Load Limits with Fuel Effects of a Premixed Diesel Combustion Mode

2009-01-1972

06/15/2009

Event
Powertrains, Fuels and Lubricants Meeting
Authors Abstract
Content
Premixed diesel combustion is intended to supplant conventional combustion in the light to mid load range. This paper demonstrates the operating load limits, limiting criteria, and load-based emissions behavior of a direct-injection, diesel-fueled, premixed combustion mode across a range of test fuels. Testing was conducted on a modern single-cylinder engine fueled with a range of ultra-low sulfur fuels with cetane number ranging from 42 to 53. Operating limits were defined on the basis of emissions, noise, and combustion stability. The emissions behavior and operating limits of the tested premixed combustion mode are independent of fuel cetane number. Combustion stability, along with CO and HC emissions levels, dictate the light load limit. The high load limit is solely dictated by equivalence ratio: high PM, CO, and HC emissions result as overall equivalence ratio approaches stoichiometric.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2009-01-1972
Pages
9
Citation
Ickes, A., Assanis, D., and Bohac, S., "Load Limits with Fuel Effects of a Premixed Diesel Combustion Mode," SAE Technical Paper 2009-01-1972, 2009, https://doi.org/10.4271/2009-01-1972.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jun 15, 2009
Product Code
2009-01-1972
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English