Dimethoxy Methane in Diesel Fuel: Part 3. The Effect of Pilot Injection, Fuels and Engine Operating Modes on Emissions of Toxic Air Pollutants and Gas/Solid Phase PAH

2001-01-3630

09/24/2001

Event
SAE International Fall Fuels & Lubricants Meeting & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
The objective of this study was to quantify the effect of pilot fuel injection on engine-out emissions of potentially toxic compounds from a modern diesel engine operated with different fuels including 15% v/v dimethoxy methane in a low-sulfur diesel fuel. Five diesel fuels were examined: a low-sulfur (∼1 ppm), low aromatic, hydrocracked fuel, the same low-sulfur fuel containing 15% v/v dimethoxy methane, a Fischer-Tropsch fuel, a California reformulated fuel, and a EPA number 2 certification fuel. A DaimlerChrysler OM611 CIDI engine was controlled with a SwRI Rapid Prototyping Electronic Control system. The pilot fuel injection was either turned off or turned on with engine control by either Location of Peak Pressure (LPP) of combustion or the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) calibration strategy. These three control strategies were compared over 2 speed-load modes run in triplicate. Thirty-three potentially toxic compounds were measured. In general, either pilot fuel injection strategy (LPP or OEM) produced higher emissions than with pilot injection turned off.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2001-01-3630
Pages
17
Citation
Ball, J., Lapin, C., Buckingham, J., Frame, E. et al., "Dimethoxy Methane in Diesel Fuel: Part 3. The Effect of Pilot Injection, Fuels and Engine Operating Modes on Emissions of Toxic Air Pollutants and Gas/Solid Phase PAH," SAE Technical Paper 2001-01-3630, 2001, https://doi.org/10.4271/2001-01-3630.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Sep 24, 2001
Product Code
2001-01-3630
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English