This invention relates to methods and apparatus for increasing diesel engine efficiency, and more particularly to improving diesel engine efficiency by using nitrous oxide as a fuel additive.
Diesel engines power many automobiles and most commercial trucks in the United States, as well as most stationary generators. Their efficient operation is a matter of great importance economically, environmentally, and in terms of petroleum conservation.
A diesel engine is a type of compression ignition internal combustion engine (ICE) in which a liquid hydrocarbon fuel is sprayed directly into hot compressed air near the top of the compression stroke. Upon spraying, the fuel begins to vaporize and, in due course, to undergo spontaneous ignition and combustion. Gas heated to high temperatures and high pressures by the combustion of the fuel exerts a force on the piston, thereby converting the heat of combustion into useful mechanical work which can be delivered through the crankshaft to an external load.
The injected fuel immediately begins to vaporize and in due course to burn in the chamber 115. The resulting release of heat energy causes a large additional increase in temperature and pressure, which forces the piston 120 downward (indicated by arrow 128) during the power stroke as illustrated in
Diesel fuels, including petroleum based fuels, biodiesel fuels, and other fuels susceptible to compression ignition, are generally less volatile than the gasoline used in spark ignition engines because they are intended for vaporization at much higher temperatures. Diesel fuel generally contains normal and branched alkanes as well as cycloparaffins and aromatic hydrocarbons. As compared to gasoline, diesel fuel contains a larger fraction of straight chain hydrocarbons which readily auto-ignite when heated. Auto-ignition is necessary in a diesel engine, but can lead to knocking in a spark-ignition engine operating at a high load. Diesel engines are designed to operate with a large excess of air, and for that reason burn more than 99% of the injected fuel, leading to low levels of unburned hydrocarbon emissions.
For combustion temperatures attainable in conventional diesel engines the Second Law of Thermodynamics does not allow more than about 65% of the heat of combustion to be converted into useful work. The actual efficiency is further reduced by in-cylinder heat losses to the cooling system, enthalpy wasted as residual heat, pressure and kinetic energy in the exhaust, and mechanical friction. As a result, most vehicular diesel engines convert only 30% to 40% of the heat of combustion into useful mechanical work.
For the reasons set forth above, methods and systems that allow utilization of a larger fraction of the available energy in diesel fuel would provide an economically valuable increase in power and mileage, as well as associated environmental and fuel conservation benefits.
In general, in a first aspect, the invention features a method for improving the efficiency of a diesel engine that includes mixing nitrous oxide in diesel fuel to provide modified fuel, and timing injection of the modified fuel into a combustion chamber of the diesel engine with a cylinder stroke to enhance ignition and reduce fuel consumption of the diesel engine relative to using unmodified diesel fuel.
Implementations of this method may include one or more of the following features:
The timing can be selected so that ignition occurs within about 10° after top dead center (e.g., within about 8°, within about 5°, within 3°, within 2°, within 1°). A concentration of nitrous oxide in the modified fuel can be between 0.02% and 2.0% by weight (e.g., about 0.02%, 0.05%, about 1.5%, about 2.0%, e.g., between 0.1% and 1.0%, such as about 0.1%, about 0.2%, about 0.3%, about 0.4%, about 0.5%, about 0.6%, about 0.7%, about 0.8%, about 0.9%, about 1.0%). The nitrous oxide can be stored as a compressed liquid in a pressurized tank prior to dissolving in the diesel fuel. Diesel fuel can be delivered to the combustion chamber first through a low pressure pump and then through a high pressure pump and the nitrous oxide, in liquid form, can be introduced into the diesel fuel through a metering valve between the low pressure pump and the high pressure pump. A driving pressure for flow through the metering valve can be an autogenous pressure of the liquid nitrous oxide. The diesel fuel can be stored in a fuel tank and the high pressure pump can be an on-demand constant pressure pump configured to prevent return of the modified fuel to the fuel tank. A metering valve can operate based on a rate of flow of the diesel fuel to produce a constant concentration of nitrous oxide in the modified fuel. The metering valve can be keyed to the rate of flow of the diesel fuel and to a RPM and load of the engine to produce an optimum concentration of nitrous oxide in the modified fuel. The metering valve and the timing of fuel injection can be controlled using an electronic processing system that includes stored instructions and electronic sensors that regulate injection timing and nitrous oxide concentration in the modified fuel to adjust both diesel fuel consumption and nitrous oxide consumption. An accumulator can be included after the introduction of nitrous oxide in the fuel line between the low pressure pump and the high pressure pump. The high pressure pump can operate at a constant volumetric rate. The engine can deliver the modified fuel to the combustion chamber via a common rail and excess modified fuel can exit the common rail through a pressure relief valve and return to an inlet side of the high pressure pump. The engine can include a common rail configured to deliver the modified fuel to the combustion chamber, one or more high-pressure solenoid pumps operated by an electronic control unit, and delivery of the mixed fuel to the combustion chamber can include using the solenoid pumps to deliver minute, accurately calibrated pulses of N2O to fuel lines leading from the common rail to the combustion chamber.
