The Effects of Combined Internal and External Exhaust Gas Recirculation on Gasoline Controlled Auto-Ignition

2005-01-0133

04/11/2005

Event
SAE 2005 World Congress & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
A combination of internal and external exhaust gas recirculation has been used to increase the attainable load in a multi-cylinder engine operated in gasoline controlled auto-ignition. The amount of residual gas trapped in the cylinder was adjusted via the negative valve overlap method. The flow of externally re-circulated exhaust gas was varied using a typical production level valve. Under stoichiometric fuelling conditions, the highest output achieved using internal exhaust gas was limited by excessive pressure rise and unacceptable levels of knock. Introducing additional external exhaust gas was found to retard ignition, reduce the rate of heat release and limit the peak knocking pressure. In turn, an increase in engine load of 20-65% was achieved, with greatest benefit governed by combustion stability limits and realised at lower engine speeds. Combined with lean burn controlled auto-ignition at lower loads, the technique has enabled reduced fuel consumption without the requirement of a NOx trap.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2005-01-0133
Pages
18
Citation
Cairns, A., and Blaxill, H., "The Effects of Combined Internal and External Exhaust Gas Recirculation on Gasoline Controlled Auto-Ignition," SAE Technical Paper 2005-01-0133, 2005, https://doi.org/10.4271/2005-01-0133.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 11, 2005
Product Code
2005-01-0133
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English