Fuel/Engine Interactions

Title: Fuel/Engine Interactions
Author: Gautam Kalghatgi
ISBN: 0768064589 / 9780768064582
Format: Hard Cover
Pages: 272
Publisher: SAE
Year: 2013
Availability: In Stock

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Conventional fossil fuels will constitute the majority of automotive fuels for the foreseeable future but will have to adapt to changes in engine technology. Unconventional transport fuels such as biofuels, gas-to-liquid fuels, compressed natural gas, and liquid petroleum gas will also play a role. Hydrogen might be a viable transport fuel if it overcomes barriers in production, transport, storage, and safety and/or if fuel cells become viable.

This book opens by considering these issues and then introduces practical transport fuels. A chapter on engine deposits follows, which is an important practical topic about how fuels affect engines that is not usually considered in other books.

The next three chapters discuss auto-ignition phenomena in engines. The auto-ignition resistance of fuels is the most important fuel property since it limits the efficiency of spark ignition engines and determines the performance of compression ignition engines. Moreover, the manufacture of fuels is primarily driven by the need to meet auto-ignition quality demands set by fuel specifications. The final chapter considers the implications for future fuels.

The book covers the many important ways that fuels and engines interact and why and how fuels will need to change to meet the requirements of future engines, as well as the implications for fuels manufacture and specifications.

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Preface

Chapter 1 : Introduction : Outlook for Energy and Transport Fuels
Chapter 2 : Manufacture, Composition, and Properties of Practical Fuels for Internal Combustion Engines
Chapter 3 : Deposits in Internal Combustion Engines
Chapter 4 : Fuel Effects on Autoignition in Premixed Systems - Knock in Spark Ignition Engines and Combustion in Homogeneous Charge Compression Ignition Engines
Chapter 5 : Preignition and Super-Knock in Turbocharged Spark Ignition Engines
Chapter 6 : Fuel Effects on Compression Ignition Combustion-Is Low-Octane Gasoline the Best Fuel for Advanced Diesel Engines?
Chapter 7 : Implications for Future Transport Fuels

Abbreviations
Index
About the Author