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Technical Paper

Evaluation of Combustion Velocities in Bi-fuel Engines by Means of an Enhanced Diagnostic Tool Based on a Quasi-Dimensional Multizone Model

2005-04-11
2005-01-0245
The burned-gas propagation process has been characterized in two bi-fuel engines by means of a combustion diagnostic tool resulting from the integration of an original multizone heat-release model with a CAD procedure for the burned-gas front geometry simulation. Burned-gas mean expansion speed ub, mean gas speed ug and burning velocity Sb were computed as functions of crank angle and burned-gas radius for a wide range of engine speeds (n = 2000-5500 rpm), loads (bmep = 200-790 kPa), relative air-fuel ratios (RAFR = 0.80-1.60) and spark advances (SA ranging from 8 deg retard to 8 deg advance from MBT), under both gasoline and CNG operations. Finally, the influence of intake runner and combustion chamber geometries on flame propagation process was investigated. Main results show that Sb is generally comparable for the engine running on both gasoline and CNG, at the same engine speed and load, under stoichiometric and MBT operations.
Technical Paper

Analysis of Combustion Parameters and Their Relation to Operating Variables and Exhaust Emissions in an Upgraded Multivalve Bi-Fuel CNG SI Engine

2004-03-08
2004-01-0983
The combustion propagation and burned-gas expansion processes in a bi-fuel CNG SI engine were characterized by applying a newly developed diagnostic tool, in order to better understand how these processes are related to the fuel composition, to the engine operating variables as well as to the exhaust emissions. The diagnostic tool is based on an original multizone heat-release model that is coupled with a CADmodel of the burned-gas containing surface for the computation of the burning speed and the burned-gas mean expansion velocity. Furthermore, the thermal and prompt NO sub-models, embedded in the diagnostic code, were employed to study the effects ofNO formation mechanisms and thermodynamic parameters on nitric oxide emissions.
Technical Paper

High-Boost C.R. Diesel Engine: A Feasibility Study of Performance Enhancement and Exhaust-Gas Power Cogeneration

2002-10-21
2002-01-2814
The present work concerns the study of the potentialities of high-boost small-displacement C.R. (Common Rail) diesel engines where the compressor and the expander are mechanically disengaged for the purpose of power cogeneration from the exhaust gas. This objective can be achieved by means of advanced concept electrical devices capable of delivering the energy produced by the expander either to the drivetrain transmission or to the even more power-demanding auxiliary equipment of both the engine and the vehicle. The performance of a small-displacement boosted diesel engine with a common-rail injection system has been predicted by means of a computational code obtained by integrating different in-house non-commercial codes that simulate the intake, combustion and exhaust processes. The model validation has been carried out by means of the experimental data obtained at Fiat Research Center on a commercial small-displacement C.R. turbocharged diesel engine.
Technical Paper

Conversion of a Multivalve Gasoline Engine to Run on CNG

2000-03-06
2000-01-0673
A production SI engine originally designed at Fiat Auto to operate with unleaded gasoline was converted to run on natural gas. To that end, in addition to designing and building the CNG fuel plant, it was necessary to replace the multipoint electronic module for injection-duration and ignition-timing control with an ECM designed to obtain multipoint sequential injection. The engine was modified so as to work either with gasoline or natural gas. For the present investigation, however, the engine configuration was not optimized for running on methane, in order to compare the performance of the engine operated by the two different fuels with the same compression ratio. In fact, the engine is also interesting as a dual-fuel engine because of its relatively high compression ratio ≈10.5 that is almost suitable for CNG operation. The engine had the main features of being a multivalve, fast-burn pent-roof chamber engine with a variable intake-system geometry.
Technical Paper

Unsteady Convection Model for Heat Release Analysis of IC Engine Pressure Data

2000-03-06
2000-01-1265
A contribution has been given to the thermodynamics approach usually used for analyzing the combustion process in IC engines on the basis of cylinder pressure data reduction. A survey of heat release type combustion models and of their calibration methods has first been carried out with specific attention paid to the bulk gas-wall heat transfer correlations used. Experimental results have given evidence that most of these correlations are incapable of predicting the phase shift occurring between the gas-wall temperature difference and the heat transfer during the engine compression and expansion strokes, owing to the transient properties of the fluid directly in contact with the wall. This work develops and applies a refined procedure for heat release analysis of cylinder pressure data including the unsteadiness effects of the convective heat transfer process.
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