With present engine modifications,
emissions of unburned ammonia was measured to be between 5000 and
10000 ppm and with a combustion efficiency above 95%. The team
believed the unburned ammonia to originate from crevices,
particularly at the ring-pack.
The NOx emission
was between 4000 and 800 ppm even at high excess air ratios. It is
critical to minimize emissions of N2O,
as it is a strong greenhouse gas. It was measured to be between 20
and 80 ppm and appeared to be related to post-oxidation reactions of
ammonia released from crevices during expansion.
Advancing the ignition
timing proved to be an efficient handle for balancing the emissions
of NH3 and
NOx.
These emissions will be reduced to H2O
and N2 in
an SCR catalyst if they are correctly balanced. Advancing ignition
timing also minimizes the formation of N2O.
The team identified four key parameters to be
most critical in premixed ammonia combustion:
-
Indicated efficiency should be high to
minimize fuel consumption.
-
CoV (Coefficient of variation) of IMEP
(Indicated Mean Effective Pressure) should be low to ensure smooth
engine operation and stable exhaust composition.
-
NH3/NOx molar
ratio in the exhaust composition should be close to 1 to enable
complete conversion of both unburned ammonia and NOx in a SCR
catalyst.
-
N2O
should be as low as possible, preferably zero, as it is a strong
greenhouse gas. The global warming from use of green ammonia may
actually become higher than from fossil diesel if concentrations
of N2O
is too high.
Successful ignition of neat ammonia at lean condition can be
achieved using excessive energy charging of an inductive spark
ignition system. Excess charge allow the arc to stretch longer
and move along with the swirling flow in the CFR engine before
it collapses and restrikes several times during a single spark
event.
The optimal air–fuel
equivalence ratio was found to be 1.25. At this air excess an
optimum indicated efficiency, low CoV and low NH3/NOx ratio
close to unity was found. Increasing the intake pressure reduces
the NH3/NOx ratio
and lower the N2O as well. With the present engine, final
adjustment to obtain a NH3/NOx ratio
of unity and minimum N2O
emission was made by advancing the spark timing and compromising
the engine efficiency slightly. A NH3/NOx ratio
of unity and minimum N2O
emission are critical criteria’s for NH3 operation of engines in
order to achieve complete NH3 and
NOx removal
with an SCR catalyst and minimize global warming from N2O.
The investigation provides evidence that ammonia
slip from the present engine primarily originates from unburned
fuel trapped in crevices during combustion, and released during
the expansion. There is also evidence that N2O
is formed during a part of the expansion stroke when crevice
releases are mixed with burned gas just hot enough for partly
oxidation of NH3.
The present test engine has a rather large crevice volume
relative to combustion chamber. A smaller crevice would lower
the slip of ammonia and this would also lower the N2O
emission as well as the NH3/NOx ratio
because the NOx would
not be affected by the smaller crevices volumes.
—Jespersen et
al.
Resources
-
Mads Carsten Jespersen,
Thomas Østerby Holst Rasmussen, Anders Ivarsson (2023) “Widening
the operation limits of a SI engine running on neat ammonia,” Fuel,
Volume 358, Part B doi: 10.1016/j.fuel.2023.130159.