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Technical Paper

Construction, Instrumentation, and Implementation of a Low Cost, Single-Cylinder Compression Ignition Engine Test Cell

2014-04-01
2014-01-0817
In order to perform cutting-edge engine research that applies to modern Compression Ignition (CI) engines, a sophisticated test cell is needed that allows control of the engine and its auxiliary systems. The primary obstacle to the completion of such a test cell is the up-front expense. This paper covers the construction of a low cost, single-cylinder engine test cell while demonstrating the type of research that can be accomplished along the way. The components necessary for the construction, instrumentation, and operation of such a test cell, neglecting emissions analysis equipment, can be obtained for less than $150,000. The engine utilized, a naturally-aspirated single-cylinder Yanmar L100V, was purchased as an engine-generator package.
Technical Paper

Efficiency and Emissions Mapping for a Single-Cylinder, Direct Injected Compression Ignition Engine

2014-04-01
2014-01-1242
A timing sweep to correlate the location of Maximum Brake Torque (MBT) was completed on a single-cylinder, direct injected compression ignition engine that was recently upgraded to a high-pressure rail injection system for better engine control. This sweep included emissions monitoring for carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, particulate matter, hydrocarbons, and oxides of nitrogen for the calibration of a heat release model, as well as the opportunity to relate MBT timing to brake-specific emissions production. The result of this timing sweep was a relatively linear correlation between injection delay and peak pressure timing. In addition, a number of other MBT timing methodologies were tested indicating their applicability for immediate feedback upon engine testing, particularly mass fraction burned correlations. Emissions were either strongly correlated to MBT timing (with emissions being minimized in the vicinity of MBT), or were completely independent of MBT.
Journal Article

Comparison of ULSD, Used Cooking Oil Biodiesel, and JP-8 Performance and Emissions in a Single-Cylinder Compression-Ignition Engine

2012-10-23
2012-32-0009
With the rapid growth of biodiesel production, it is prudent to research ways to improve its operation and performance in an engine, especially concerning fuel economy and exhaust emissions. This requires a thorough understanding of both the biodiesel production and engine operating processes. Completion of a published study of the impact of biodiesel fuel properties on engine operation indicated that it is difficult to draw conclusions about the exact causes of increased NOx emissions with respect to biodiesel properties without the capability of measuring engine cylinder pressures. As improvements were made to the authors' laboratory, a system to monitor and record pressure inside a diesel engine during operation was constructed to test dissimilar fuels. In the current work, three different fuels were tested in order to investigate combustion phasing, emissions, and fuel consumption as a function of fuel properties such as density, viscosity, Cetane Number, and energy content.
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