International Journal of Engine Research | 2021
Toward co-optimization of renewable fuel blend production and combustion in ultra-high efficiency SI engines
Abstract
The shift from fossil to renewable fuels presents an opportunity to tailor a fuel’s molecular structure and composition to the needs of advanced internal combustion engine concepts, while simultaneously aiming for economic and sustainable fuel production. We have recently proposed a method for computer-aided design of tailor-made fuels that integrates aspects of both product and production pathway design. The present paper sets out to sequentially combine that method with experimental investigation on a single cylinder research engine and model-based early-stage process evaluation to create, validate, and benchmark a rationally designed multi-component biofuel for highly boosted spark-ignition engines. To this end, the computer-aided design approach is applied to a network of possible fuel components and their production pathways. The resulting optimal four-component fuel EBCC (50\u2009mol% ethanol, 21\u2009mol% 2-butanone, 15\u2009mol% cyclopentane, and 14\u2009mol% cyclopentanone) is analyzed with regard to combustion performance and estimated fuel production cost. Variations of both the indicated mean effective pressure and the relative air/fuel ratio were performed on an engine equipped with a compression ratio of 14.7. EBCC achieves indicated efficiencies that are significantly higher than those of RON 102 gasoline fuel and comparable to those of pure 2-butanone, an extremely knock-resistant fuel identified in a previous round of model-based fuel design. Furthermore, a strong reduction in engine-out soot emissions is observed compared to RON 102 gasoline. Early-stage process evaluation shows EBCC to have lower estimated fuel production costs than 2-butanone. Production costs of pure ethanol, however, are estimated to be even lower, mainly due to lower plant investment costs and a synthesis pathway that does not require hydrogen. The paper concludes with a brief perspective on further integration of the proposed sequential approach with the goal of co-optimizing the production and combustion of renewable fuel blends.