Comparative thermodynamic analysis of LNG, LPG, methanol, ethanol, biodiesel and hydrogen as alternative fuels in HCCI engines

Aiming to mitigate the problem of harmful emissions arising from the use of conventional fossil fuels, the performances of alternative fuels, namely LNG, LPG, biodiesel, ethanol, methanol, and hydrogen in an HCCI engine have been analyzed. Thus, a thermodynamic model that considers the gas composition of combustion products and the specific heat temperature dependency of the working fluid has been developed. It allows examining the influence of key engine parameters such as the compressor pressure ratio, ambient temperature, equivalence ratio, engine speed, and the compressor isentropic efficiency on the performance of the HCCI engine. The reliability of the model has been successfully verified against various theoretical and experimental data from the literature. Results showed that LNG performs the best in terms of brake efficiency, exergy efficiency, and placed second in terms of brake specific fuel consumption. With the exception of the latter, although it is associated with a higher energy value, hydrogen produces lower performance compared to the other fuels assessed. For all fuels, the largest exergy destruction rates occur in the HCCI engine. It ranges between 78.4 and 87.8 % of the total exergy destruction rate according to the fuel used. The order of exergy destruction rates within the other components differs from one fuel to the other.

___

  • Khaliq, S.K. Trivedi, I. Dincer, “Investigation of a Wet Ethanol Operated HCCI Engine Based on First and Second Law Analyses,”Appl. Therm. Eng., 31, pp. 621-1629, 2011.
  • S.K. Trivedi, A. Haleem, “Thermodynamic Analysis and Utilization of Wet Ethanol in Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition Engine,”Int. J. Sust. Energy, 35, pp. 33-46, 2013.
  • G.R. Fatehi, S. Khalilarya, R. Ebrahimi, “Energy and Exergy Analyses of Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI) Engine,”Thermal Sci., 17, pp. 107–17, 2013.
  • S. Jafarmadar, N. Javani, “Exergy Analysis of Natural Gas/DME Combustion in Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition Engines (HCCI) Using Zero-Dimensional Model with Detailed Chemical Kinetics Mechanism,”Int. J. Exergy, 15, pp. 363–81, 2014.
  • M. Djermouni, A. Ouadha, “Thermodynamic Analysis of an HCCI Engine Based System Running on Natural Gas,”Energy Convers. Manag., 88, pp. 723-731,2014.
  • A. Khaliq, “Energy and Exergy Analyses of a Hydrogen Fuelled HCCI Combustion Engine Combined with Organic Rankine Cycle,”Int. J. Exergy, 17, pp. 240–265, 2015.
  • S. Mamalis, D.N.Assanis, “Second-law Analysis of Boosted HCCI Engines: Modeling Study,”J. Energy Eng., 141:C4014014.
  • Y. Li, M. Jia, Y. Chang, L.K. Kokjohn, R.D. Reitz, “Thermodynamic Energy and Exergy Analysis of Three Different Engine Combustion Regimes,”Appl. Energy, 180, pp. 849-858,2016.
  • M. Djermouni, A. Ouadha, “Comparative Assessment of LNG and LPG in HCCI Engines,”Energy Procedia, 139, pp. 254-259,2017.
  • A. Khaliq, S. Islam, I. Dincer, “Energy and Exergy Analyses of a HCCI Engine-based System Running on Hydrogen Enriched Wet-Ethanol Fuel,”Int. J. Exergy, 28, pp. 72 – 95, 2019.
  • M.M. Namar, O. Jahanian, “Energy and Exergy Analysis of a Hydrogen-Fueled HCCI Engine,”J. Therm. Anal. Calorim., 137, pp. 2005-2015, 2019.
  • S. Aceves, D. Flowers, “Engine Shows Diesel Efficiency without the Emissions,”Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory:Livermore, CA, USA, 2004.
  • H. Hiereth, P. Prenninger, Charging the Internal Combustion Engine, Vienna, Austria: Springer-Verlag, 2003.
  • J.B. Heywood, Internal Combustion Engine Fundamentals, New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1988.
  • H.S. Soyhan, H. Yasar, H. Walmsley, B. Head, Kalghatgi, G.T., and Sorusbay, C., Evaluation of Heat “Transfer Correlations for HCCI Engine Modeling,”Appl. Thermal Eng., 29, pp. 541-549, 2009.
  • R. Stone, Introduction to Internal Combustion Engines, 3rdEd., MacMillan Press Ltd, 1999.
  • A.Bejan, Advanced Engineering Thermodynamics, 2nd Ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997.
  • T.J.Kotas, The Exergy Method of Thermal Plant Analysis, Great Britain: Anchor Brendon Ltd., 1995.
  • 51/60DF Project guide-Marine Four-Stroke dual-fuel engines compliant with IMO Tier II, Augsburg: MAN Diesel & Turbo SE, 2013.
  • J.M.G. Antunes, R. Mikalsen, A.P. Roskilly, “An Investigation of Hydrogen-Fuelled HCCI Engine Performance and Operation,”Int. J. Hydrogen Energy, 33, pp. 5823-5828, 2008.
  • M.M. Hassan, M.M. Rahman, K. Kadirgama, D. Rasamy, “ Numerical Study of engine parameters on combustion and performance characteristics in an n-heptane fueled HCCI engine,”Appl. Therm. Eng., 128, pp. 1464-1475, 2018.
  • J.A. Caton, An Introduction to Thermodynamic Cycle Simulations for Internal Combustion Engines, Chechister: John & Wiley & Sons, Ltd., 2016.
  • D.C. Kyritsis, C.D. Rakopoulos, “Parametric Study of the Availability Balance in an Internal Combustion Engine Cylinder,” SAE paper, 2001-01-1263, 2001, 2001.
  • R.J. Primus, P.F. Flynn, “Diagnosing the Real Performance Impact of Diesel Engine Design Parameter Variation (A Primer in the Use of Second Law Analysis),” Cummins Engine Co., Inc., 1984.