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A Study of the Theoretical Potential of Thermochemical Exhaust Heat Recuperation for Internal Combustion Engines...

by Veerathu K Chakravarthy, Charles S Daw, Josh A Pihl, James C Conklin
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
Publisher Location
United States of America
Conference Name
The 2010 Technical Meeting of the Central States Section of the Combustion Institute
Conference Location
Champaign, Illinois, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
Central States Section of the Combustion Institute- Local host is University of Illinois
Conference Date
-

We present a detailed thermodynamic analysis of thermochemical recuperation (TCR) applied to an idealized internal combustion engine with single-stage work extraction. Results for several different fuels are included. For a stoichiometric mixture of methanol and air, TCR can increase the estimated ideal engine Second Law efficiency by about 3% for constant pressure reforming and over 5% for constant volume reforming. For ethanol and isooctane the estimated Second Law
efficiency increases for constant volume reforming are 9% and 11%, respectively. The Second Law efficiency improvements from TCR result primarily from the higher intrinsic exergy of the reformed fuel and pressure boost associated with gas mole increase. Reduced combustion irreversibility may also yield benefits for future implementations of combined cycle work extraction.