WO1998004817A1 - Internal combustion engine - Google Patents

Internal combustion engine Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1998004817A1
WO1998004817A1 PCT/GB1997/001187 GB9701187W WO9804817A1 WO 1998004817 A1 WO1998004817 A1 WO 1998004817A1 GB 9701187 W GB9701187 W GB 9701187W WO 9804817 A1 WO9804817 A1 WO 9804817A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
egr
fuel
engine
intake
air
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/GB1997/001187
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Thomas Tsoi-Hei Ma
Original Assignee
Ford Motor Company Limited
Ford Werke Ag
Ford France S.A.
Ford Motor Company
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GB9615768A external-priority patent/GB2313623A/en
Application filed by Ford Motor Company Limited, Ford Werke Ag, Ford France S.A., Ford Motor Company filed Critical Ford Motor Company Limited
Priority to DE69702200T priority Critical patent/DE69702200T2/en
Priority to EP97920814A priority patent/EP0914550B1/en
Priority to US09/230,609 priority patent/US6092512A/en
Publication of WO1998004817A1 publication Critical patent/WO1998004817A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B1/00Engines characterised by fuel-air mixture compression
    • F02B1/12Engines characterised by fuel-air mixture compression with compression ignition
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B17/00Engines characterised by means for effecting stratification of charge in cylinders
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B47/00Methods of operating engines involving adding non-fuel substances or anti-knock agents to combustion air, fuel, or fuel-air mixtures of engines
    • F02B47/04Methods of operating engines involving adding non-fuel substances or anti-knock agents to combustion air, fuel, or fuel-air mixtures of engines the substances being other than water or steam only
    • F02B47/08Methods of operating engines involving adding non-fuel substances or anti-knock agents to combustion air, fuel, or fuel-air mixtures of engines the substances being other than water or steam only the substances including exhaust gas
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B51/00Other methods of operating engines involving pretreating of, or adding substances to, combustion air, fuel, or fuel-air mixture of the engines
    • F02B51/04Other methods of operating engines involving pretreating of, or adding substances to, combustion air, fuel, or fuel-air mixture of the engines involving electricity or magnetism
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02MSUPPLYING COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL WITH COMBUSTIBLE MIXTURES OR CONSTITUENTS THEREOF
    • F02M26/00Engine-pertinent apparatus for adding exhaust gases to combustion-air, main fuel or fuel-air mixture, e.g. by exhaust gas recirculation [EGR] systems
    • F02M26/13Arrangement or layout of EGR passages, e.g. in relation to specific engine parts or for incorporation of accessories
    • F02M26/17Arrangement or layout of EGR passages, e.g. in relation to specific engine parts or for incorporation of accessories in relation to the intake system
    • F02M26/20Feeding recirculated exhaust gases directly into the combustion chambers or into the intake runners
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02MSUPPLYING COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL WITH COMBUSTIBLE MIXTURES OR CONSTITUENTS THEREOF
    • F02M26/00Engine-pertinent apparatus for adding exhaust gases to combustion-air, main fuel or fuel-air mixture, e.g. by exhaust gas recirculation [EGR] systems
    • F02M26/13Arrangement or layout of EGR passages, e.g. in relation to specific engine parts or for incorporation of accessories
    • F02M26/35Arrangement or layout of EGR passages, e.g. in relation to specific engine parts or for incorporation of accessories with means for cleaning or treating the recirculated gases, e.g. catalysts, condensate traps, particle filters or heaters
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02MSUPPLYING COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL WITH COMBUSTIBLE MIXTURES OR CONSTITUENTS THEREOF
    • F02M26/00Engine-pertinent apparatus for adding exhaust gases to combustion-air, main fuel or fuel-air mixture, e.g. by exhaust gas recirculation [EGR] systems
    • F02M26/13Arrangement or layout of EGR passages, e.g. in relation to specific engine parts or for incorporation of accessories
    • F02M26/36Arrangement or layout of EGR passages, e.g. in relation to specific engine parts or for incorporation of accessories with means for adding fluids other than exhaust gas to the recirculation passage; with reformers
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B75/00Other engines
    • F02B75/02Engines characterised by their cycles, e.g. six-stroke
    • F02B2075/022Engines characterised by their cycles, e.g. six-stroke having less than six strokes per cycle
    • F02B2075/025Engines characterised by their cycles, e.g. six-stroke having less than six strokes per cycle two
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B3/00Engines characterised by air compression and subsequent fuel addition
    • F02B3/06Engines characterised by air compression and subsequent fuel addition with compression ignition
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02TCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO TRANSPORTATION
    • Y02T10/00Road transport of goods or passengers
    • Y02T10/10Internal combustion engine [ICE] based vehicles
    • Y02T10/12Improving ICE efficiencies

