1. Introduction
In the section of marine transportation, the NG-diesel dual-fuel engine is one of the most popular engines for ocean-going vessels and river vessels due to its cleaner emission and significant economic benefit in LNG carriers. Against the background of reducing 50% of GHG (greenhouse gas) emissions from the shipping industry by 2050, improving energy efficiency is one of the hot spots [
1]. To improve energy efficiency, an accurate dual-fuel engine model is one of the key factors since the control strategy greatly affects energy efficiency. The widely accepted control-oriented engine models are specified for liquid diesel oil with direct injection or liquid gasoline with port injection. MAN 51/60DF dual-fuel engine can burn natural gas and diesel oil and can run in liquid fuel mode, gas fuel mode, and fuel sharing model. Its complexity makes the heat release rate difficult to calculate. It is the core sub-model in the engine model. Thus, we propose a Wiebe-based heat release rate model. It can be used to calculate the heat release rate for the dual-fuel engine.
The heat release rate is one of the key parameters of combustion, but it could not be measured directly up to now. One way to obtain its value is to calculate it from the measured in-cylinder pressure according to the thermal dynamic theory [
2,
3]. The other way to obtain its value is to calculate it from the combustion model. Over decades of development, there are various types of combustion models, such as the fractal-based combustion model [
4], the mixing-controlled combustion (MCC) model for DI diesel engines [
5,
6], the quasi-dimensional combustion models [
7,
8], and the Wiebe empirical model [
9]. The fractal-based combustion model assumes that the main part of the heat release is due to the turbulent premixed flame propagation. It considers the flame front to be a wrinkled spherical surface centered in the spark plug location. The rate of heat release is the rate of flame front propagation. By describing the physics of the small scales of turbulence on the basis of the phenomenological concept of vortex cascade and fractal theory, the fractal-based combustion model can simulate both premixed and non-premixed turbulent flames [
10]. MCC considers the DI diesel engine combustion as the combination of premixed-controlled combustion and diffusion-controlled combustion. For the premixed-controlled combustion, the rate of heat release is determined by the rate of chemical kinetic reaction. It is correlated by a Wiebe function. For the diffusion combustion, the rate of heat release relies on the rate of fuel–air mixing and is a function of the available fuel quantity and the turbulent kinetic energy density. The representative quasi-dimensional models are the Cummins gaseous jet model and the Hiroyasu oil droplet model. The Hiroyasu oil droplet model divides the spray into zones in the radial and axial directions and tracks the evolution of the packets over time. In each packet, only fuel vapor reacts with the surrounding air. The fuel droplets in liquid state are not ready for combustion. The mass of fuel burned in a packet is determined by the mass of fuel vapor and air. It is limited by the chemical reaction rate [
11]. The Wiebe empirical model considers that the rate of heat release can be directly correlated by combustion duration, combustion start crank angle, and a combustion rate distribution factor (also called combustion shape parameter). The Wiebe model discards the complex combustion distribution in space and in time. It keeps the key factors and simplifies the three-dimensional properties into zero-dimension. Since the Wiebe model is an empirical model, it can be used for various types of engines and fuel types. With fine calibration, it can generate excellent accuracy. When it is used in a 0D diesel engine model, it can also meet the real-time requirement. Tang, Y. [
12] optimized the in-cylinder process and obtained the real-time execution of a marine low speed diesel engine.