In general, in another aspect, the invention features a system that includes a diesel internal combustion engine including at least one combustion chamber, and a means for mixing nitrous oxide in diesel fuel to form modified fuel and controlling a time at which the modified fuel is injected into the combustion chamber to enhance ignition and reduce fuel consumption of the diesel engine relative to using unmodified diesel fuel.
Implementations of this aspect may include one or more of the following features and/or features of other aspects:
The system can control the time so that resulting ignition occurs within about 5° to 10° after top dead center. The system can mix the nitrous oxide so that the concentration of nitrous oxide in the modified fuel is between 0.1% and 1.0% by weight. The system can include a pressure-resistant tank where the nitrous oxide is stored as a pressurized liquid. The system can include a metering valve for introducing the nitrous oxide into a fuel line. The system can include a high pressure pump and a low pressure pump for delivering diesel to the combustion chamber, where the metering valve is located between the low pressure pump and the high pressure pump. The high pressure pump can be an on-demand constant pressure pump configured to prevent return of the modified fuel to a fuel tank supplying the diesel fuel. The system can include a means whereby the metering valve operates based on a rate of flow of the diesel fuel to produce a constant concentration of nitrous oxide in the modified fuel. The system can include a means whereby the metering valve operates based on a rate of flow of the diesel fuel and to a RPM and load of the engine to produce an optimum concentration of nitrous oxide in the modified fuel. The system can include an electronic processing system that includes stored instructions and electronic sensors which control injection timing and nitrous oxide concentration in the modified fuel adjust diesel fuel consumption and nitrous oxide consumption.
In general, in another aspect, a system includes a diesel internal combustion engine that includes a low-pressure pump and a high-pressure pump for delivering diesel fuel to at least one combustion chamber via a common rail, the high-pressure pump being configured to operate at a constant volumetric rate. The system also includes a tank containing nitrous oxide and a supply module arranged to supply nitrous oxide from the tank to a fuel line between the low-pressure pump and the high-pressure pump, where the nitrous oxide mixes with diesel fuel in the fuel line to provide modified fuel. The system also includes an accumulator in the fuel line between the low-pressure and high-pressure pumps downstream from where the nitrous oxide is introduced. The system also includes a return line for returning to an inlet side of the high-pressure pump modified fuel exiting the common rail through a pressure relief valve. The system may be configured to implement the method of the first aspect.
In general, in another aspect, the invention features a system that includes a diesel internal combustion engine that includes one or more fuel injectors which receive fuel via a common rail, a tank containing nitrous oxide, one or more high-pressure solenoid pumps, and an electronic control unit in communication with the high-pressure solenoid pumps. During operation the electronic control unit causes the solenoid pumps to deliver calibrated pulses of nitrous oxide to one or more fuel lines leading from the common rail to each fuel injector. The system may be configured to implement the method of the first aspect.
