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Using ion-current sensing to interpret gasoline HCCI combustion processes

conference contribution
posted on 2024-03-05, 11:15 authored by Andreas Gazis, David Blundel, Dimitris Panousakis, Jamie Turner, Nebosja Milovanovic, Rui Chen, Jill Stewart

Homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI), combustion has the potential to be highly efficient and to produce low NOx, carbon dioxide and particulate matter emissions, but experiences problems with cold start, running at idle and producing high power density. A solution to these is to operate the engine in a ‘hybrid mode’, where the engine operates in spark ignition mode at cold start, idle and high loads and HCCI mode elsewhere during the drive cycle, demanding a seamless transition between the two modes of combustion through spark assisted controlled auto ignition. Moreover; HCCI requires considerable control to maintain consistent start of combustion and heat release rate, which has thus far limited HCCI’s practical application.In order to provide a suitable control method, a feedback signal is required. This paper will investigate the use of an ion-current sensor in HCCI combustion in order to extract and quantify combustion measurants, with particular reference to control applications. A presentation of results of ion-current sensing for monitoring combustion under steady state operation, over a variety of speeds and trapped residual gas amounts is made. The results show that estimation of cylinder pressure parameters through the ion signal with promising accuracy is shown, and ion-current is proven to be a cost effective and adequately informative feedback signal for both SI and HCCI engine control.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Engineering (Research Outputs)

Publisher

Society of Automotive Engineers

Date Submitted

2010-04-06

Date Accepted

2006-01-01

Date of First Publication

2006-01-01

Date of Final Publication

2006-01-01

Event Name

Society of Automotive Engineers World congress 2006

Event Dates

00/01/1900

Date Document First Uploaded

2013-03-13

ePrints ID

2272

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