Abstract
Stoichiometric dual-fuel compression ignition (SDCI) combustion has superior potential in both emission control and thermal efficiency. Split injection of diesel reportedly shows superiority in optimizing combustion phase control and increasing flexibility in fuel selection. This study focuses on split injection strategies in SDCI mode. The effects of main injection timing and pilot-to-total ratio are examined. Combustion phasing is found to be retarded in split injection when overmixing occurs as a result of early main injection timing. Furthermore, an optimised split injection timing can avoid extremely high pressure rise rate without great loss in indicated thermal efficiency while maintaining soot emission at an acceptable level. A higher pilot-to-total ratio always results in lower soot emission, higher combustion efficiency, and relatively superior ITE, but improvements are not significant with increased pilot-to-total ratio up to approximately 0.65.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 2015-01-0847 |
Number of pages | 6 |
Journal | SAE Technical Paper 2015-01-0847 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 14 Apr 2015 |
Event | SAE 2015 World Congress and Exhibition - Detroit, United States Duration: 21 Apr 2015 → 23 Apr 2015 |