Impact of High Compression Ratios on Ethanol Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition

2026-01-5038

6/10/2026

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Ethanol requires elevated intake temperatures to initiate autoignition in Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI) as a high-octane single-stage fuel. To leverage the high thermal efficiency, low engine-out NOx, and near-zero soot inherent to HCCI with ethanol, a custom piston design was developed to enable high compression ratios (CR) up to 22.5:1. This study investigates HCCI combustion with ethanol at three CRs of 17.5, 20.0, and 22.5 through equivalence ratio and boost sweeps performed to assess the reduction in the intake temperature requirement at high CRs and the emissions and efficiency trade-offs. Results indicate a clear benefit with reduced intake temperature requirements with increasing CR. However, a combustion efficiency penalty was observed at high CRs. Three-dimensional Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations were performed using Large Eddy Simulation (LES) coupled with a detailed chemistry model to investigate the underlying mechanisms of the combustion efficiency penalty. CFD results reveal that the combustion efficiency penalty at high CR is primarily due to increased crevice mass trapping unburned or partially oxidized species and a rapid expansion effect inhibiting complete carbon monoxide (CO) oxidation.
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Vedpathak, K., Kumar, M., Motwani, R., Datar, A., et al., "Impact of High Compression Ratios on Ethanol Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition," SAE Technical Paper Series, January 1, 2026, https://doi.org/10.4271/2026-01-5038.
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4 hours ago
Product Code
2026-01-5038
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English