Combustion Characteristics and Exhaust Gas Emissions of a Diesel Engine Supplied with Reformed EGR
Date Published: 2005-05-11
Paper Number:2005-01-2087
DOI: 10.4271/2005-01-2087
Citation:
Tsolakis, A., Megaritis, A., Yap, D., and Abu-Jrai, A., "Combustion Characteristics and Exhaust Gas Emissions of a Diesel Engine Supplied with Reformed EGR," SAE Technical Paper 2005-01-2087, 2005, doi:10.4271/2005-01-2087.
The Reformed EGR (REGR) technique involves the injection of hydrocarbon fuel (e.g., diesel) into a catalytic reformer fitted into the engine EGR system, so that the produced hydrogen containing gas mixture is fed back to the engine as REGR. Thus, in effect the engine operates in a similar way to a dual fuelled engine with standard EGR. Depending on the reforming conditions, the composition and the calorific value of the REGR may vary and this affects the engine performance and emissions. In the present study, simulated REGR with different H
2
/CO ratios has been examined. The combustion of REGR with maximum H
2
and minimum CO contents resulted in the highest reduction of NO
x
emissions. This case simulated the reformer operation where the CO is fully converted to H
2
by promoting the exothermic water gas shift reaction (WGSR). The highest reductions of both smoke and fuel consumption were achieved in the case of simulating the reformer operation where the CO is not fully converted to H
2
. In all the examined cases, the use of REGR resulted in reduced NO
x
and smoke emissions. Improved fuel economy was achieved only at middle and high load engine operation compared to the standard operation with diesel fuel only.
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