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to an internal combustion engine that runs under lean burn and controlled auto- lgmtion combustion conditions during low load operation.
  • Lean burn is known to give low fuel consumption and low NO x emissions.
  • Known methods to extend the lean limit include improving the igmtability of the mixture by enhancing the fuel preparation, for example using finely atomised fuel or vaporised fuel, and increasing the flame speed by introducing charge motion and turbulence in the air/fuel mixture.
  • combustion by auto-ignition has been proposed for operating an engine with very lean air/fuel mixtures .
  • Controlled Auto-ignition Combustion has been given different names according to authors from various research activities world-wide including Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (Southwest Research Institute) , Premixed Charge Compression Ignition (Toyota and VW) , Active Radical Combustion (Honda) , Fluid Dynamically Controlled Combustion (French Petroleum Institute) , Active Thermo Combustion (Nippon Engines) .
  • Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition Southwest Research Institute
  • Premixed Charge Compression Ignition Toyota and VW
  • Active Radical Combustion Honda
  • Fluid Dynamically Controlled Combustion Frnch Petroleum Institute
  • Active Thermo Combustion Nippon Engines
  • NO x emission produced in controlled auto-ignition combustion is extremely low in comparison with spark ignition combustion based on a propagating flame front and heterogeneous charge compression ignition combustion based on an attached diffusion flame.
  • the burnt gas temperature is highly heterogeneous within the charge with very high local values creating high NO x emission.
  • the burnt gas temperature is substantially homogeneous with much lower local values resulting in very low NO x emission.
  • the present invention seeks to provide a lean burn engine capable of operating with very lean mixtures and to remain n the controlled auto-ignition combustion mode over a wide range of engine speeds and loads. This could improve fuel economy and meet NO x emission standard without relying on using a lean NO x catalyst or a lean NO x trap in the exnaust system of the engine.
  • an internal combustion engine having an external exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) pipe for recirculating exhaust gases to the engine intake system and including means for metering fuel into the air drawn into the engine by way of the intake system, means for supplying additional fuel directly into the EGR pipe to be vaporised within the EGR pipe, and means for ensuring the presence of air in the EGR pipe to mix with the fuel vapour in the EGR pipe, characterised in that the section of the EGR pipe lying between the point at which the fuel vapour is mixed with the air and the point at which the resulting mixture enters the intake system is of a length and temperature to enable a proportion of the fuel vapour to be oxidised thermally by the a r in the said mixture to produce a substantial quantity of partial oxidation products in the EGR pipe, the concentration of partial oxidation products, when introduced into the overall combustible charge in the engine combustion chamber, being sufficient to reduce by at least 10% the duration of combustion when the spark timing is optimised for best engine thermal efficiency at a
  • EGR exhaust gas re
  • the means for metering fuel into the air drawn into the engine by way of the intake system and the means for supplying fuel directly into the EGR pipe are jointly operative to supply a leaner than stoichiomet ⁇ c quantity of fuel m the combustible charge so as to ensure the presence of surplus air m the EGR gases. If desired, however, air may additionally be injected into the EGR pipe.
  • GB-A-2 , 277 , 776 describes an engine where a fuel injector is used to spray fuel onto an EGR valve.
  • the EGR valve is positioned in a cool position at the end of the EGR pipe near the intake port and the temperature is sufficiently low for the fuel injector to be mounted directly on the housing of the EGR valve.
  • Vaporised fuel alone produced in the above prior art systems is in itself effective in improving ignition, but there is no provision for the production of partially oxidised fuel which is even more effective, to the extent that a sufficient concentration of such partial oxidation pro ⁇ ucts could lead to auto-ignition independent of spark ignition.
  • the production of partial oxidation products and the attainment under certain operating conditions of auto- lgnit on are the key features of the present invention which are not anticipated in the above prior art systems.
  • GB 0,770,814, GB-A-2 , 161 , 212 and US-A-3, 918 , 412 describe fuel cracking devices in the EGR pipe to reform the hydrocarbon fuel in the presence of carbon dioxide and steam into hydrogen and carbon monoxide.
  • the production of partial oxidation products is a low temperature kinetics process (below 900°K) characterised by cool flame reaction in which the fuel molecules combine slowly with oxygen molecules forming partial oxidation products CHO, CH 2 0, CO, H0 2 , H 2 0 2 etc. which are precursors to ignition.
  • This is to be distinguished from the high temperature kinetics process (above 1000°K) characterised by combustion in which the fuel reacts rapidly with the oxygen accompanied by a spontaneous release of energy, i.e. the calorific heat of the fuel.
  • the aim of the present invention is to make better use of the low temperature kinetics in order to assist ignition.
  • the increased presence of partial oxidation products in the comDustible charge is beneficial for assisting ignition and flame propagation in a spark ignition lean burn engine and reducing the duration of combustion when the spark timing is set to optimise the efficiency of the engine at a given speed, load, air/fuel ratio and EGR dilution.
  • the present invention takes advantage of the fact that the EGR gases in a lean burn engine also contain surplus oxygen and because of their elevated temperature, fuel dispersed within the EGR gases will start to produce partial oxidation products of the type produced by dispersing the fuel in hot intake air. Furthermore, by taking advantage of the transport time associated with the location of the supply of additional fuel in the EGR pipe, the time available for thermal oxidation of the fuel may be extended to several engine cycles.
  • the additional fuel supply into the EGR gases may be a carburettor mounted remotely from the hot EGR pipe and connected to a venturi in the EGR pipe for supplying a calibrated fuel flow into the venturi in proportion with the EGR gas flow.
  • the additional fuel supply may - 1 -
  • the EGR/fuel mixture containing partial oxidation products may be mixed with the intake air in the intake port to form a substantially homogeneous mixture.
  • the present invention to maintain the separation and stratification between the EGR/fuel mixture containing partial oxidation products and the intake air/fuel mixture both outside and inside the combustion chamber during the intake period. Only during the compression period after both mixtures have been compressed to sufficiently high temperatures in the cylinder should they be allowed to mix. Auto-ignition may take place either locally within the hot EGR/fuel mixture containing partial oxidation products while it is still stratified from the air/fuel mixture, or globally in the homogeneous charge after the EGR and air are mixed towards the end of the compression period. The latter condition ensures that the timing of the auto- lgnition is determined substantially by the time when the EGR/fuel mixture containing partial oxidation products and the air/fuel mixture are mixed towards the end of each compression period.
  • the timing of the auto-ignition is known within a narrow range and can be further controlled within the range by varying the concentration of partial oxidation products when mixed with the combustible charge in the engine cylinder.
  • WO 95/22687 and British Pat. Appln. No. 9510491.5 describe methods of achieving gas stratification between the EGR gases and air within the combustion chamber.
  • the objective was to maintain gas stratification throughout the intake and compression periods and to ignite a stratified charge where air and fuel form an ignitable mixture in the vicinity of the spark plug and EGR gases are disposed in regions remote from the spark plug.
  • the fuel must be dispersed within the air and not in the EGR gases m order to avoid misfire and incomplete combustion.
  • the design of the EGR supply into the intake port is such that, during the period when the intake valve is closed the EGR gases are drawn into the closed end of the intake port in the vicinity of the intake valve and are stored as a column within the intake port and its associated intake duct forming a stratified column with the air in the intake duct along the length of the intake duct, and during the period when the intake valve is open the stratified column is drawn in series into the cylinder to form a stratified charge within the combustion chamber.
