Faculty Publications
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Item Effects of compression and mixing ratio on NH3/H2 fueled Si engine performance, combustion stability, and emission(Elsevier Ltd, 2022) Dinesh, M.H.; Kumar, G.N.Carbon-free fuels for the worldwide decarbonization movement are ammonia and hydrogen. The experiment is conducted under WOT conditions with a constant ignition timing of 24°CA BTDC to evaluate performance, combustion stability, and emissions with varying CR (12 to 15), hydrogen energy fractions (5 to 21%), and engine speeds between 1500 and 1700 RPM. BP increased by 31.2% at 1700RPM and BTE increased by 39.0% at 1500RPM, despite a 9% decrease in volumetric efficiency at 1700RPM, from 5% hydrogen fraction at CR12 to 21% hydrogen fraction at CR15.The combustion process is sped up by the effect of hydrogen fraction and CR, causing the flame development and propagation period to shorten. NOx emission was increased significantly with hydrogen and CR, with an increase of 42.34% from 5% hydrogen at CR12 to 21% hydrogen at CR15 at 1700 RPM. Excessive NOx emissions are a drawback that can be successfully controlled by installing after treatment or exhaust gas recirculation technologies. Ammonia is another important key element used to reduce NOx emissions from vehicles because it is used in SCR. © 2022 The AuthorsItem Consequences of varying compression ratio and ignition timing on engine fueled with E-MEBANOL(SAGE Publications Ltd, 2023) Pandey, J.K.; Dinesh, M.H.; Gn, K.Alcohols are oxygenated renewable fuels responsible for low carbon emission and high H/C ratio. In the present study, a blend of methanol, ethanol, and n-butanol in equal proportion by volume (E-MEBANOL) is tested as a sustainable fuel for SI engines under variable compression ratio (CR) and ignition timing (SOI). The performance of the engine is found to improve by increasing CR as well as advancing the SOI, as the brake power (BP), brake thermal efficiency (BTE), and volumetric efficiency are found to increase by increasing CR to 15 from 11 at an advanced SOI of 24°CA before top dead center (BTDC) from 16°CA BTDC by 17.54%, 17.47%, and 10.53% respectively. Similarly, combustion is also enhanced with increasing CR and advancing SOI as the peak cylinder pressure (Pmax), and maximum net heat release rate (NHRmax) are found to increase by 60% and 27.64%, respectively, while positions of these peaks are advanced by 17°CA and 18°CA respectively by increasing CR from 11 to 15 and SOI advanced to 24°CA BTDC. The flame development period (CA10) increases with advancing SOI and decreases with increasing CR, while the flame development period (CA10-90) and total combustion duration decrease with both increasing CR and advancing SOI. The CO & HC emissions improve with increasing CR and advancing SOI, while NOx increases drastically, but EGT decreases continuously. © IMechE 2022.Item A comparative study of NOx mitigating techniques EGR and spark delay on combustion and NOx emission of ammonia/hydrogen and hydrogen fuelled SI engine(Elsevier Ltd, 2023) Pandey, J.K.; Dinesh, M.H.; Kumar, G.N.IC engines, the backbone of the transportation sector is facing energy insecurity and stringent environmental norms motivating researchers to look for alternate ways of revival. In pursuit hydrogen and its careers are seen as promising option. Aiming the same comparative-study is performed on NH3/H2 (7:3) and hydrogen under varying ignition (from −24°CA to −12°CA) and EGR rates (till 25%). Results indicate improved combustion for NH3/H2 for a small range of ignition than hydrogen, ∂P/∂θ and ∂Q/∂θ is improved before TDC and deteriorates after it. Cycle-by-cycle variations increase for a longer ignition range for NH3/H2, but NOx drops more rapidly. At −24°CA, NH3/H2 has observed a minimal gap in peak pressure, CoV and performance from hydrogen. Though a small EGR helps reduce NOx, cycle-by-cycle variations and CA90 reduce due to improved combustion for NH3/H2. ∂P/∂θ and ∂Q/∂θ improve for the same range too. However, hydrogen suffers adverse effects due to EGR that intensify with increasing EGR-rate. At higher EGR, unstable combustion and heterogeneity prevail, resulting in increased cycle-by-cycle variations and a rapid drop in peak pressure. The prolonged combustion witnesses a massive decline in NOx for both fuels; however, the gap between NH3/H2 and hydrogen entities reduces. NH3/H2 shows better efficiency than hydrogen for an efficient NOx control. However, higher fuel NOx maintains a significant difference for NH3/H2 than hydrogen. The study limits quantitative analysis of it and also NH3 emissions, which is another primary concern. © 2023 Elsevier LtdItem Experimental investigation of variable compression ratio and ignition timing effects on performance, combustion, and Nox emission of an ammonia/hydrogen-fuelled Si engine(Elsevier Ltd, 2023) Dinesh, M.H.; Kumar, G.N.In the present experimental study hydrogen-assisted ammonia combustion strategy is used in a SI engine with variable ignition timings (18ºCA bTDC to 32ºCA bTDC) and wide-open throttle conditions, CR changes (14–16) at 1400RPM and 1800RPM. This article aims to optimize ignition timing to boost efficiency and power without knocking. It has been established that ammonia/hydrogen fuels are a clean energy source capable of reducing pollution caused by undesirable emissions. The results revealed that increasing the CR from 14 to 16 increased brake power, brake thermal efficiency, NOX, cylinder pressure, and net heat release rate by 36.82%, 25.11%, 30.21%, 10.35%, and 9.53%, respectively. CA10-90 and EGT, on the other hand, are reduced. Increased speed reduces volumetric efficiency by 9.5% at 1800 RPM. In each CR, 28ºCA bTDC ignition timing and 21% hydrogen energy fraction performed well, which can be observed. Hence, the experiment results indicate hydrogen can be used as a combustion promoter, establishing a new standard for developing ammonia-fuelled engines. © 2023 Hydrogen Energy Publications LLC
