Mechanical Engineering for Society and Industry
Vol 3 No 1 (2023)

Strategies to achieve controlled auto-ignition (CAI) combustion: A review

Ibham Veza (Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS, Malaysia)
Indra C. Setiawan (Universitas Pancasila, Jakarta)
La Ode M. Firman (Universitas Pancasila, Indonesia)
Handi Handi (Universitas Bung Karno, Indonesia)
Ayu Amanah (Universitas Bung Karno, Indonesia)
Mega T. Kurnia (Universitas Bung Karno, Indonesia)
Permana A. Paristiawan (National Research and Innovation Agency, Indonesia)
Muhammad Idris (PT PLN (Persero), Indonesia)
Ahmed Sule (Kogi State College of Education, Nigeria)
Anthony C. Opia (Niger Delta University, Nigeria)



Article Info

Publish Date
16 Nov 2022

Abstract

Conventional gasoline engines suffer from low performance and NOx emissions. Controlled auto-ignition (CAI), sometimes referred to as homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI), is a promising concept to solve such problems. CAI has the potential to improve spark ignition (SI) engine fuel economy while at the same time solving the trade-off of NOx-soot emissions found in compression ignition (CI) engines. The CAI engine can reach a fuel economy comparable to that of a conventional diesel engine with ultra-low NOx and negligible soot emissions. However, controlling auto-ignition remains the biggest difficulty that hinders the implementation of CAI as a commercial engine. Research towards a cleaner and more efficient engine is driven by the progressively stringent emission regulation imposed worldwide. Therefore, the CAI was developed to meet the emissions target while maintaining engine performance. CAI works on the principle of lean mixture and auto-ignition. To obtain CAI combustion, the temperatures in the cylinder must be sufficient to initiate auto-ignition. Without the use of a spark plug or injector, the CAI suffers from a direct control mechanism to start the combustion. The most practical approach to controlling the initiation of auto-ignition in CAI is diluting the intake charge by either trapping the residual gas or recirculating the exhaust gas. Both approaches enable the engine to achieve CAI combustion without requiring significant modifications to control the onset of CAI combustion phase.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

mesi

Publisher

Subject

Aerospace Engineering Automotive Engineering Chemical Engineering, Chemistry & Bioengineering Control & Systems Engineering Electrical & Electronics Engineering Energy Engineering Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering Materials Science & Nanotechnology Mechanical Engineering Transportation

Description

Aims Mechanical engineering is a branch of engineering science that combines the principles of physics and engineering mathematics with materials science to design, analyze, manufacture, and maintain mechanical systems (mechanics, energy, materials, manufacturing) in solving complex engineering ...