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Autoignition of Isooctane beyond RON and MON Conditions
Author(s) -
Jean-Baptiste Masurier,
Muhammad Waqas,
S. Mani Sarathy,
Bengt Johansson
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
sae international journal of fuels and lubricants
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.659
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1946-3960
pISSN - 1946-3952
DOI - 10.4271/2018-01-1254
Subject(s) - autoignition temperature , environmental science , automotive engineering , chemistry , combustion , engineering , organic chemistry
The present study experimentally examines the low temperature autoignition area of isooctane within the in-cylinder pressure – incylinder temperature map. Experiments were run with the help of a CFR engine. The boundaries of this engine were extended so that experiments could be performed outside the domain delimited by RON and MON traces. Since HCCI combustion is governed by kinetics, the rotation speed for all the experiments was set at 600 rpm to allow time for low temperature heat release (LTHR). All the other parameters (intake pressure, intake temperature, compression ratio and equivalence ratio), were scanned, such as the occurrence of isooctane combustion. The principal results showed that LTHR for isooctane occurs effortlessly under high intake pressure (1.3 bar) and low intake temperature (25 °C). Increasing the intake temperature leads to the loss of the LTHR, and therefore to a smaller domain on the pressuretemperature trace. In such a case, the LTHR domain is restricted from 20 to 50 bar in pressure and from 600 to 850 K in temperature. By slightly decreasing the intake pressure, the LTHR domain remains unchanged, but the LTHR tends to disappear, and finally, at 1.0 bar, the LTHR domain ceases to exist. When the equivalence ratio is moved from 0.3 to 0.4, the LTHR domain is delimited in the same range of pressure and temperature, but the start of combustion occurs slightly earlier for the same pressure-temperature trace. Similar conclusions were drawn regarding the variation of both intake pressure and temperature, except that few LTHR points were observed under 1.0 bar intake.

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