  • the design of the EGR supply into the intake port is such that during at least part of each intake period the EGR gases and the intake air are drawn in parallel into the cylinder along separate channels in the intake port to form a stratified charge within the combustion chamber.
  • the relative volumes of the gases flowing along the separate channels are kept constant while the engine load is varied in order to minimise mixing within the combustion chamber for a wide range of engine loads .
  • the EGR/fuel mixture containing partial oxidation products and the intake air/fuel mixture are compressed and mixed to form a homogeneous charge within the combustion chamber towards the end of the compression period.
  • the partial oxidation pro ⁇ ucts contained within the EGR/fuel mixture is distributed uniformly throughout the combustible charge.
  • the intake port may be designed to produce tumble motion within the combustion chamber and the design of the combustion chamber may be such that the EGR gases and intake air, being stratified within the cylinder at the beginning of each compression period, are compressed and rapidly mixed when the tumble motion disintegrates towards the end of each compression period.
  • the piston may be designed to produce squish motion within the combustion chamber and the design of the combustion chamDer may be such that the EGR gases and intake air, D ⁇ ing stratified within the cylinder at the beginning of each compression period, are compressed and rapidly mixed when the squish motion intensifies towards the end of each compression period.
  • Figure 1 is a schematic representation of an engine in accordance with a first embodiment of the invention.
  • Figure 2 is a similar representation of an alternative emoodiment of the invention.
  • FIG. 1 there is shown a lean burn internal combustion engine having a piston 12 reciprocating within a cylinder to define a variable volume combustion chamber 10.
  • the intake charge is ignited, at least under high load conditions, by a spark plug 18. Though as described below under certain conditions the engine is designed for auto-ignition to occur, this spark plug 18 is preferably fired under all conditions .
  • Ambient air is supplied to the combustion chamber by way of an intake manifold 22 having one branch that terminates in an intake port 24 controlled by an intake valve 14.
  • the intake manifold 22 is connected to receive ambient air by way of a butterfly throttle 20 that sets the engine load.
  • the intake port 24 is divided by a partition wall 26 into two channels, the air entering by way of the upper channel into which fuel is dispersed by a fuel injector 28.
  • the lower channel is connected to a second manifold 34 which is itself connected by way of an external EGR pipe 30 to the exhaust system of the engine.
  • the EGR pipe 30 is shown as being connected to the exhaust port 26 controlled by the exhaust valve 16 of the same cylinder in order that the EGR gases should be as hot as possible, but it can be connected further downstream in the exhaust system.
  • a valve 32 is provided in the EGR pipe 30 to control the rate of EGR flow and to shut off the EGR flow at high engine loads.
  • fuel is introduced into the EGR pipe 30 to be partially oxidised within the hot EGR gases containing surplus air.
  • the introduction of fuel is achieved by aspiration in a manner similar to a conventional carburettor.
  • a venturi 38 is arranged along the length of the EGR pipe 30 and is connected by a fuel delivery pipe 48 to a chamber 47.
  • a fuel dispersing tube 42 feeds into the chamber 47 and is connected by a regulator 46 to a fuel reservoir 40 that is maintained at the static pressure in the EGR pipe by a gas line 44.
  • the reduced dynamic pressure created within the venturi 38 by the flow of EGR gases draws fuel from the reservoir 40 at a rate that may be adjusted by the regulator 46, the latter being a fixed or variable orifice such as a needle valve.
  • the embodiment of Figure 2 differs from that of Figure 1 in two respects.
  • the carburettor arrangement is replaced by a fuel injector 50.
  • the injector 50 feeds fuel into the EGR pipe 30 by way of a fuel delivery pipe 52 that extends tangentially to the EGR pipe 30 to promote vaporisation.
  • the EGR valve 32 is positioned upstream of the fuel delivery pipe 52, the latter also being connected to an air supply line 58 that draws in ambient air through a regulator 56.
  • the air drawn in by way of the regulator 56 can serve for idle speed control and is preferably introduced tangentially to the fuel delivery pipe 52 to assist in fuel dispersion.
  • a plasma reactor consisting of a high voltage wire 60 mounted in a porous dielectric barrier 64 in a section 62 of the EGR pipe 30 serves to ionise the gases and increase the production of partial oxidation products in the EGR/fuel mixture.
  • the total quantity of fuel supplied to the engine both via the EGR gases and the fuel injector 28 is less than the quantity required for stoichiometry .
  • the engine is operated in a lean burn mode in which there is always surplus oxygen in the combustible charge and in the exhaust gases.
  • the fuel introduced into the EGR gases can react with the hot surplus oxygen but the thermal reaction is a low temperature kinetics process and does not cause spontaneous combustion of the fuel. Instead a cool flame reaction takes place that produces partial oxidation products that are reintroduced into the combustion chamber via the EGR pipe 30.
  • the section of the EGR pipe lying between the point at which the fuel vapour is mixed with the air and the point at which the said mixture enters the intake system is of a length and temperature that enable a proportion of the fuel vapour to be oxidised thermally by the air m the said mixture to produce a substantial quantity of partial oxidation products in the - " GR pipe.
  • the presence of partial oxidation products in the combustible charge increases the ignitability of the charge resulting in more robust spark ignition lean burn combustion. If enough partial oxidation products are present, the charge can auto-ignite by compression, without the assistance of a spark, when the appropriate temperature and pressure conditions occur in the combustion chamber.
  • the control of the concentration of partial oxidation products in the EGR/fuel mixture permits auto- lgnition to be achieved over a wide range of engine speeds and loads .
  • the control can be effected by varying several parameters.
  • Second, the production of the partial oxidation products can be increased by increasing the exhaust gas temperature and by lagging the EGR pipe to prevent heat loss.
  • the rate of reaction between the fuel and the surplus oxygen in the EGR gases can be increased by preheating the fuel supplied to the EGR pipe.
  • energy can be supplied to the EGR/fuel mixture, for example electrical discharge energy of a low temperature plasma corona reactor of Figure 2.
  • the described engine and intake system is also designed to retain the heat of the EGR gases containing partial oxidation products for as long as possible by resorting to charge stratification that maintains the hot EGR gases and the cold intake air separate until the end of the intake stroke.
  • the intake port 24 is used m the manner shown in Figure 1 as a storage port when the intake valve 14 is closed.
  • the shaded area represents the EGR gases containing partial oxidation products and the unshaded areas intake air.
  • the intake valve 14 When the intake valve 14 is opened at the commencement of the intake stroke, at first, the column of EGR gases is drawn in from the upper channel of the intake port 24 in parallel with the EGR gases of the lower channel and subsequently, as shown in Figure 2, EGR gases are drawn into the lower part of the combustion chamber 10 from the lower channel of the intake port 24 while the intake air and fuel are drawn into the upper part of the combustion chamber 10. Therefore up to the commencement of the compression stroke, the EGR gases containing partial oxidation products and intake air are kept separate to prolong the time for the production of partial oxidation products within the EGR gases.
  • the geometry of the combustion chamber 10 is designed to create mixing during the compression stroke so that at the instant of ignition or spontaneous combustion near the end of the compression stroke, the charge is substantially homogeneous .
  • the effect of charge stratification is not merely to prolong the production time of the partial oxidation products n the EGR gases, but more importantly it prevents premature spontaneous ignition by keeping the ignitable fuel away from an adequate supply of oxygen until near the end of the compression stroke when the mixing of the charge will allow auto-ignition to occur.
  • the timing of the auto- lgmt on is controlled by the time at which the gas streams are allowed to mix homogeneously rather than by the concentration of partial oxidation products averaged over the wnole charge. Therefore a surplus of partial oxidation products can be produced to ensure robust lean burn ignition or auto-ignition while avoiding the risk of premature ignition .