Among other advantages, the systems and methods may provide substantial improvement in efficiency and/or performance of diesel engines or other internal combustion engines.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims and accompanying drawings, in which like reference numbers indicate like features, and wherein:
Both cooling system losses and exhaust losses in an ICE are determined by the in-cylinder pressure and temperature profile, which depends on the RPM, the time and duration of injection, the ignition delay, and the rate of burn. Referring again to
To some extent the duration and speed of combustion can be controlled by the timing and rate of fuel injection and the spray nozzle configuration, but this approach is limited in scope because the combustion profile is also influenced by engine parameters such as stroke, bore, and RPM, and by fuel parameters such as cetane number, a measurement of intrinsic ignition delay.
The interplay of these many factors can be modeled by simple stepwise computer programs which trace the history of temperature, pressure, heat loss and mechanical work as determined by the laws of ideal gas theory, thermodynamics, and heat flow. Calculations based on such models show that optimum efficiencies can achieved when rapid combustion is initiated shortly after TDC.
The results 202 and 204 in
Because models such as this reveal a considerable advantage in efficiency for combustion which begins and concludes shortly after TDC, that is the target at which methods for achieving better combustion should aim. To do that, some of the factors controlling the onset and rate of combustion should be modified. The presence one chemical species, atomic oxygen, in the immediate vicinity of the evaporating fuel is believed to be important to rapid combustion. It is further believed that the concentration of atomic oxygen can be greatly increased by photodissociation of oxygen molecules using a properly timed pulse of ultraviolet (UV) light of appropriate wavelength (i.e., having a sufficiently short wavelength).
An important factor controlling combustion is believed to be the nature of the oxidizing species encountered by the fuel. Normally the only such species is molecular oxygen, O2, which for quantum mechanical reasons reacts relatively slowly with fuel molecules. Oxygen atoms would be capable of reacting more rapidly, but engine temperatures are not high enough to dissociate O2 into significant amounts of free O. Thus auto-ignition of diesel fuel during compression must rely on a gradual increase in local temperature caused by relatively slow reactions involving molecular oxygen, such as
These reactions continue until they produce a temperature and free radical concentration high enough to initiate an avalanche of chain reactions. At that point ignition occurs and full combustion begins.
While normal combustion in diesel engines is controlled by engine operating conditions and the kinetics of slow reactions involving fuel and O2 molecules, the situation would be far different if free O atoms were present, because such atoms react far more vigorously with fuel molecules to cause rapid ignition. Heat alone produces very few free O atoms, so diesel combustion can be improved by introducing free O atoms from some other source, when and where they will do the most good.
One way to provide oxygen atoms is by introducing ozone (O3) as an oxygen atom precursor into the intake airstream. Ozone decomposes on heating to release free oxygen atoms
with a half-life of 0.1 to 0.5 msec at the temperatures of 400° C. to 600° C. and the pressures of 50 to 125 atmospheres occurring during diesel compression. That rate can be adequate of producing enough oxygen atoms to promote rapid ignition.
Although ozone is generally too unstable to be stored in bulk and then added to the intake airstream, it can be generated in the airstream by an electrical discharge. However, ozone generation in air drawn from the external environment is sensitive to ambient conditions such as temperature and humidity, and it is difficult to produce adequate concentrations of ozone using equipment having a useful service life. For both of these reasons in situ generation of ozone for use in diesels is presently considered unreliable.
In addition to such practical problems, there is another problem associated with the addition of an oxygen atom precursor such as ozone to the intake airstream, because the release of free oxygen atoms is dependent on the chemical properties of the additive and on the operating parameters of the engine, neither of which is susceptible to real-time control. Thus the release of oxygen atoms cannot readily be timed to optimize engine efficiency.
The applicants have realized that the efficacy of oxygen atom production may be optimized by automatically producing O atoms precisely when and where they are needed, namely in the sheath of combustible fuel vapor which envelopes the evaporating fuel droplets shortly after injection. This may be accomplished by introducing a small concentration of nitrous oxide (N2O) into the fuel just before it enters the combustion chamber. Following injection, the highly volatile N2O quickly flashes into the vapor phase and begins to generate oxygen atoms.
