retard for slowing the combustion rate. Reduced chemical-kinetic rates with combustion retard are found to play a lesser role.</div>

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