Abstract

A lean burn internal combustion engine is described having at least one cylinder. An intake port (24) supplies an intake charge to the combustion chamber (10) of the cylinder and the exhaust gases are discharged through an exhaust port (26). Fuel is supplied by a fuel injector (28) for dispersion within the air drawn into the combustion chamber (10) by way of the intake port (24), and exhaust gases from the exhaust port (26) are recirculated to the intake port (24) without passing through the combustion chamber (10) by way of an external EGR pipe (30). To promote lean burn and auto-ignition at low engine load, an additional fuel supply (40) is provided in the EGR pipe (30) for introducing fuel to be partially oxidised within the hot EGR gases before they enter the intake port (24).

Description

Internal combustion engine
Field of the invention
The present invention relates to an internal combustion engine that runs under lean burn and controlled auto- lgmtion combustion conditions during low load operation.
Background of the invention
Lean burn is known to give low fuel consumption and low NOx emissions. There is however a limit at which an engine can be operated with a lean air/fuel mixture because of misfire and combustion instability as a result of slow burn. Known methods to extend the lean limit include improving the igmtability of the mixture by enhancing the fuel preparation, for example using finely atomised fuel or vaporised fuel, and increasing the flame speed by introducing charge motion and turbulence in the air/fuel mixture. Finally, combustion by auto-ignition has been proposed for operating an engine with very lean air/fuel mixtures .
Controlled Auto-ignition Combustion has been given different names according to authors from various research activities world-wide including Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (Southwest Research Institute) , Premixed Charge Compression Ignition (Toyota and VW) , Active Radical Combustion (Honda) , Fluid Dynamically Controlled Combustion (French Petroleum Institute) , Active Thermo Combustion (Nippon Engines) . As the various names imply, when certain conditions are met within a homogeneous charge of lean air/fuel mixture during low load operation, auto-ignition can occur wherein bulk combustion takes place initiated simultaneously from many ignition sites within the charge, resulting in very stable power output, very clean combustion and high thermal efficiency. NOx emission produced in controlled auto-ignition combustion is extremely low in comparison with spark ignition combustion based on a propagating flame front and heterogeneous charge compression ignition combustion based on an attached diffusion flame. In the latter two cases represented by today's well known spark ignition engine and diesel engine respectively, the burnt gas temperature is highly heterogeneous within the charge with very high local values creating high NOx emission. By contrast, in controlled auto-ignition combustion where the combustion is uniformly distributed throughout the charge from many ignition sites, the burnt gas temperature is substantially homogeneous with much lower local values resulting in very low NOx emission.
Engines operating under controlled auto-ignition combustion have already been successfully demonstrated in two-stroke gasoline engines using a conventional compression ratio. It is believed that the high proportion of burnt gases remaining from the previous cycle, i.e. the residual content, within the two-stroke engine combustion chamber is responsible for providing the hot charge temperature and active fuel radicals necessary to promote auto-ignition in a very lean air/fuel mixture. In four-stroke engines, because the residual content is low, auto-ignition is more difficult to achieve, but can be induced by heating the intake air to a high temperature or by significantly increasing the compression ratio.
In all the above cases, the range of engine speeds and loads in which controlled auto-ignition combustion can be achieved is relatively narrow. The fuel used also has a significant effect on the operating range, for example, diesel fuel and methanol fuel have wider auto-ignition ranges than gasoline fuel. Object of the invention
The present invention seeks to provide a lean burn engine capable of operating with very lean mixtures and to remain n the controlled auto-ignition combustion mode over a wide range of engine speeds and loads. This could improve fuel economy and meet NOx emission standard without relying on using a lean NOx catalyst or a lean NOx trap in the exnaust system of the engine.
Summary of the invention
According to the present invention, there is provided an internal combustion engine having an external exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) pipe for recirculating exhaust gases to the engine intake system and including means for metering fuel into the air drawn into the engine by way of the intake system, means for supplying additional fuel directly into the EGR pipe to be vaporised within the EGR pipe, and means for ensuring the presence of air in the EGR pipe to mix with the fuel vapour in the EGR pipe, characterised in that the section of the EGR pipe lying between the point at which the fuel vapour is mixed with the air and the point at which the resulting mixture enters the intake system is of a length and temperature to enable a proportion of the fuel vapour to be oxidised thermally by the a r in the said mixture to produce a substantial quantity of partial oxidation products in the EGR pipe, the concentration of partial oxidation products, when introduced into the overall combustible charge in the engine combustion chamber, being sufficient to reduce by at least 10% the duration of combustion when the spark timing is optimised for best engine thermal efficiency at a given speed, load, air/fuel ratio and EGR dilution.
Preferably, the means for metering fuel into the air drawn into the engine by way of the intake system and the means for supplying fuel directly into the EGR pipe are jointly operative to supply a leaner than stoichiometπc quantity of fuel m the combustible charge so as to ensure the presence of surplus air m the EGR gases. If desired, however, air may additionally be injected into the EGR pipe.
At typical temperatures of the EGR gases during lean burn low load operation, the rate of thermal oxidation of the fuel with the surplus oxygen in the EGR gases is relatively slow. Sufficient time must therefore be provided for the reaction process to take place in order for the partial oxidation products to be built up to useful amounts.
US 3,894,520 describes an engine where fuel is introduced nto a very short EGR connection between the exhaust and intake ports by way of an internal passage linking the two ports across the cylinder head.
GB-A-2 , 277 , 776 describes an engine where a fuel injector is used to spray fuel onto an EGR valve. As in conventional practice, the EGR valve is positioned in a cool position at the end of the EGR pipe near the intake port and the temperature is sufficiently low for the fuel injector to be mounted directly on the housing of the EGR valve.
In both cases, despite the fact that air may also be present in the EGR pipe, insufficient residence time is provided for the fuel in the EGR pipe to be oxidised to any appreciable amount before it is mixed with cold air in the intake system.
Vaporised fuel alone produced in the above prior art systems is in itself effective in improving ignition, but there is no provision for the production of partially oxidised fuel which is even more effective, to the extent that a sufficient concentration of such partial oxidation proαucts could lead to auto-ignition independent of spark ignition. The production of partial oxidation products and the attainment under certain operating conditions of auto- lgnit on are the key features of the present invention which are not anticipated in the above prior art systems.
GB 0,770,814, GB-A-2 , 161 , 212 and US-A-3, 918 , 412 describe fuel cracking devices in the EGR pipe to reform the hydrocarbon fuel in the presence of carbon dioxide and steam into hydrogen and carbon monoxide. These references, which essentially exclude the presence of air from the EGR pipe because it would interfere with the fuel cracking process, provide no teaching relevant to the present invention for whicn the presence of air in the EGR pipe is essential if partial oxidation of the fuel is to take place in the EGR pipe.
It is advantageous in the present invention to provide a plasma reactor in the EGR pipe downstream of the additional fuel supply to ionise the gases and increase the rate of production of the partial oxidation products .