Introduction of N2O into the fuel immediately before injection eliminates the need to store, handle, or dispense quantities of N2O-loaded fuel which could emit N2O vapor into the atmosphere, where it acts as a greenhouse gas, or into the head space of tanks and storage vessels, where it could pose a safety risk. Instead, the N2O would be provided in pressurized containers prefilled with the compound in liquid form, ready to be attached to a coupling in the engine compartment. Tanks of liquefied N2O are classified as safe for public sale and interstate transport. It is believed that liquid N2O does not cause explosions, and the compound is completely destroyed by diesel combustion, so the described approach fully addresses safety and pollution concerns.
The half life for the dissociation of N2O in clean air at pressures near 50 bar is believed to be greater than 100 msec at temperatures below about 900° C. Although that seems slow in the context of a compression stroke lasting more than 10 msec, the decomposition of N2O is believed to be greatly accelerated by the presence of organic fuel molecules, and the decomposition of even a small fraction of the N2O can lead to enough oxygen atoms to cause spontaneous ignition. Our experience confirms that less than 1% of N2O dissolved in the fuel has a profoundly beneficial effect on diesel ignition and combustion.
Nitrous oxide is a liquid under pressures of 30 to 70 atmospheres, and can be handled in much the same manner as liquid carbon dioxide. It is commercially available and can be safely transported by conventional carriers. However, at elevated temperatures in the presence of fuel molecules, gaseous N2O decomposes exothermically into nitrogen molecules, N2, and oxygen atoms O. Thus, when it is liberated from the fuel spray, it mixes with evaporating fuel vapor and begins to undergo exothermic reactions leading to the initiation of free radical chains and the onset of ignition. A concentration of about 1015 atoms of O per cubic centimeter has been shown to initiate ignition at temperatures below 300° C. At a typical compression ratio of 16:1 and an air to fuel ratio of 40:1, complete decomposition of 0.33% of N2O in the fuel produces about 101 O atoms per cubic centimeter, and an even higher concentration in the vapor sheath surrounding the fuel spray. Thus under those conditions the decomposition of even a small fraction of the N2O can cause ignition to occur almost immediately upon injection, thus largely eliminating the lag associated with slow pre-combustion reactions between fuel and molecular oxygen.
This invention should not be confused with the discharge of a pound or more per minute of liquid N2O into the intake airstream of an internal combustion engines to produce a dramatic power boost for a short period of time. This practice, which is common during competitive performance events, relies on the high oxygen content of N2O (36%) compared with that of ambient air (21%), and on the increased air density produced by the cooling of the intake airstream by flash evaporation of the injected N2O. The increase of available oxygen in the intake airstream can be combined with an increase in the amount of injected fuel to raise engine power nearly to the limit set by the mechanical strength of the engine.
In contrast, the invention claimed here does not increase power at the expense of increased fuel consumption, nor does it involve the rapid introduction of large quantities of a combustion promoter. Instead, improvements in mileage of 10% to 25% are economically produced by introducing very small quantities of nitrous oxide along with the injected fuel.
In certain embodiments, a tank of compressed liquid N2O is provided along with a line connecting that tank with the low pressure fuel feed line, a metering valve or piston and plunger capable of delivering a small but controlled quantity of N2O into the fuel, and an electronic system capable of controlling the dispensing rate, either maintaining it at a preset value or varying it in response to such engine variables as RPM and air-to-fuel ratio. Generally, the concentration of N2O in the fuel should be sufficiently high to provide a significant power boost and sufficiently low to allow a few gallons of N2O to support a several hundred mile trip. Desirable concentrations of N2O in the fuel typically lie between 0.02% and 2.0% by weight, for example 0.2% to 0.4% by weight.
The metering valve 316 is under the control of an electronic system which adjusts the flow of N2O to maintain a desired concentration in the fuel. In alternative versions of the invention the N2O may pass through its own high pressure pump before being introduced into the high pressure fuel immediately before the fuel injectors, and the electronic control system may or may not include a processor coded to vary the N2O concentration in response changes in engine RPM and the air-to-fuel ratio.
Other configurations beside those shown in these figures can be used to introduce ignition-promoting quantities of N2O into diesel fuel.
