Increasing the Efficiency of Hydrogen Direct Injection Internal Combustion Engines through the Use of Miller Cycles and Water Injection

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Abstract
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Hydrogen-fueled reciprocating engines typically feature reasonable efficiencies and low engine-out emissions but low power density, compromising their utility and economics. Previous hydrogen engine research has found efficiency and anti-knock benefits when using either Miller cycles or water injection. This article therefore studies, for the first time, a directly injected (DI), spark-ignited, heavy-duty, turbocharged and hydrogen-fueled engine operated with both Miller cycles and water injection. Miller cycles, with either early or late intake valve closure, and water injection combine to achieve high engine efficiencies approaching 50%, which is significantly higher than the same engine with standard valve timing. The increased susceptibility of hydrogen autoignition in these Miller cycles is overcome by water injection, which simultaneously increases the charge density, counteracting both lean-burn hydrogen’s and Miller cycles’ commonly observed power loss. This demonstrates that the combination of DI, Miller cycles, and water injection is a pathway toward highly efficient, low-emission, hydrogen-fueled engines with power densities that are comparable to conventional engines.
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Pages
22
Citation
Mortimer, J., Poursadegh, F., Brear, M., and Yang, Y., "Increasing the Efficiency of Hydrogen Direct Injection Internal Combustion Engines through the Use of Miller Cycles and Water Injection," SAE Int. J. Engines 19(1), 2026, .
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Publisher
Published
Jan 31
Product Code
03-19-01-0001
Content Type
Journal Article
Language
English