Title of article :
Spark-ignited engine NOx emissions in a low-nitrogen oxycombustion environment
Author/Authors :
Van Blarigan، نويسنده , , Andrew and Kozarac، نويسنده , , Darko and Seiser، نويسنده , , Reinhard and Chen، نويسنده , , J.Y. and Cattolica، نويسنده , , Robert and Dibble، نويسنده , , Robert، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Abstract :
This paper investigates the formation of the pollutant nitric oxides (NOx) in the low-nitrogen (N2) environment of methane oxycombustion in a spark-ignited (SI) internal combustion engine. Working fluid composition, N2 concentration, O2 concentration, compression ratio (CR) and spark-timing have been investigated to evaluate the feasibility of operating such a system below NOx regulation levels without after-treatment systems.
issions in g/kW h are shown under equivalent CR, intake temperature, and indicated mean effective pressure (IMEP) at maximum brake torque spark-timing, to have an approximately linear dependence on N2 concentration from no N2 to normal air combustion. At a given N2 concentration, NOx emissions were found to be adversely correlated with power, thermal efficiency, and the coefficient of variation of IMEP. It was found that with 2–3% N2 by volume in the working fluid, it was possible to reduce NOx emissions to satisfy regulation levels, but this corresponds to non-ideal engine performance in other metrics. Satisfying regulations while operating at the maximum thermal efficiency required the N2 concentration be reduced to 1–2% by volume.
stem was simulated using an AVL Boost model, with results indicating that the increasing NOx concentrations at higher O2 cases and earlier spark-timings can largely be attributed to higher burned-gas temperatures. An additional simulation utilizing CHEMKIN and the GRI 3.0 mechanism was used to estimate NOx formation, and with results indicating that air-calibrated NOx mechanisms maintain reasonable accuracy in low-N2 environments.
Keywords :
NOX , Exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) , Simulation , Experiment , Oxycombustion , SI engine
Journal title :
Applied Energy
Journal title :
Applied Energy