The phenomenology combustion models are too complex for control applications. Some of the parameters are difficult to determine. Generally, these models are developed for specified engine types, and they are sensitive to the fuel types. The Wiebe model is the most widely used model due to its simple form, fast calculation speed, and nonsensitivity to fuel types and engine types [
9]. It has already been widely used in advanced combustion concept analyses, such as the HCCI [
13,
14], RCCI [
15], and PPC [
16], in alternative fuel investigations, such as the biodiesel [
17] and hydrogen [
18,
19], in control strategy developments, such as the injection strategy [
16,
20] and phasing control [
21,
22,
23], in knocking avoidance [
19,
24], in fault diagnosis [
25], in propulsion system dynamics research [
26], in hydraulic-free piston engine [
27], and so on. Sui, W. B. [
21,
22,
23] developed a control-oriented model for a dual-fuel engine and an engine with VGT and EGR to test their adaptive control strategy and feedforward control strategy for combustion phasing control. In their model, the Wiebe model is used to predict the CA50. Liu, J. L. [
28,
29] compared the model performance in peak firing pressure, mass fraction of burned fuel, and heat release rate using a single Wiebe, a double Wiebe, and a triple Wiebe for the natural-gas-spark-ignited diesel engine. It concluded that the triple Wiebe was more suitable for his research engine. Xiang, L. [
24] used a zero-dimension two-zone model and a Wiebe heat release rate model to investigate the effects of compression ratio, air–fuel equivalence ratio, and ignition timing on the knocking performance of a spark ignition natural gas engine. They also investigated the effect of pilot fuel energy on the knocking performance of a compression ignition dual-fuel engine. Sapra, H. [
18] compared the performance of the Seiliger model and double-Wiebe model on a spark ignition hydrogen–natural-gas engine. This work showed that the Wiebe model has poor prediction capability. Diaz, G. J. A. [
19] investigated the effects of hydrogen and methane proportions, compression ratio, and equivalence ratio on the knock occurrence crank angle, the combustion duration, and the compression polytropic coefficient in a cooperative fuel research engine. The mass fraction of burned fuel was fitted with a Wiebe function. Kozlov, A. [
30] investigated the effect of pilot fuel mass, pilot fuel injection pressure, pilot fuel injection timing, and excess air ratio on the combustion process of a heavy-duty dual-fuel diesel-ignited gas engine. The Wiebe model was used for heat release rate calculation at each operating point. From these fellow works, it can be seen that the Wiebe model is still active and is so widely used.
MAN 51/60DF combines the port injection and direct injection and the gas fuel and the liquid fuel in one. This fact prevents the existing combustion models from being used directly for the engine’s overall performance calculation. As an inborn drawback of the Wiebe model, each set of parameters corresponds solely to an engine load. It cannot be used in all modes and loads. To overcome this drawback, much research work has been carried out. Mikulski, M. [
31,
32] created a fast and reliable dual-fuel combustion model to be used for model-based control development. The diesel burning rate was fitted by a Wiebe-based function. It was modified as the linear relationship of combustion duration with fuel oil consumption. The gaseous fuel combustion was modeled as single-step macro-reaction kinetics. Loganathan, S. [
33] used a Wiebe function to investigate the heat release rate of a DME-fueled diesel engine. All Wiebe parameters were modified by LCF (load correction factor) and OCF (oxygenate correction factor). LCF is the ratio of diesel mass flow rates between the optimum load and others. OCF is the ratio of mass flow rates between DME and diesel at identical power output. Yang, T. H. [
16] used a linear algorithm to identify the double-Wiebe parameters so that it could be used to optimize the fuel injection and achieved the benefits of partially premixed combustion. Stoumpos, S. [
34] used a database to store the parameters of the triple-Wiebe function. Christopher Kim Blomberg [
35] used a three-stage heat release model to investigate the HCCI combustion performance. It combines LTR (low temperature heat release), ITR (intermediate temperature heat release), and HTR (high temperature heat release) into one model. The LTR and HTR are Wiebe functions. The ITR is a Wiebe-like exponential function. Sedigheh Tolou [
36] used a double-Wiebe function to account for the rapid initial premixed combustion and a gradual diffusion-like state of combustion for a GDI engine. Variables of the Wiebe function were correlated to derive a predictive combustion model.
