A new advanced combustion mode is introduced, called Thermally Stratified Compression Ignition (TSCI), which uses direct water injection to control both the average temperature and the temperature distribution prior to ignition, thereby providing cycle-to-cycle control over the start and rate of heat release in Low Temperature Combustion (LTC). Experiments were conducted to fundamentally understand the effects of water injection on heat release in LTC. The results show that water injection retards the start of combustion due to the latent heat of vaporization of the injected water. Furthermore, for start of water injection timings between 20 and 70 degrees before top dead center, combustion is significantly elongated compared to without water injection. The 10% to 90% burn duration with 6.6 and 9.0 mg of water per cycle was 77% and 146% longer than without water injection, respectively. Direct water injection reduces the heat release rate by local evaporative cooling that results in a forced thermal stratification. Finally, the load limits with and without water injection were determined experimentally. Without water injection, the load range was 2.3 to 3.6 bar gross IMEP. By using water injection to control heat release, the load range in TSCI was 2.3 to 8.4 bar gross IMEP, which is a range expansion of over 350%. These results demonstrate that direct water injection can provide significant improvements to both controllability and the range of operability of LTC, thereby resolving the major challenges associated with HCCI.
The accumulation and burn-off of combustion chamber deposits create uncontrolled shifting of the homogeneous charge compression ignition operability range. This combustion chamber deposit–created operational variability places increased control burden on a multi-mode engine. However, the operational variability can be mitigated by manipulating combustion chamber deposit accumulation. A magnesium zirconate thermal barrier coating was applied to the piston of a homogeneous charge compression ignition engine in an effort to reduce combustion chamber deposit accumulation through elevated piston surface temperatures. While reduced combustion chamber deposit thicknesses were observed on the magnesium zirconate piston periphery, combustion chamber deposit accumulation in the bowl region increased relative to aluminum piston operation. Additionally, combustion chamber deposit thicknesses on the aluminum cylinder head were reduced during operation with the magnesium zirconate coated piston. Chamber-wide alterations to combustion chamber deposit accumulation taken together with the increased burn duration and hydrocarbon emissions measured during operation with the magnesium zirconate piston indicate significant interaction between the directly injected fuel spray and thermal barrier coating porosity. The porosity and surface roughness of the magnesium zirconate thermal barrier coating are speculated to create fuel pooling/absorption within the piston bowl, increasing combustion chamber deposit accumulation in the bowl and leaning the remaining fuel–air charge. The charge leaning lengthens the magnesium zirconate burn duration and reduces cylinder head combustion chamber deposit accumulation. Furthermore, hydrocarbon emissions were increased during magnesium zirconate operation due to late desorption and subsequent incomplete burning of fuel from piston bowl and the presence of incombustibly lean areas in the remaining cylinder charge.
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