The production of partial oxidation products is a low temperature kinetics process (below 900°K) characterised by cool flame reaction in which the fuel molecules combine slowly with oxygen molecules forming partial oxidation products CHO, CH20, CO, H02, H202 etc. which are precursors to ignition. This is to be distinguished from the high temperature kinetics process (above 1000°K) characterised by combustion in which the fuel reacts rapidly with the oxygen accompanied by a spontaneous release of energy, i.e. the calorific heat of the fuel. The aim of the present invention is to make better use of the low temperature kinetics in order to assist ignition.
The increased presence of partial oxidation products in the comDustible charge is beneficial for assisting ignition and flame propagation in a spark ignition lean burn engine and reducing the duration of combustion when the spark timing is set to optimise the efficiency of the engine at a given speed, load, air/fuel ratio and EGR dilution.
If the concentration and the temperature of the partial oxidation products in the combustible charge are sufficiently high, auto-ignition may take place within the combustion cnarge.
Prior art systems aiming at achieving auto-ignition are described m technical papers published by the Society of Automotive Engineers: SAE 961160, SAE 960081, SAE 892068, SAE 830264. In these systems, fuel is dispersed within hot intake air in the air intake system to promote partial oxidation. Hot EGR gases or hot residual gases may be used to mix with the intake air to increase the temperature, but the time available for thermal oxidation of the fuel is inadequate except in a narrow range of engine operating conditions .
While these systems only disperse fuel in the intake air, the present invention takes advantage of the fact that the EGR gases in a lean burn engine also contain surplus oxygen and because of their elevated temperature, fuel dispersed within the EGR gases will start to produce partial oxidation products of the type produced by dispersing the fuel in hot intake air. Furthermore, by taking advantage of the transport time associated with the location of the supply of additional fuel in the EGR pipe, the time available for thermal oxidation of the fuel may be extended to several engine cycles.
The additional fuel supply into the EGR gases may be a carburettor mounted remotely from the hot EGR pipe and connected to a venturi in the EGR pipe for supplying a calibrated fuel flow into the venturi in proportion with the EGR gas flow. Alternatively the additional fuel supply may - 1 -
be a fuel injector mounted at the cool end of a fuel delivery pipe which is connected to the hot EGR pipe.
To reαuce the cooling caused by evaporation of the fuel injected into the EGR gases, it is further advantageous to regulate the temperature of the fuel supplied to the fuel injector to maintain a predetermined fuel temperature just below the boiling point of the fuel corresponding to the pressure of the fuel within the fuel injector.
The EGR/fuel mixture containing partial oxidation products may be mixed with the intake air in the intake port to form a substantially homogeneous mixture. On the other hand, it is advantageous to separate and stratify the EGR gases from the intake air both outside and inside the combustion chamber during each intake period in order to maintain a substantially stratified charge within the combustion chamber at the end of the intake period. Subsequent to this, it is then even more advantageous to promote mixing between the EGR gases and air within the combustion chamber during each compression period in order to form a substantially homogeneous charge towards the end of the compression period .
It s preferred m the present invention to maintain the separation and stratification between the EGR/fuel mixture containing partial oxidation products and the intake air/fuel mixture both outside and inside the combustion chamber during the intake period. Only during the compression period after both mixtures have been compressed to sufficiently high temperatures in the cylinder should they be allowed to mix. Auto-ignition may take place either locally within the hot EGR/fuel mixture containing partial oxidation products while it is still stratified from the air/fuel mixture, or globally in the homogeneous charge after the EGR and air are mixed towards the end of the compression period. The latter condition ensures that the timing of the auto- lgnition is determined substantially by the time when the EGR/fuel mixture containing partial oxidation products and the air/fuel mixture are mixed towards the end of each compression period. This is an important improvement over the prior art systems where the timing of the auto-ignition was unpredictable, being broadly influenced by the temperature, mixture strength and dilution content of the combustible charge. In the present invention, the timing of the auto-ignition is known within a narrow range and can be further controlled within the range by varying the concentration of partial oxidation products when mixed with the combustible charge in the engine cylinder.
WO 95/22687 and British Pat. Appln. No. 9510491.5 describe methods of achieving gas stratification between the EGR gases and air within the combustion chamber. In these applications, the objective was to maintain gas stratification throughout the intake and compression periods and to ignite a stratified charge where air and fuel form an ignitable mixture in the vicinity of the spark plug and EGR gases are disposed in regions remote from the spark plug. In these cases it is obvious that the fuel must be dispersed within the air and not in the EGR gases m order to avoid misfire and incomplete combustion.
In the present invention, gas stratification is conserved only during the intake period and the charge is deliberately mixed to form a homogeneous mixture towards the end of each compression period. In this context, a combination of WO
95/22687 and/or GB 9510491.5 with the present invention will be effective in achieving the necessary gas stratification during the intake period.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention aimed at achieving gas stratification within the combustion chamber in a manner similar to that described in WO 95/22687, the design of the EGR supply into the intake port is such that, during the period when the intake valve is closed the EGR gases are drawn into the closed end of the intake port in the vicinity of the intake valve and are stored as a column within the intake port and its associated intake duct forming a stratified column with the air in the intake duct along the length of the intake duct, and during the period when the intake valve is open the stratified column is drawn in series into the cylinder to form a stratified charge within the combustion chamber.
In another embodiment of the invention aimed at achieving gas stratification within the combustion chamber in a manner similar to that described GB 9510491.5, the design of the EGR supply into the intake port is such that during at least part of each intake period the EGR gases and the intake air are drawn in parallel into the cylinder along separate channels in the intake port to form a stratified charge within the combustion chamber. The relative volumes of the gases flowing along the separate channels are kept constant while the engine load is varied in order to minimise mixing within the combustion chamber for a wide range of engine loads .
In the last step, the EGR/fuel mixture containing partial oxidation products and the intake air/fuel mixture are compressed and mixed to form a homogeneous charge within the combustion chamber towards the end of the compression period. During this process, the partial oxidation proαucts contained within the EGR/fuel mixture is distributed uniformly throughout the combustible charge.
In order to promote mixing within the combustion chamber during the compression period, the intake port may be designed to produce tumble motion within the combustion chamber and the design of the combustion chamber may be such that the EGR gases and intake air, being stratified within the cylinder at the beginning of each compression period, are compressed and rapidly mixed when the tumble motion disintegrates towards the end of each compression period.
Alternatively, the piston may be designed to produce squish motion within the combustion chamber and the design of the combustion chamDer may be such that the EGR gases and intake air, Dβing stratified within the cylinder at the beginning of each compression period, are compressed and rapidly mixed when the squish motion intensifies towards the end of each compression period.
Brief description of the drawings
The invention will now be described further, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which :
Figure 1 is a schematic representation of an engine in accordance with a first embodiment of the invention, and
Figure 2 is a similar representation of an alternative emoodiment of the invention.
Detailed description of the preferred embodiments
