Characteristics of Diesel Combustion in Low Oxygen Mixtures with Ultra-High EGR

2006-01-1147

04/03/2006

Event
SAE 2006 World Congress & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
Ultra-low NOx and smokeless operation at higher loads up to half of the rated torque is attempted with large ratios of cold EGR. NOx decreases below 6 ppm (0.05 g/(kW·h)) and soot significantly increases when first decreasing the oxygen concentration to 16% with cold EGR, but after peaking at 12-14% oxygen, soot then deceases sharply to essentially zero at 9-10% oxygen while maintaining ultra low NOx and regardless of fuel injection quantity. However, at higher loads, with the oxygen concentration below 9-10%, the air/fuel ratio has to be over-rich to exceed half of rated torque, and thermal efficiency, CO, and THC deteriorate significantly. As EGR rate increases, exhaust gas emissions and thermal efficiency vary with the intake oxygen content rather than with the excess air ratio.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2006-01-1147
Pages
9
Citation
Ogawa, H., Miyamoto, N., Shimizu, H., and Kido, S., "Characteristics of Diesel Combustion in Low Oxygen Mixtures with Ultra-High EGR," SAE Technical Paper 2006-01-1147, 2006, https://doi.org/10.4271/2006-01-1147.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 3, 2006
Product Code
2006-01-1147
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English