Over the course of 15 minutes, 100 grams of nitrous oxide is bubbled through 3000 grams of CN 45 diesel fuel, causing a weight gain of 10 grams, equivalent to 0.33%. A similar quantity of unmodified fuel is reserved in an identical container, and both containers are weighed. A John Deere M4024T four cylinder diesel engine mounted on a test rack and governed at 1800 RPM is rigidly connected to a 60 cycle AC Dynamo which in turn is connected to a set of four individually switchable 5 kW electrical heaters. A control panel is provided to allow RPM, current and voltage to be read in real time. Fuel consumption is monitored by weight.
The engine is started on standard diesel fuel from its own tank and allowed to reach steady state operating conditions for 15 minutes under a 5 kW load. Fuel flow is then switched to the graduated container of unmodified fuel and the engine is operated with a 5 kW load for 5 minutes, at which time flow is switched to the N2O doped fuel for the same length of time. At the beginning and end of these operating intervals the containers are weighed. Fuel flow is then switched back to fuel from the main tank, and the engine is allowed to equilibrate for 15 minutes with a 10 kW load. The same procedure is then followed with the two containers of unmodified and modified fuel, and this sequence is again followed with 15 kW and 20 kW loads. In all cases the actual load is determined by current and voltage readings.
Table 1 shows the results of these tests.
Over this range of loads fuel consumption proves to be reduced between 18% and 23% when the engine is operating on fuel containing 0.33% N2O by weight.
A Ford F250 truck powered by a 6.0 liter V8 Power Stroke diesel is modified as shown schematically in
An experiment is conducted using experimental system 600 as follows to determine the improvement in mileage of a diesel vehicle produced by a small concentration of N2O in the fuel. Referring to
During travel to the preselected test route, valves 608 and 610 are set so as to deliver fuel from tank number 302 through the low pressure pump 612, the filter 614, and the high pressure pump 616 to the common rail 618, from which it is distributed to the individual injectors 620, with excess fuel escaping through pressure relief valve 622 and then flowing through two way valve 610, return line 624, and routing valve 626 back to fuel tank 602.
Upon the truck arriving at the starting site three way valve 608 is set so as to draw fuel from tank number 604, and two way valve 610 is set to return excess fuel back to tank number 604. The truck is immediately driven on a round trip over the 50 km test course, adhering as closely as possible to a predetermined sequence of speeds not exceeding 80 km/hr.
When once again at the starting point, valve 608 is set so as to draw N2O-containing fuel from tank number 606, valves 610 and 626 are set so as to deliver excess fuel from the pressure relief valve 622 to waste tank number 628, and the truck is driven on a round trip over the same course adhering as nearly as possible to the same sequence of speeds. During this part of the test run, tanks 606 and 628 automatically adjust their volume so as to minimize head space over the N2O-containing fuel, thus mitigating any slight risk of exothermic decomposition of N2O vapor and allowing and little or no N2O (a known greenhouse gas) to be released into the atmosphere.
At the conclusion of the experiment valves 608, 610 and 626 are returned to their initial settings so as to draw fuel from, and return fuel to, tank number 602; after which the truck is driven back to its base of operations and the weight of fuel remaining in tanks number 604, 606 and 628 is accurately determined
The mileage obtained using the two fuels is then calculated based on the 100 km total length of the course and the weight of fuel consumed, (60 kg minus the weight of fuel in tank number 604) for regular fuel and (60 kg minus the weight of fuel in tank number 606 plus the weight of fuel in tank number 628) for the N2O-containing fuel. The results of three repetitions of this experiment show the average mileage on conventional fuel to be 17.1 mpg and the average mileage on N2O-containing fuel to be 21.4 mpg. Thus under the conditions described here the improvement achieved by the addition of 0.35% N2O to the fuel is 25.1%.
A number of embodiments have been described. Other embodiments are in the following claims.
This application claims benefit of Provisional Application No. 61/755,730 filed on Jan. 23, 2013, the entire content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2014/012695 | 1/23/2014 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61755730 | Jan 2013 | US |