In Figure 1 there is shown a lean burn internal combustion engine having a piston 12 reciprocating within a cylinder to define a variable volume combustion chamber 10. The intake charge is ignited, at least under high load conditions, by a spark plug 18. Though as described below under certain conditions the engine is designed for auto-ignition to occur, this spark plug 18 is preferably fired under all conditions .
Ambient air is supplied to the combustion chamber by way of an intake manifold 22 having one branch that terminates in an intake port 24 controlled by an intake valve 14. The intake manifold 22 is connected to receive ambient air by way of a butterfly throttle 20 that sets the engine load. The intake port 24 is divided by a partition wall 26 into two channels, the air entering by way of the upper channel into which fuel is dispersed by a fuel injector 28. The lower channel is connected to a second manifold 34 which is itself connected by way of an external EGR pipe 30 to the exhaust system of the engine. The EGR pipe 30 is shown as being connected to the exhaust port 26 controlled by the exhaust valve 16 of the same cylinder in order that the EGR gases should be as hot as possible, but it can be connected further downstream in the exhaust system. A valve 32 is provided in the EGR pipe 30 to control the rate of EGR flow and to shut off the EGR flow at high engine loads.
In the present invention, m order to assist ignition and reduce the duration of combustion, fuel is introduced into the EGR pipe 30 to be partially oxidised within the hot EGR gases containing surplus air. In the embodiment of Figure 1 the introduction of fuel is achieved by aspiration in a manner similar to a conventional carburettor. To this end a venturi 38 is arranged along the length of the EGR pipe 30 and is connected by a fuel delivery pipe 48 to a chamber 47. A fuel dispersing tube 42 feeds into the chamber 47 and is connected by a regulator 46 to a fuel reservoir 40 that is maintained at the static pressure in the EGR pipe by a gas line 44. The reduced dynamic pressure created within the venturi 38 by the flow of EGR gases draws fuel from the reservoir 40 at a rate that may be adjusted by the regulator 46, the latter being a fixed or variable orifice such as a needle valve.
The embodiment of Figure 2 differs from that of Figure 1 in two respects. First, the carburettor arrangement is replaced by a fuel injector 50. The injector 50 feeds fuel into the EGR pipe 30 by way of a fuel delivery pipe 52 that extends tangentially to the EGR pipe 30 to promote vaporisation. The EGR valve 32 is positioned upstream of the fuel delivery pipe 52, the latter also being connected to an air supply line 58 that draws in ambient air through a regulator 56. The air drawn in by way of the regulator 56 can serve for idle speed control and is preferably introduced tangentially to the fuel delivery pipe 52 to assist in fuel dispersion. Second, a plasma reactor consisting of a high voltage wire 60 mounted in a porous dielectric barrier 64 in a section 62 of the EGR pipe 30 serves to ionise the gases and increase the production of partial oxidation products in the EGR/fuel mixture.
During operation of the embodiment of Figure 1, the total quantity of fuel supplied to the engine both via the EGR gases and the fuel injector 28 is less than the quantity required for stoichiometry . Hence the engine is operated in a lean burn mode in which there is always surplus oxygen in the combustible charge and in the exhaust gases. The fuel introduced into the EGR gases can react with the hot surplus oxygen but the thermal reaction is a low temperature kinetics process and does not cause spontaneous combustion of the fuel. Instead a cool flame reaction takes place that produces partial oxidation products that are reintroduced into the combustion chamber via the EGR pipe 30.
To ensure that a sufficient quantity of partial oxidation products is produced, the section of the EGR pipe lying between the point at which the fuel vapour is mixed with the air and the point at which the said mixture enters the intake system, is of a length and temperature that enable a proportion of the fuel vapour to be oxidised thermally by the air m the said mixture to produce a substantial quantity of partial oxidation products in the -"GR pipe.
When the EGR gases mixed with intake air are compressed and thereby heated during the compression stroke of the engine, the presence of partial oxidation products in the combustible charge increases the ignitability of the charge resulting in more robust spark ignition lean burn combustion. If enough partial oxidation products are present, the charge can auto-ignite by compression, without the assistance of a spark, when the appropriate temperature and pressure conditions occur in the combustion chamber.
Auto-ignition can occur in a conventional spark ignition engine unintentionally but because it is uncontrolled, steps are taken to avoid it. This phenomenon can cause knock at high engine loads resulting in what is termed pinking.
Thougn auto-ignition is undesirable at high load, at low loads it produces better combustion than spark ignition. The reason for this is that instead of a flame being initiated at the spark plug and propagating across the width of the combustion chamber, auto-ignition results in a simultaneous combustion initiated at many ignition sites resulting a more rapid and complete combustion and also in a more even temperature distribution within the charge. By avoiding excessively high local gas temperatures in this manner, the NOx emission is reduced.
In Figs 1 and 2, the control of the concentration of partial oxidation products in the EGR/fuel mixture permits auto- lgnition to be achieved over a wide range of engine speeds and loads . The control can be effected by varying several parameters. First, the proportion of the fuel dispersed in the EGR gases can be increased. Second, the production of the partial oxidation products can be increased by increasing the exhaust gas temperature and by lagging the EGR pipe to prevent heat loss. Third, the rate of reaction between the fuel and the surplus oxygen in the EGR gases can be increased by preheating the fuel supplied to the EGR pipe. Fourth, energy can be supplied to the EGR/fuel mixture, for example electrical discharge energy of a low temperature plasma corona reactor of Figure 2.
The described engine and intake system is also designed to retain the heat of the EGR gases containing partial oxidation products for as long as possible by resorting to charge stratification that maintains the hot EGR gases and the cold intake air separate until the end of the intake stroke. To this end, the intake port 24 is used m the manner shown in Figure 1 as a storage port when the intake valve 14 is closed. In the drawings, the shaded area represents the EGR gases containing partial oxidation products and the unshaded areas intake air. While the intake valve 14 is closed, as shown in Figure 1, there will be vacuum in the manifold 22 created by the induction stroke of one of the other cylinders of the engine and this will cause EGR gases to enter the intake port 24 via the lower channel and to accumulate in the upper channel as shown after having been turned around by the geometry of the intake port 24. Throughout this time no mixing has taken place between the EGR gases containing partial oxidation products and the intake air. When the intake valve 14 is opened at the commencement of the intake stroke, at first, the column of EGR gases is drawn in from the upper channel of the intake port 24 in parallel with the EGR gases of the lower channel and subsequently, as shown in Figure 2, EGR gases are drawn into the lower part of the combustion chamber 10 from the lower channel of the intake port 24 while the intake air and fuel are drawn into the upper part of the combustion chamber 10. Therefore up to the commencement of the compression stroke, the EGR gases containing partial oxidation products and intake air are kept separate to prolong the time for the production of partial oxidation products within the EGR gases.
The geometry of the combustion chamber 10 is designed to create mixing during the compression stroke so that at the instant of ignition or spontaneous combustion near the end of the compression stroke, the charge is substantially homogeneous .
The effect of charge stratification is not merely to prolong the production time of the partial oxidation products n the EGR gases, but more importantly it prevents premature spontaneous ignition by keeping the ignitable fuel away from an adequate supply of oxygen until near the end of the compression stroke when the mixing of the charge will allow auto-ignition to occur. In this way the timing of the auto- lgmt on is controlled by the time at which the gas streams are allowed to mix homogeneously rather than by the concentration of partial oxidation products averaged over the wnole charge. Therefore a surplus of partial oxidation products can be produced to ensure robust lean burn ignition or auto-ignition while avoiding the risk of premature ignition .

