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Journal Article

Development of a Phenomenological Dual-Fuel Natural Gas Diesel Engine Simulation and Its Use for Analysis of Transient Operations

2014-10-13
2014-01-2546
Abundant supply of Natural Gas (NG) is U.S. and cost-advantage compared to diesel provides impetus for engineers to use alternative gaseous fuels in existing engines. Dual-fuel natural gas engines preserve diesel thermal efficiencies and reduce fuel cost without imposing consumer range anxiety. Increased complexity poses several challenges, including the transient response of an engine with direct injection of diesel fuel and injection of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) upstream of the intake manifold. A 1-D simulation of a Cummins ISX heavy duty, dual-fuel, natural gas-diesel engine is developed in the GT-Power environment to study and improve transient response. The simulated Variable Geometry Turbine (VGT)behavior, intake and exhaust geometry, valve timings and injector models are validated through experimental results. A triple Wiebe combustion model is applied to characterize experimental combustion results for both diesel and dual-fuel operation.
Technical Paper

An Evaluation of Knock Determination Techniques for Diesel-Natural Gas Dual Fuel Engines

2014-10-13
2014-01-2695
The recent advent of highly effective drilling and extraction technologies has decreased the price of natural gas and renewed interest in its use for transportation. Of particular interest is the conversion of dedicated diesel engines to operate on dual-fuel with natural gas injected into the intake manifold. Dual-fuel systems with natural gas injected into the intake manifold replace a significant portion of diesel fuel energy with natural gas (generally 50% or more by energy content), and produce lower operating costs than diesel-only operation. Diesel-natural gas engines have a high compression ratio and a homogeneous mixture of natural gas and air in the cylinder end gases. These conditions are very favorable for knock at high loads. In the present study, knock prediction concepts that utilize a single step Arrhenius function for diesel-natural gas dual-fuel engines are evaluated.
Technical Paper

In-Cylinder Thermodynamic Analysis for Performance Engine Development

2012-04-16
2012-01-1170
This research describes several data processing and analysis techniques that can be used to quantify indicated torque losses associated with in-cylinder thermodynamic events. The detailed thermodynamic techniques are intended to aid the development of performance engines under high-load conditions. This study investigates potential IMEP gains that could be made to an engine based on evaluating cylinder and manifold pressure data collected during wide-open-throttle operation. Examination of the data can guide engine design changes by exposing inefficiencies that may have otherwise gone unnoticed. Examples of calibration adjustments and physical intake and exhaust manifold design changes are also presented to validate the data analysis techniques presented. The research data sets were recorded using a 5.3L V8 engine in conjunction with a highly-controlled transient dynamometer.
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