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DALIAN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY Login 中文
周一卉

Associate Professor
Supervisor of Master's Candidates


Gender:Female
Alma Mater:Dalian University of Technology
Degree:Doctoral Degree
School/Department:Chemical Engineering
Discipline:Safety Science and Engineering. Chemical Process Equipment
Business Address:Room H403,West Dist.,DUT
Contact Information:13500780440
E-Mail:zflower@dlut.edu.cn
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Current position: Home >> Scientific Research >> Paper Publications

Throttling effect study in the CDF/RCCI combustion with CNG ignited by diesel and diesel/biofuel blends

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Indexed by:期刊论文

Date of Publication:2021-02-02

Journal:FUEL

Volume:279

ISSN No.:0016-2361

Key Words:Throttling; Conventional dual-fuel; Reactivity controlled compression ignition; Blended pilot fuel; Low load

Abstract:Compressed natural gas (CNG) enrichment ignited by the diesel fuel in the compression ignition engine generally reveals low thermal efficiency and high carbon monoxide (CO) and total hydrocarbons (THC) emissions at low load due to the over-lean mixture. This paper aims to numerically study the improvement effectiveness of throttling on the efficiency and emissions in the conventional dual-fuel (CDF)/reactivity controlled compression ignition (RCCI) combustion modes with CNG mixture ignited by diesel and diesel/n-butanol blends at low load. Two pilot fuels and two combustion modes were compared by sweeping the intake air pressure (P-in) from 1.0 to 0.7 bar based on a fixed CA50 of 2 degrees CA ATDC, indicated mean effective pressure (IMEP) of 2.5 bar approximately, and CNG substitution rate of 50%. The numerical results showed that reducing P-in can significantly improve the combustion efficiency and THC emission due to the increased fuel/air concentration. In comparison with CDF combustion, RCCI combustion obtains higher combustion efficiency and lower THC emission. CO is reduced gradually with the decreasing P-in in the RCCI combustion, and having the similar level as that in the CDF combustion at P-in of 0.7 bar. N-butanol addition can further reduce the CO and THC emissions in the RCCI combustion with the reducing P-in. Overall, it reveals that diesel blended with n-butanol as the pilot fuel in the RCCI combustion at low intake air pressure is more favorable for the improvement of efficiency and emissions at low load.