Abstract
The current numerical study aims to examine the single and combined effects of various piston bowl geometries, diesel main Start of Injection (SOI) timing, and syngas energy ratio on the combustion characteristics, specific emissions (g/kW·h), energy distribution, and exergy of a heavy-duty off-road Reactivity-Controlled Compression Ignition (RCCI) diesel engine. The examined geometries include the stock chamber (baseline combustion chamber), wide-shallow chamber, dual-swirl chamber, stepped-lip chamber. The main SOI timing was varied from −20 to −5 Crank Angle (CA) After Top Dead Center (ATDC) with 5 CA steps. Also, syngas energy ratio including 0% Conventional Diesel Combustion (CDC) mode, 20%, 40%, and 60% of total fuel energy per cycle. To accomplish this goal, the SAGE combustion model coupled with a reduced chemical kinetic mechanism consists of 360 reactions, and 72 species was applied to conduct this investigation. The numerical findings showed that the use of the wide-shallow chamber extended the engine operable range under diesel-syngas combustion operating conditions. In comparison to the baseline CDC case, the application of the dual-swirl chamber under CDC conditions, and main SOI timing of −15 CA ATDC led to reduction of Carbon Monoxide (
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