Claims

Claims
1. An internal combustion engine having an external exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) pipe for recirculating exhaust gases to the engine intake system and including means for metering fuel into the air drawn into the engine by way of the intake system, means for supplying additional fuel directly into the EGR pipe to be vaporised within the EGR pipe, and means for ensuring the presence of air in the EGR pipe to mix w th the fuel vapour in the EGR pipe, characterised in that the section of the EGR pipe lying between the point at which the fuel vapour is mixed with the air and the point at which the resulting mixture enters the intake system is of a length and temperature to enable a proportion of the fuel vapour to be oxidised thermally by the air in the said mixture to produce a substantial quantity of partial oxidation products in the EGR pipe, the concentration of partial oxidation products, when introduced into the overall combustible charge in the engine combustion chamber, being sufficient to reduce by at least 10% the duration of combustion when the spark timing is optimised for best engine thermal efficiency at a given speed, load, air/fuel ratio and EGR dilution.
2. An internal combustion engine as claimed in claim 1, wherein the means for metering fuel into the air drawn into the engine by way of the intake system and the means for supplying fuel directly into the EGR pipe are jointly operative to supply a leaner than stoichiometric quantity of fuel in the combustible charge so as to ensure the presence of surplus air in the EGR gases.
3. An internal combustion engine as claimed m claim 1 or
2, wherein air is injected into the EGR pipe.
4. An internal combustion engine as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein a plasma reactor is provided in the EGR pipe downstream of the point at which the fuel vapour is mixed with the air to ionise the gases in the said mixture and increase the rate of production of partial oxidation products .
5. An internal combustion engine as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein means are provided that are operative during idle operating conditions immediately after a cold start, to retard the ignition timing of the engine later than top dead centre of the engine in order to increase the temperature of the EGR gases and the rate of production of partial oxidation products.
6. An internal combustion engine as claimed in claim 1, wherein the means of supplying additional fuel into the EGR pipe is a carburettor having a fuel reservoir mounted remotely from the hot EGR pipe and a fuel dispersing tube connected to a venturi m the EGR pipe for supplying a calibrated flow of additional fuel into the venturi in proportion with the velocity of the flow of EGR gases through the venturi.
7. An internal combustion engine as claimed in claim 1, wherein the means of supplying additional fuel into the EGR pipe is a fuel injector mounted at the cool end of a fuel delivery pipe remote from the hot EGR pipe and connect to the EGR pipe at the other end of the fuel delivery pipe.
8. An internal combustion engine as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the concentration of partial oxidation products in the EGR gases when mixed within the combustible charge in the engine cylinder is sufficient to cause auto-ignition of the charge by compression.
9. An internal combustion engine as claimed in claim 8, wherein the timing of the auto-ignition is varied by varying the concentration of partial oxidation products in the EGR gases when mixed within the combustible charge m the engine cylinder .
10. An internal combustion engine as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein means are provided to separate the EGR gases containing partial oxidation products from the intake air both outside and inside the combustion chamber during each intake period of the engine cylinder in order to maintain a substantially stratified charge within the combustion chamber at the end of the intake period.
11. An internal combustion engine as claimed in claim 10, wherein means are provided to promote mixing between the EGR gases and air within the combustion chamber during each compression period of the engine cylinder in order to form a substantially homogeneous charge towards the end of the compression period.
12. An internal combustion engine as claimed in claims 10 and 11, wherein the design of the EGR supply into the intake port is such that, during the period when the intake valve is closed the EGR gases are drawn into the closed end of the intake port in the vicinity of the intake port and are stored as a column within the intake port and its associated intake duct forming a stratified column with the air in the intake duct along the length of the intake duct, and during the period when the intake valve is open the stratified column is drawn in series into the cylinder to form a stratified charge within the combustion chamber.
13. An internal combustion engine as claimed in claims 10 to 12, wherein the design of the EGR supply into the intake port is such that during at least a portion of each intake period the EGR gases and the intake air are drawn in parallel into the cylinder along separate channels in the intake port to form a stratified charge within the combustion chamber, the relative volumes of the gases flowing along the separate channels being kept constant while the engine load is varied in order to minimise mixing within the combustion chamber for a wide range of engine loads .
14. An internal combustion engine as claimed in claims 10 to 13, wherein the intake port is designed to produce tumble motion within the combustion chamber and the design of the combustion chamber is such that the EGR gases and intake air, being stratified within the cylinder at the beginning of each compression period, are compressed and rapidly mixed when the tumble motion disintegrates towards the end of each compression period.
15. An internal combustion engine as claimed in claims 10 to 14, wherein the piston is designed to produce squish motion within the combustion chamber and the design of the combustion chamber is such that the EGR gases and intake air, being stratified within the cylinder at the beginning of the compression period, are compressed and rapidly mixed when the squish motion intensifies towards the end of each compression period.
PCT/GB1997/001187 1996-07-26 1997-05-01 Internal combustion engine WO1998004817A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE69702200T DE69702200T2 (en) 1996-07-26 1997-05-01 INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE
EP97920814A EP0914550B1 (en) 1996-07-26 1997-05-01 Internal combustion engine
US09/230,609 US6092512A (en) 1996-07-26 1997-05-01 Internal combustion engine

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9615768.0 1996-07-26
GB9615768A GB2313623A (en) 1996-06-01 1996-07-26 Fuel supply to EGR gases in a lean-burn auto-ignition i.c. engine

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1998004817A1 true WO1998004817A1 (en) 1998-02-05

Family

ID=10797574

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/GB1997/001187 WO1998004817A1 (en) 1996-07-26 1997-05-01 Internal combustion engine

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (1) US6092512A (en)
EP (1) EP0914550B1 (en)
DE (1) DE69702200T2 (en)
WO (1) WO1998004817A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (31)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE19847096A1 (en) * 1998-10-13 2000-04-20 Massholder Karl F Plasma-chemical reduction of gaseous and solid pollutants in exhaust gases comprises use of dielectrically-limited discharges in a combustion chamber of IC engine
US6662775B2 (en) 1999-03-23 2003-12-16 Thomas Engine Company, Llc Integral air compressor for boost air in barrel engine
US6698394B2 (en) 1999-03-23 2004-03-02 Thomas Engine Company Homogenous charge compression ignition and barrel engines
WO2001000310A2 (en) 1999-06-08 2001-01-04 Bechtel Bwxt Idaho, Llc Plasma reforming and partial oxidation of hydrocarbon fuel vapor to produce synthesis gas and/or hydrogen gas
US6474060B2 (en) * 1999-11-17 2002-11-05 Southwest Research Institute Exhaust gas recirculation filtration system
JP4148773B2 (en) * 2000-10-30 2008-09-10 チャールズ ラッセル トーマス Homogeneous charge compression ignition barrel engine
SE522464C2 (en) * 2001-05-21 2004-02-10 Scania Cv Ab Procedure for fuel injection in an internal combustion engine and internal combustion engine
US6810658B2 (en) * 2002-03-08 2004-11-02 Daimlerchrysler Ag Exhaust-gas purification installation and exhaust-gas purification method for purifying an exhaust gas from an internal combustion engine
US6895746B2 (en) * 2002-05-31 2005-05-24 Utc Fuel Cells, Llc Reducing oxides of nitrogen using hydrogen generated from engine fuel and exhaust
US6662760B1 (en) * 2002-10-17 2003-12-16 Southwest Research Institute Method and apparatus for controlling combustion timing in an homogenous-charge compression-ignition engine
ES2304471T3 (en) * 2002-11-08 2008-10-16 Emitec Gesellschaft Fur Emissionstechnologie Mbh EXHAUST GAS INSTALLATION AND PROCEDURE FOR OPERATION.
US7290522B2 (en) * 2003-06-12 2007-11-06 Masschusetts Institute Of Technology High compression ratio, high power density homogeneous charge compression ignition engines using hydrogen and carbon monoxide to enhance auto-ignition resistance
US6945238B2 (en) * 2003-10-03 2005-09-20 General Motors Corporation Air intake arrangement for an internal combustion engine
US8046299B2 (en) 2003-10-15 2011-10-25 American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. Systems, methods, and devices for selling transaction accounts
US8006484B2 (en) * 2005-02-14 2011-08-30 Eaton Corporation Systems and methods for reducing emissions of internal combustion engines using a fuel processor bypass
US7681394B2 (en) * 2005-03-25 2010-03-23 The United States Of America, As Represented By The Administrator Of The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Control methods for low emission internal combustion system
US7464688B2 (en) * 2005-12-21 2008-12-16 Yu Robert C Active radical initiator for internal combustion engines
CN101421495B (en) * 2006-04-07 2011-07-06 大卫·A·布兰科 Combustion control via homogeneous combustion radical ignition (hcri) or partial hcri in cyclic ic engines
US9010293B2 (en) * 2006-04-07 2015-04-21 David A. Blank Combustion control via homogeneous combustion radical ignition (HCRI) or partial HCRI in cyclic IC engines
US7398643B2 (en) * 2006-05-16 2008-07-15 Dana Canada Corporation Combined EGR cooler and plasma reactor
US20080295501A1 (en) * 2007-05-31 2008-12-04 Weidong Gong Stoichiometric engine system utilizing reformed exhaust gas
PL2198132T3 (en) * 2007-08-30 2011-08-31 Energy Conversion Tech As Exhaust gas apparatus and method for the regeneration of a nox trap and a particle filter
US7654246B2 (en) * 2007-10-04 2010-02-02 Southwest Research Institute Apparatus and method for controlling transient operation of an engine operating in a homogeneous charge compression ignition combustion mode
DE102008032253B4 (en) * 2008-07-09 2013-05-29 Man Truck & Bus Ag Self-igniting internal combustion engine with ether fumigation of combustion air for vehicles and method for ether fumigation of combustion air in a self-igniting internal combustion engine for vehicles
US8056546B2 (en) * 2010-03-24 2011-11-15 Ford Global Technologies, Llc Multi-function throttle valve
US8453626B2 (en) 2011-08-26 2013-06-04 Concentric Skånes Fagerhult AB EGR venturi diesel injection
JP5806967B2 (en) * 2012-03-30 2015-11-10 株式会社クボタ Diesel engine exhaust treatment equipment
US9212627B2 (en) * 2012-09-19 2015-12-15 Ford Global Technologies, Llc Diesel engine water in fuel separator and reservoir automatic drain system and control strategy
GB2510171B (en) 2013-01-28 2015-01-28 Cool Flame Technologies As Method and cleaning apparatus for removal of SOx and NOx from exhaust gas
CN108361127B (en) * 2018-04-24 2023-07-04 吉林大学 Variable tumble layering EGR (exhaust gas recirculation) air inlet device of dual-fuel internal combustion engine and control method thereof
US11306689B2 (en) * 2020-03-04 2022-04-19 Aisan Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha EGR system

