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A Study of Alcohol Blended Fuels in an Unthrottled Single Cylinder Spark Ignition Engine
Author(s) -
Alasdair Cairns,
Alan Todd,
Pavlos Aleiferis,
Neil Fraser,
John Malcolm
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
sae technical papers on cd-rom/sae technical paper series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.295
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1083-4958
pISSN - 0148-7191
DOI - 10.4271/2010-01-0618
Subject(s) - ignition system , spark (programming language) , cylinder , automotive engineering , spark ignition engine , alcohol fuel , materials science , alcohol , homogeneous charge compression ignition , nuclear engineering , mechanical engineering , computer science , engineering , combustion , aerospace engineering , chemistry , diesel fuel , combustion chamber , organic chemistry , programming language , biochemistry
This work involved study of the effects of alcohol blends on combustion, fuel economy and emissions in a single cylinder research engine equipped with a mechanical fully variable valvetrain on the inlet and variable valve timing on the exhaust. A number of splash blends of gasoline, iso-octane, ethanol and butanol were examined during port fuel injected early inlet valve closing operation, both with and without variable valve timing. Under low valve overlap conditions, it was apparent that the inlet valve durations/lifts required for full unthrottled operation were remarkably similar for the wide range of blends studied. However, with high valve overlap differences in burning velocities and internal EGR tolerances warranted changes in these valve settings. In turn, it was concluded that high ethanol content blends facilitated minimum throttling at the inlet valve itself and the largest relative savings in terms of fuel consumption, engine-out emissions of NOx and (corrected) unburned hydrocarbons. Copyright © 2010 SAE International

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