Pilot ignited premixed combustion of dimethyl ether in a turbodiesel engine

2008 
Abstract This paper describes combustion studies of dimethyl ether in a common rail turbodiesel engine wherein the dimethyl ether was fumigated into the intake air and the conventional diesel injection was used with the intention of igniting the premixed DME-air charge. This combustion process is referred to here as a “mixed mode” process and is similar in some respects to what is commonly referred to as “dual fuel” combustion. In contrast to “dual fuel” combustion, however, in which the gaseous fuel is often natural gas or biogas, in this process with DME the gaseous charge ignites largely independently of the diesel injection. The diesel injection was accomplished with a single, main injection. The engine was operated at a single speed and load. Gaseous and particulate emissions were monitored and heat release analysis was performed to examine how the fuels burn and the impact on emissions formation at various levels of substitution of diesel fuel with fumigated DME, at as high as 44% of the fuel energy from DME. Reductions in NO x emissions and increases in particulate matter emissions are observed with DME fumigation. The increase in PM emissions is attributed to enrichment of the diesel fuel spray, due to displacement of intake oxygen by the fumigated DME, despite the widely observed soot suppressing effect of DME.
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