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3894520A (en) * 1974-03-13 1975-07-15 Thermo Electron Corp Charge forming device with fuel vaporization
US4135481A (en) * 1976-11-26 1979-01-23 Cornell Research Foundation, Inc. Exhaust gas recirculation pre-stratified charge
DE3918678A1 (en) * 1989-06-08 1990-12-13 Bosch Gmbh Robert Starting aid for vehicle diesel engine - performs plasma ignition of condensed fuel film on insert surface near fuel jet
JPH06213081A (en) * 1993-01-14 1994-08-02 Yamaha Motor Co Ltd Exhaust gas recirculation system of engine
WO1995022687A1 (en) * 1994-02-22 1995-08-24 Ford Motor Company Limited Intake manifold system
EP0719916A1 (en) * 1994-12-29 1996-07-03 Institut Français du Pétrole Method and device for recirculating exhaust gas for a spark ignited 4-cycle engine

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE2545861A1 (en) * 1975-10-14 1977-05-05 Audi Nsu Auto Union Ag External ignition engine fuel feed preparation system - in which exhaust gas is fed back in region of injector nozzle
GB2313623A (en) * 1996-06-01 1997-12-03 Ford Motor Co Fuel supply to EGR gases in a lean-burn auto-ignition i.c. engine
JPH11172047A (en) * 1997-12-09 1999-06-29 Kureha Elastomer Kk Thermoplastic elastomer composition

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3894520A (en) * 1974-03-13 1975-07-15 Thermo Electron Corp Charge forming device with fuel vaporization
US4135481A (en) * 1976-11-26 1979-01-23 Cornell Research Foundation, Inc. Exhaust gas recirculation pre-stratified charge
DE3918678A1 (en) * 1989-06-08 1990-12-13 Bosch Gmbh Robert Starting aid for vehicle diesel engine - performs plasma ignition of condensed fuel film on insert surface near fuel jet
JPH06213081A (en) * 1993-01-14 1994-08-02 Yamaha Motor Co Ltd Exhaust gas recirculation system of engine
WO1995022687A1 (en) * 1994-02-22 1995-08-24 Ford Motor Company Limited Intake manifold system
EP0719916A1 (en) * 1994-12-29 1996-07-03 Institut Français du Pétrole Method and device for recirculating exhaust gas for a spark ignited 4-cycle engine

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
PATENT ABSTRACTS OF JAPAN vol. 018, no. 579 (M - 1698) 7 November 1994 (1994-11-07) *

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0914550B1 (en) 2000-05-31
DE69702200T2 (en) 2000-10-12
DE69702200D1 (en) 2000-07-06
EP0914550A1 (en) 1999-05-12
US6092512A (en) 2000-07-25

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP0914550B1 (en) Internal combustion engine
US6845746B2 (en) Internal combustion engine with injection of gaseous fuel
US4445468A (en) 2-Stroke internal combustion engine and an ignition-combustion method of an internal combustion engine
US6550430B2 (en) Method of operating a dual fuel internal
EP0680558B1 (en) Gas delivery system
JP3384383B2 (en) In-cylinder injection internal combustion engine
CN114320572B (en) Multi-combustion-mode ammonia fuel engine and control method thereof
US20080257304A1 (en) Internal combustion engine and combustion method of the same
WO2001086128A2 (en) Internal combustion engine operable in pcci mode with early control injection and method of operation
EP0458809A4 (en) Piston and process for achieving controlled ignition
JP2002161780A (en) Operation system in internal combustion engine which is operated by self-ignitable fuel
GB2313623A (en) Fuel supply to EGR gases in a lean-burn auto-ignition i.c. engine
GB2277776A (en) Compression ignition engine fuel supply control
US6345610B1 (en) Partial oxidation device for an HCCI engine intake system
CN110821661B (en) Dual-fuel compression-ignition four-stroke engine based on reformed gas and combustion control method
US6668790B2 (en) Method of operating an internal combustion engine operated on gasoline type fuels
Mathur et al. Effects of charge diluents on the emission characteristics of a hydrogen fueled diesel engine
Henein et al. Emissions Trade-Off and Combustion Characteristics of a High-Speed Direct Injection Diesel Engine
CN110206642A (en) The heat liberation rate, heat release rate active control system and its control method that internal-combustion piston engine is burnt based on multi-region
CN110821662A (en) Dual-fuel compression-ignition two-stroke engine based on reformed gas and combustion control method
Bhiogade et al. A comparative experimental study on engine operating on premixed charge compression ignition and compression ignition mode
CN110953066B (en) Engine and in-cylinder split-layer combustion method
CN101929364A (en) Diffusion combustion method for knock-resisting compression ignition of equivalence-ratio gasoline direct injection engine
JP3206280B2 (en) Compression ignition type internal combustion engine
Balasubramanian et al. Application of exhaust gas recirculation of NOx reduction in SI engines

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): JP US

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT BE CH DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE

DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 1997920814

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 09230609

Country of ref document: US

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 1997920814

Country of ref document: EP

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: JP

Ref document number: 1998508577

Format of ref document f/p: F

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 1997920814

Country of ref document: EP