The synthetic fuels dimethyl ether (DME) and polyoxymethylene
dimethylether (POMDME or OME) are
promising oxygenated fuels to meet the rising challenges
of air pollution control, CO2-neutrality, and sustainability.
The sootless combustion and high ignitability of DME
and OME represent ideal properties for an application in
diesel engines. However, recent investigations of oxygenates
reported an increase of nanoparticles, which are known to
have fatal effects on human’s health. Besides nanoparticles,
ongoing discussions about future emission legislation focus
on a drastic reduction of NOx.
For this reason, the present work investigates different
measures to reduce NOx emissions using DME/OME and a
paraffinic diesel fuel (PDF) as reference. Different rail pressures,
exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) rates, and injection
timings are evaluated, considering the effectivity on NOx
reduction and the impact on other emissions, especially on
nanoparticles. Besides these calibration parameters, a
variation of the injector nozzle design for DME/OME is
carried out to find an optimum between efficiency and NOx.
Finally, the influence of water injection into the intake port
is investigated and compared against the NOx reduction using
direct injection of a mixture of fuel with water.
It is found that the number of nanoparticles using DME/
OME shows no dependency of the abovementioned NOxreducing
measures and significantly decreases in comparison to
PDF. Furthermore, a nozzle design taking account of both the
lower energy density of the fuels and decreased rail pressure
proves to be the optimum for DME/OME, leading to a benefit in
NOx emission levels and thermal efficiency in comparison to
PDF. Moreover, a notable reduction in NOx is observed by
injecting small amounts of water into the intake port. Though,
increased water mass does not lead to a proportional NOx reduction
effect. Direct injection of fuel/water mixtures shows a
comparable effect on NOx emission levels when applying an equal
amount of water. However, the direct injection of a fuel/water
mixture shows higher impact on NOx reduction at increased load.
«
The synthetic fuels dimethyl ether (DME) and polyoxymethylene
dimethylether (POMDME or OME) are
promising oxygenated fuels to meet the rising challenges
of air pollution control, CO2-neutrality, and sustainability.
The sootless combustion and high ignitability of DME
and OME represent ideal properties for an application in
diesel engines. However, recent investigations of oxygenates
reported an increase of nanoparticles, which are known to
have fatal effects on human’s health. Besides na...
»