A Study of the Effects of High EGR, High Equivalence Ratio, and Mixing Time on Emissions Levels in a Heavy-Duty Diesel Engine for PCCI Combustion

2006-01-0026

04/03/2006

Event
SAE 2006 World Congress & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
Experiments were performed on a single-cylinder heavy-duty Caterpillar SCOTE 3401E engine at high speed (1737 rev/min) and loads up to 60% of full load for fully Premixed Charge Compression Ignition (PCCI) combustion. The engine was equipped with a high pressure (150 MPa) Caterpillar 300B HEUI fuel injection system. The engine was run with EGR levels up to 75% and with equivalence ratios up to 0.95. These experiments resulted in compliance of NOx and PM emissions to 2010 emissions mandates levels up to the tested load. The set of experiments also demonstrated the importance of cylinder charge preparation by way of optimized start-of-combustion timing for sufficient in-cylinder mixing. It was found that increased EGR rates, even with the correspondingly increased equivalence ratios, increase mixing time and substantially decrease PM emissions.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2006-01-0026
Pages
14
Citation
Hardy, W., and Reitz, R., "A Study of the Effects of High EGR, High Equivalence Ratio, and Mixing Time on Emissions Levels in a Heavy-Duty Diesel Engine for PCCI Combustion," SAE Technical Paper 2006-01-0026, 2006, https://doi.org/10.4271/2006-01-0026.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 3, 2006
Product Code
2006-01-0026
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English