Performance and exhaust emissions in a natural-gas fueled dual-fuel engine

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Abstract

In order to establish the optimum fueling in a natural gas fueled dual fuel engine, experiments were done for some operational parameters on the engine performances and the exhaust emissions. The results show that the pilot fuel quantity should be increased and its injection timing should be advanced to suppress unburned hydrocarbon emission in the middle and low output range, while the quantity should be reduced and the timing retarded to avoid onset of knock at high loads. Unburned hydrocarbon emission and thermal efficiency are improved by avoiding too lean natural gas mixture by restricting intake charge air. However, the improvement is limited because the ignition of pilot fuel deteriorates with excessive throttling. It is concluded that an adequate combination of throttle control and equivalence ratio ensures low hydrocarbon emission and the thermal efficiency comparable to diesel operation.

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APA

Shioji, M., Ishiyama, T., Ikegami, M., Mitani, S., & Shibata, H. (2001). Performance and exhaust emissions in a natural-gas fueled dual-fuel engine. JSME International Journal, Series B: Fluids and Thermal Engineering, 44(4), 641–648. https://doi.org/10.1299/jsmeb.44.641

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