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Jun 19, 2023

Why ducted fuel

Image credit: Dedmityay/Dreamstime

By Roger Brereton, Pailton Engineering

Published Friday, May 19, 2023

A new invention inspired by the Bunsen burner could lead to major breakthroughs in the quest for cleaner diesel, with significant implications for commercial transport.

A 2016 New York Times article recounting the history of our relationship with diesel, from its invention in the 1800s to Volkswagen’s ‘Dieselgate’ scandal, concluded that the notion of clean diesel was “an oxymoron”.

Exhaust from diesel engines contains harmful pollutants such as nitrogen oxides and soot particles. Although governments from the late 1990s onwards encouraged their uptake, in the belief that they were more environmentally friendly than petrol/gasoline equivalents, it has since been argued that diesel cars produce more than four times as much pollution.

For the automotive sector, the solution was the introduction of regulations to discourage the use of diesel vehicles, while accelerating the uptake of electric alternatives. For commercial vehicles, however, it is not so simple. Despite all the bad publicity diesel has attracted in recent years, there is simply nothing that can match this fuel for its energy density, reliability and durability.

Electrifying smaller, lighter vehicles is one thing. For buses and long-haul vehicles, diesel is far superior at generating the torque needed to keep them moving. That’s not to rule out the viability of electric, hybrid or hydrogen trucks and buses. However, the weight of these vehicles generates a different set of requirements that make alternatives to the combustion engine trickier to develop.

While some are set on overcoming the challenges of developing electric or hydrogen vehicles, others are focusing on making diesel cleaner. It could take many years and huge infrastructure investments before we see long-haul trucks powered by electric batteries or hydrogen fuel cells in significant numbers. If diesel is here to stay - at least for the short term - then anything that can reduce its emissions will make a big difference to the planet.

Whether or not diesel can be truly ‘clean’ is open to debate, but in relative terms the improvements are there. A combination of engineering breakthroughs and government regulation has ensured that modern diesel is significantly cleaner in comparison to its predecessors. Key technological developments include advances in fuel-injection technologies and systems for treating exhaust emissions. According to manufacturer DAF, the nitrogen oxide emissions of a modern truck with a Euro 6 engine are 95 per cent lower than from similar trucks from 25 to 30 years ago.

An ongoing engineering dilemma is the trade-off between soot and nitrogen oxide reduction. A diesel engine delivers greater fuel efficiency than its petrol or gasoline counterpart, but it releases toxic nitrogen oxide emissions. To mitigate this, spent low-oxygen combustion gases from the previous engine cycle are routed back into the air intake. This reduces the temperature and oxygen concentrations in the fuel-air mixtures, thereby reducing the production of nitrogen oxides.

The drawback to this dilution strategy is that at these lower temperatures not all fuel is consumed, with what is left creating more particles of partially burned carbon or soot. Engineers therefore need to find a way of burning the diesel as fully as possible, while keeping temperatures low enough to avoid excess nitrogen oxide.

Charles Mueller, a combustion scientist at Sandia National Laboratories in the US, thinks he has found a solution to this problem. Drawing inspiration from a Bunsen burner, he proposes equipping diesel fuel injectors with tiny Bunsen burner chimney equivalents. These small metal tubes would be installed a short distance from the injector nozzle hole and align with the fuel stream. Much like a Bunsen burner when it burns blue, this will ensure the fuel and air is more fully mixed and provide for better burning, but at the lower temperatures needed for nitrogen oxide dilution.

Mueller’s patented technology is called ducted fuel injection (DFI). There is already interest from industry and scientific research and testing is so far looking very encouraging.

Mueller himself feels that the large engines in ships and locomotives would be a good candidate for exploiting the benefits of DFI. For large engines like these, converting to electric is cost-prohibitive. DFI carries the additional benefit that it can be retrofitted to existing engines. This possibility makes it a technology that could bring enormous benefits in a range of applications. As there is no need to develop entirely new engines to exploit the benefits of Mueller’s breakthrough, retrofitting could be a potential game-changer for the trucking industry.

Clean diesel may be an oxymoron. However, it is clear that a range of technologies are making diesel cleaner, in relative terms. Ducted fuel injection is a breakthrough that has considerable promise. If hydrogen and electric trucks take longer to develop than the more optimistic forecasts might suggest, it is comforting to know that breakthroughs in diesel technology have the potential to deliver significant reductions in emissions.

Roger Brereton is head of sales at steering components manufacturer Pailton Engineering

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