New CNG Concepts for Passenger Cars: High Torque Engines with Superior Fuel Consumption

2003-01-2264

06/23/2003

Event
Future Transportation Technology Conference & Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Since the CO2 emissions of passenger car traffic and their greenhouse potential are in the public interest, natural gas (CNG) is discussed as an attractive alternative fuel. The engine concepts that have been applied to date are mainly based upon common gasoline engine technology. In addition, in mono-fuel applications, it is made use of an increased compression ratio -thanks to the RON (Research Octane Number) potential of CNG-, which allows for thermodynamic benefits.
This paper presents advanced engine concepts that make further use of the potentials linked to CNG. Above all, the improved knock tolerance, which can be particularly utilized in turbocharged engine concepts. For bi-fuel (CNG/gasoline) power trains, the realization of variable compression ratio is of special interest. Moreover, lean burn technology is a perfect match for CNG engines. Fuel economy and emission level are evaluated basing on test bench and vehicle investigations.
The result is an engine concept that offer not only low exhaust emissions, but has the high torque characteristics commonly known by HSDI diesel engines and a fuel consumption benefit that gives an Greenhouse advantage of 25…30% compared to diesel and even more compared to gasoline. That kind of “Downsizing” creates a customers' value based on high torque and low fuel costs that may make this kind of fuel more popular.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2003-01-2264
Pages
11
Citation
Pischinger, S., Umierski, M., and Hüchtebrock, B., "New CNG Concepts for Passenger Cars: High Torque Engines with Superior Fuel Consumption," SAE Technical Paper 2003-01-2264, 2003, https://doi.org/10.4271/2003-01-2264.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jun 23, 2003
Product Code
2003-01-2264
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English