Due to the nature of diffusive combustion, diesel engines display a distinct trade-off between nitrogen oxide (NOX) and particulate matter (PM). Since emission regulations become ever stricter, the relevance of dissolving this trade-off increases steadily as it hinders engine development from achieving ultralow emission levels. Seeking new opportunities to approach the problem, the modification of fuel properties has gained much attention. In particular, oxygenated fuels reduce particle emissions drastically, while having little adverse impact on NOX. Similarly, water (H2O) emulsification of diesel is commonly reported to reduce both NOX and PM. Both methods appear very promising, yet only few investigations were conducted in an effort of combing the benefits of the two.
With this work, the authors provide a detailed study on combustion and emissions for both neat oxymethylene ethers (OME2-OME5) and an H2O-emulsified OME mixture (OMEmix). By varying injection pressure and fuel properties (i.e., fuel chain length/H2O fraction in OMEmix) separately, the sole impact of altered fuel on the investigated measurands (NOX, carbon dioxide [CO2], combustion speed, cylinder pressure, heat release) could be distinguished and quantified on the basis of a linear regression analysis. It was found that the impact of fuel properties does not interact with varied operating conditions (i.e., rail pressure); thus the impact of altered fuel (chain length, H2O content) onto the measurands is nearly constant. With respect to NOX, the effect of increased fuel chain length (−0.73 g/kWhi with an increase in chain length of one) was found to be approximately twice as pronounced when directly compared with increasing H2O concentration (−0.41 g/kWhi with a 1% increase in H2O share). It was found that CO2 emissions are directly correlating to a rising fuel chain length (approx. +23 g/kWhi with an increase in chain length of one). The latter also affects the combustion process (i.e., combustion speed, max. heat release, max. cylinder pressure) in near-linear correlation. Contrary to the impact of neat OMEn chain length, an additional H2O share in OMEmix barely affected the combustion process.
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Due to the nature of diffusive combustion, diesel engines display a distinct trade-off between nitrogen oxide (NOX) and particulate matter (PM). Since emission regulations become ever stricter, the relevance of dissolving this trade-off increases steadily as it hinders engine development from achieving ultralow emission levels. Seeking new opportunities to approach the problem, the modification of fuel properties has gained much attention. In particular, oxygenated fuels reduce particle emission...
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