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      Development of an Oxy-Fuel Combustion System in a Compression-Ignition Engine for Ultra-Low Emissions Powerplants Using CFD and Evolutionary Algorithms

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      Applied Sciences
      MDPI AG

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          Abstract

          This study uses an optimization approach for developing a combustion system in a compression–ignition engine that is able to operate under oxy-fuel conditions, and produces mainly CO2 and H2O as exhaust gases. This is achieved because the combustion concept uses pure oxygen as an oxidizer, instead of air, avoiding the presence of nitrogen. The O2 for the combustion system can be obtained by using a mixed ionic–electronic conducting membrane (MIEC), which separates the oxygen from the air onboard. The optimization method employed maximizes the energy conversion of the system, reducing pollutant emissions (CxHy, particulate matter, and carbon monoxides) to levels near zero. The methodology follows a novel approach that couples computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and particle swarm optimization (PSO) algorithms to optimize the complete combustion system in terms of engine performance and pollutant generation. The study involves the evaluation of several inputs that govern the combustion system design in order to fulfill the thermo-mechanical constraints. The parameters analyzed are the piston bowl geometry, fuel injector characteristics, air motion, and engine settings variables. Results evince the relevance of the optimization procedure, achieving very low levels of gaseous pollutants (CxHy and CO) in the optimum configuration. The emissions of CO were reduced by more than 10% while maintaining the maximum in-cylinder pressure within the limit imposed for the engine. However, indicated efficiency levels are compromised if they are compared with an equivalent condition operating under conventional diesel combustion.

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          Most cited references46

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          Renormalization group analysis of turbulence. I. Basic theory

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            Climate Change 2014 Mitigation of Climate Change

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              Pre-combustion, post-combustion and oxy-combustion in thermal power plant for CO2 capture

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                ASPCC7
                Applied Sciences
                Applied Sciences
                MDPI AG
                2076-3417
                July 2022
                July 14 2022
                : 12
                : 14
                : 7104
                Article
                10.3390/app12147104
                60049990-b04a-402b-aad0-e62ba97b9411
                © 2022

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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