Method of operating an internal combustion engine operated...

Internal-combustion engines – Combustion chamber means having fuel injection only – Combustible mixture stratification means

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C123S305000, C123S294000, C123S430000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06668790

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a method of operating an internal combustion engine operated on gasoline type fuels, more specifically on gasoline, wherein ignition of the fuel-air mixture is initiated spontaneously in at least one operational range of the engine, preferably in the part load range, and wherein a stratified charge is produced in the combustion chamber, preferably in the higher load range.
The term gasoline type fuels designates not only gasoline, but also other blends of hydrocarbons, gases, liquid hydrocarbons made from natural gas and alcohol.
DESCRIPTION OF PRIOR ART
The publication entitled “Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition (HCCI) of Diesel Fuel”, Allen W. Gray et al., SAE Paper No. 971676 discloses that extremely low NO
x
and soot emissions are obtained during combustion of an auto-ignited lean fuel-air mixture on account of the homogeneous distribution of concentration and temperature.
It is also known that, on account of its high ignition property, diesel fuel is compounding the difficulty of carrying out this combustion process because the time of ignition can be fixated as desired just before top dead center only when the compression ratio and the engine load are low. As compared to conventional diesel processes, the low compression ratio required results in considerable disadvantages regarding specific fuel, said disadvantages having, together with the low achievable power production, heretofore prevented this process from being more widely used although it yields favorable emission ratings.
Another difficulty specific to diesel fuel is the position of the boiling range between approximately 170° C. and 360° C. that hinders vaporation and accordingly homogenization of the cylinder charge and that may yield high NO
x
, soot and unburned hydrocarbon emissions and involves the risk of diesel fuel mixing with the lubricant.
For HCCI combustion, gasoline presents great advantages on account of its low autoignition quality and the lower gasoline boiling range of between approximately 30° C. and 190° C. Analogous to the diesel engine, the compression ratio may here be raised to values of about 15 to 17. Although the achievable indicated mean effective pressure is higher than with diesel fuel, it remains limited to the part load range as may be gathered from the publication entitled “An Experimental Study on Premixed-Charge Compression Ignition Gasoline Engine”, Taro Aoyama et al., SAE Paper No. 960081. Special tests yielded a maximum indicated mean effective pressure of approximately 7 to 8.5 bar. Accordingly, and in order to be capable of covering the whole operational range up to 20 bar, a second combustion system capable of high load is required.
For this second combustion process, the document AT 003 135 U1 suggests a Stratified Charge Spark Ignition process (SCSI-process in short).
A conventional stoichiometric process with spark ignition, lambda sensor and three-way catalytic converter (HCSI-process in short for Homogeneous Charge Spark Ignition) may also be used as a second combustion process. The HCSI operation requires a compression ratio of about 10, which means that, on passing from low load to high load, the compression ratio must be lowered from about 16 (HCCI) to about 10 (HCSI). This is only possible with considerable constructional expenditure. With this method, high indicated mean effective pressures of more than 20 bar are possible.
The SCSI-process mentioned operates with a compression ratio similar to that of a diesel engine, i.e., of about 16 as well, which presents the advantage that in case HCCI operation (low load) is combined with SCSI operation (high load), there is no need to change the compression ratio. As compared to HCSI operation, this additionally has the advantage of a higher thermal efficiency in the higher load range. Special tests yielded a maximum indicated mean effective pressure of about 12 bar for SCSI operation.
An important principle of SCSI operation is that the ignition delay for spontaneous ignition—also assisted by the reaction retarding means of exhaust gas recirculation—would be considerably longer than with a direct injection diesel engine. With spark ignition, the start of ignition may be selected freely within the ignition delay mentioned. By virtue of the thus possible, relatively long, but accurately controllable carburetion duration between the start of injection and the start of combustion, soot emissions may be considerably reduced over a direct injection, autoignition combustion process.
At even higher mean pressures, it proved to become increasingly difficult to suppress spontaneous auto-ignition before the desired start of combustion due to the rise of the temperature level. To this purpose it would be necessary to lower the compression ratio, which would require, as already mentioned, a complex construction and would penalize efficiency, and to have a higher exhaust gas recirculation rate that would on the other hand increase soot emissions, so that the long duration of carburetion would no longer make sense.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,535,716 describes a spontaneous ignition gasoline-fueled internal combustion engine in which the fuel is indirectly injected into an intake runner.
The DE 2 031 455 A discloses a spontaneous ignition air compression internal combustion engine for operation on fuels with poor ignition characteristics. Part of the exhaust gas is externally recirculated from the exhaust line to the intake line by way of a controller.
The publication DE 198 18 596 A1 discloses a process for operating a four-stroke internal combustion engine on a homogeneous, lean basic mixture of air, fuel and retained exhaust gas with compression ignition and direct fuel injection into a combustion chamber. At part load, the internal combustion engine is operated with compression ignition and mechanically controlled exhaust gas retention. At full load and in the high part load range, the engine is operated in the Otto mode.
The document EP 1 048 833 A2 teaches to utilize internal exhaust gas recirculation to control combustion in a spontaneous ignition or spark ignition internal combustion engine.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is the object of the invention to avoid the drawbacks mentioned in the range of high mean pressures and to achieve in the simplest possible manner high exhaust quality and concurrently high efficiency for an internal combustion engine operated on fuel with poor ignition characteristics in the range of higher mean pressures as well.
This is achieved in accordance with the invention in that combustion is initiated by spontaneous ignition of the fuel in the full load range as well and in that preferably the in-cylinder charge temperature is controlled throughout the load range by way of internal exhaust gas recirculation and in that, in the full load range, the start of fuel injection occurs after top dead center. The full load range designates here a range including the full load line with high load from a predetermined limit for the indicated mean pressure. By increasing the charge temperature and additionally by pilot injection, the ignition delay, which is longer with gasoline than with diesel fuel, may be shortened, but not enough. In order to shorten ignition delay further, the fuel is injected at full load only from top dead center, the whole quantity of fuel being injected in the full load range within the region of ignition delay. Accordingly, the internal combustion engine is operated at full load in the auto-ignition mode with spontaneous ignition of a stratified, that is to say heterogeneous charge (SCCI process in short for Stratified Charge Compression Ignition). As compared to the diesel process with diesel fuel, the process can benefit from the lesser tendency of gasoline to form soot and compared with the stoichiometric process it presents the advantage, based on the high compression ratio, of higher efficiency, which makes the combination of HCCI at low loads and of SCCI at higher loads particularly interesting for utility engines.
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