Jared Zeman, Ziming Yan, Michael Bunce, Adam Dempsey

Assessment of design and location of an active prechamber igniter to enable mixing-controlled combustion of ethanol in heavy-duty engines

  • Mechanical Engineering
  • Ocean Engineering
  • Aerospace Engineering
  • Automotive Engineering

This numerical study focuses on assessing the key design parameters of interest for use of an active prechamber igniter as an ignition assistance device to enable mixing-controlled combustion (MCC) of ethanol (E100) in a heavy-duty Caterpillar C9.3B engine. Computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulations of a baseline diesel and prechamber retrofitted C9.3B at a gross indicated mean effective pressure (IMEPg) of 5 bar and 1800 rpm are carried out using CONVERGE. In particular, the sizing of the prechamber volume, sizing of total orifice cross sectional area (orifice diameter), and location of the prechamber relative to a centrally mounted common rail direct injector are varied to discern the appropriate operational and design characteristics to achieve robust ignition assistance at the selected conditions. Simulation results indicate that use of an active prechamber igniter with E100 as a standalone fuel source can replicate ignition delays and thermal efficiencies similar to diesel combustion at the same engine boundary conditions, thus not requiring any changes to the engine’s air handling system. Igniter mounting location, orifice sizing, and jet targeting were found to have the strongest influence on ignition assistance with preference toward larger orifice diameters that appropriately located heating contributions in near vicinity to the direct injector.

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