The Effects of Hot and Cool EGR with Hydrogen Assisted Jet Ignition

2007-01-3627

08/05/2007

Event
Asia Pacific Automotive Engineering Conference
Authors Abstract
Content
Hydrogen assisted jet ignition (HAJI) is a pre-chamber ignition system for standard gasoline fueled engines that involves the use of a chemically active turbulent jet to initiate combustion in lean fuel mixtures. HAJI burns the lean main charge rapidly and with almost no combustion variability, which allows for low hydrocarbon emissions and almost zero NOx, due to lower peak temperatures.
This paper focuses on the effects of internal and cooled external exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) on combustion parameters, emissions and thermal efficiency in a single cylinder HAJI equipped CFR engine. Experimental results indicate that replacing air with EGR in λ=2 mixtures can shift the lean limit at which NOx is negligible to mixtures as rich as λ=1.3, without a large penalty in hydrocarbon emissions and thermal efficiency.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-3627
Pages
13
Citation
Toulson, E., Watson, H., and Attard, W., "The Effects of Hot and Cool EGR with Hydrogen Assisted Jet Ignition," SAE Technical Paper 2007-01-3627, 2007, https://doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-3627.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Aug 5, 2007
Product Code
2007-01-3627
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English