First images made of hydrogen burning in working internal combustion
engine
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ARGONNE, Ill. (June 22, 2006) Images of hydrogen combustion have been
captured for the first time in an internal combustion engine operating at
real-world speeds and loads by engineers at the U.S. Department of Energy's
Argonne National Laboratory. This window into the inner workings of a hydrogen-powered
engine is helping to optimize the engines for street use some day.
Researchers in Argonne's Engines and Emissions Group are experts at imaging
the interiors of working engines. A few years ago, their X-ray images of combustion
inside a diesel engine revealed a surprising shock wave as diesel fuel spurted
out of the fuel injector. This earlier research is helping to improve fuel
injectors and increase diesel efficiency.
Their current research focuses on hydrogen the most abundant element on
earth and one of many fuels being evaluated worldwide as a near-term alternative
to gasoline.
"Hydrogen-powered internal combustion engines (ICEs) are a low-cost,
near-term technology," explained mechanical engineer Steve Ciatti, who
is the project's principal investigator. "They can be the catalyst to
building a hydrogen infrastructure for fuel cells."
Some automakers are already viewing hydrogen ICEs as a near-term bridge to
the use of fuel cells in vehicles, Ciatti said. Both Ford and BMW already have
demonstration fleets gathering data.
"Hydrogen ICEs can ease the transition to fuel-cell powered cars," Ciatti
said. "We're envisioning a two-step conversion to hydrogen. Using hydrogen
ICEs as a stop gap will give consumers a chance to adapt to new hydrogen economy
in steps as the new infrastructure is phased in. With these engines, they will
still pump fuel into their cars."
By using imaging tools and other standard engine measurement devices on
a Ford Motor Co. single-cylinder, direct-injection hydrogen engine, Argonne
mechanical engineers Ciatti, Henning Lohse-Busch and Thomas Wallner are optimizing
engine operation and identifying the root causes of combustion anomalies,
such as pre-ignition and knock. These problems are more pronounced at high
speeds and high loads. Argonne researchers observe 50 performance measurements
during each engine test.
Researchers use ultraviolet imaging to capture images inside the running engine. "Hydrogen's
visible radiation signature is barely discernible, so we focused on the chemical
reactions of hydrogen and oxygen, called OH chemiluminescence, in the engine," Ciatti
said. These reactions emit photons in the ultraviolet energy range, and that
light is captured and analyzed with specialized optics.
"Hydrogen ICEs are a lot like gasoline engines, except the fuel is gaseous
instead of liquid," Ciatti said. Hydrogen has wide flammability limits,
so the engine does not need a throttle, a device that chokes the air/fuel mixture
to control the engine power and hampers efficiency (a standard car today is
25 percent efficient; a hydrogen car will be close to 45 percent efficient),
nor do they require exhaust after-treatment when operating correctly.
Hydrogen's high flame speed also offers a chance to increase the power output
without increasing engine size. Using a direct injection of hydrogen, the power
density is roughly 117 percent that of an equivalent gasoline engine and
hydrogen ICEs start easily in cold weather. However, unlike liquid fuels, hydrogen
has low energy density per unit volume which means the vehicle will have
somewhat limited range by comparison. The significant increase in efficiency
will help to mitigate this characteristic.
"The unique properties of hydrogen fuel (wide flammability limits and
the ignition characteristics) are exciting because you can do things with hydrogen
that you can't do with hydrocarbons," Ciatti said. For example, you can
use direct injection (spraying the fuel directly into the combustion chamber),
so the efficiency goes up and the power density goes up, but unfortunately
the complexity goes up as well.
Researchers are also determining the most efficient and cleanest way to run
the engine without knock or pre-ignition, another technical challenge.
Because of its nature, hydrogen easily combusts, so researchers are experimenting
with a multiple injection approach. They are injecting hydrogen directly into
the cylinder once or twice during each combustion cycle, depending upon operating
conditions. The goal is to determine the optimum timing and amount of hydrogen
injected each cycle. The wrong mixture of hydrogen causes engine operation
and emission problems.
The researchers are also experimenting with prototype injectors. Making them
is a materials science and engineering challenge because the operating atmosphere
is unusually hot and under high pressure. Sealing and cooling the injector
becomes a critical task.
"Working with a single cylinder allows us to isolate problems so we don't
have four cylinders to track through to see where and how problems started," explained
Ciatti.
"We plan to solve problems in the single cylinder and then try them out
in a four-cylinder," said Ciatti. The mechanical engineering team has
installed a 2.3 liter four-cylinder Ford hydrogen engine and is commissioning
it. Eventually, the team will integrate the four-cylinder engine into a flexible
hybrid vehicle to test how the engine operates as part of a vehicle in Argonne's Advanced Powertrain Research Facility.
This research is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy's FreedomCAR
and Vehicle Technologies Program.
Argonne researchers are collaborating with Sandia
National Laboratories, Ford,
BMW and the European Hydrogen Internal Combustion Engine (HyICE) initiative.
Argonne National Laboratory seeks solutions to pressing national problems in science and technology.
The nation's first national laboratory, Argonne conducts leading-edge basic
and applied scientific research in virtually every scientific discipline. Argonne
researchers work closely with researchers from hundreds of companies, universities,
and federal, state and municipal agencies to help them solve their specific
problems, advance America 's scientific leadership and prepare the nation for
a better future. With employees from more than 60 nations, Argonne is managed
by UChicago
Argonne, LLC for
the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office
of Science.
For more information, please contact Steve McGregor (630/252-5580 or
media@anl.gov) at Argonne.
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