An Experimental Investigation on Aldehyde and Methane Emissions from Hydrous Ethanol and Gasoline Fueled SI Engine

2020-01-2047

09/15/2020

Features
Event
SAE Powertrains, Fuels & Lubricants Meeting
Authors Abstract
Content
Use of ethanol as gasoline replacement can contribute to the reduction of nitrogen oxide (NOx) and carbon oxide (CO) emissions. Depending on ethanol production, significant reduction of greenhouse-gas emissions is possible. Concentration of certain species, such as unburned ethanol and acetaldehyde in the engine-out emissions are known to rise when ratio of ethanol to gasoline increases in the fuel. This research explores on hydrous ethanol fueled port-fuel injection (PFI) spark ignition (SI) engine emissions that contribute to photochemical formation of ozone, or so-called ozone precursors and the precursor of peroxyacetyl nitrates (PANs). The results are compared to engine operation on gasoline. Concentration obtained by FTIR gas analyzer, and mass-specific emissions of formaldehyde (HCHO), acetaldehyde (MeCHO) and methane (CH4) under two engine speed, four load and two spark advance settings are analyzed and presented. Combustion phasing results based on in-cylinder pressure analysis are also included. Concentration and specific emissions of acetaldehyde and methane were found to increase in case of hydrous ethanol, comparing to gasoline use. Difference in formaldehyde emissions was statistically insignificant at slower engine speed.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2020-01-2047
Pages
12
Citation
Gailis, M., Pirs, V., Jansons, M., Birzietis, G. et al., "An Experimental Investigation on Aldehyde and Methane Emissions from Hydrous Ethanol and Gasoline Fueled SI Engine," SAE Technical Paper 2020-01-2047, 2020, https://doi.org/10.4271/2020-01-2047.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Sep 15, 2020
Product Code
2020-01-2047
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English