Researchers, in addition to those mentioned above, have conducted much research on the combustion model development, but there is a lack of a control-oriented models that can calculate the overall performance of the dual-fuel engine under all operating modes and loads. The Wiebe model will be one of the most suitable candidates for the control-oriented heat release rate model of the dual-fuel engine. As it can only be used in a load, the Woschni/Anisit model was specified for diesel engines, and an unnamed model was specified for gasoline engines to extend the load range of the Wiebe model. However, there is no publicly acceptable solution for dual-fuel engines. In addition, there are two more factors, the fuel type and the fuel ratio, introduced into the dual-fuel engine model. This makes the dual-fuel engine model more complex. To solve this problem, the SL (standard linear) model is proposed. It correlates the Wiebe parameters on the basis of the linear functions in liquid fuel mode and gas fuel mode. In fuel sharing mode, it combines the model in liquid fuel mode and that in gas fuel mode. Four types of combinations in fuel sharing mode and replacement by Woschni/Anisit model in liquid fuel mode and gas fuel mode are further discussed. Results show that the SL model is accurate for the dual-fuel engine. It makes the dual-fuel engine simulation in all operating modes and loads possible with only a single model and a single set of parameters.
In this paper, the specifications and attributes related to our study of the dual-fuel engine are introduced first. Then, the modeling hypothesis and definition of the proposed model are presented. The next three sections present the process and result of the model validation and discussion. Finally, a summary and a conclusion are given. The hypothesis and the proposed model are proven to be feasible and applicable.
3. Ideas for the SL Model and Validation
The general single-Wiebe heat release rate model is shown in Equation (1). For a specified type of engine and fuel, parameters in the Wiebe function are different in different loads. A set of parameters can only be used in a load.
To extend the Wiebe model to different loads, Woschni, G. and Anisit, F. modified the combustion duration
and combustion distribution factor
for the diesel engine, as shown in Equations (2) and (3). This model requires a set of validated parameters as the reference values.
The subscript 0 denotes the reference parameters, and they have been well validated. is the air–fuel ratio; is the revolution speed; is the ignition delay; and and are the pressure and temperature at the compression beginning, respectively.
In the quasi-dimensional combustion model, the fuel combustion rate is proportional to the fuel concentration and oxygen concentration, as shown in Equation (4).
It can be inferred from Equation (4) that more time is needed when there is more fuel that needs to be burned. Discarding the complex processes during combustion, we suppose that the duration of combustion depends mainly on the amount of injected fuel. If the duration is expressed in terms of crank angle, the combustion duration can be directly derived from the revolution speed, as shown in Equation (5).
Therefore, the combustion duration can be regarded as the function of the amount of fuel injected into each cylinder and the revolution speed of crankshaft, as shown in Equation (6).
In gas fuel mode, the fuel gas and air are well mixed. Thus, its combustion rate is limited by the rate of chemical reaction. Compared with the liquid fuel mode, since there is no fuel vapor preparation, the combustion duration in gas fuel mode will be shorter. The angle difference is assumed to be a constant value at the same load. Thus, the combustion duration in gas fuel mode can be derived from the value in liquid fuel mode, as shown in Equation (7).
As the engine runs at a fixed speed, it has almost the same injection pressure. Therefore, the injected fuel per crank angle can be considered equal at different loads. The injection duration is longer than the ignition delay. During the ignition delay, the amount of injected fuel per crank angle at low load and heavy load is almost equal. Then, the amount of fuel vapor after injection can be considered to vary only with the thermal history of compression. The thermal history of compression can be measured by the integral of the in-cylinder temperature from the beginning of compression to the beginning of combustion. The total injected fuel is varied with different loads. When the combustion rate distribution is described in crank angle, it will additionally be affected by the engine revolution speed. In summary, the combustion distribution factor can be affected by the thermal history during the compression, the total injected fuel, and the revolution speed, as shown in Equation (8).
In gas fuel mode, assuming a similar combustion rate at the beginning of combustion from light load to heavy load, the ratio of burned fuel at the beginning will be smaller at heavy load than that at light load. Therefore, the combustion distribution factor will be smaller at a heavy load than at a light load. As the combustion duration is shorter and the combustion rate is greater in gas fuel mode, the combustion distribution factor will be smaller in this mode. Thus, the combustion distribution factor in gas fuel mode can be described in Equation (9).
The ignition delay
is defined as the crank angle interval from the fuel injection to the beginning of combustion. Thus, the angle of combustion beginning can be derived from injection timing and ignition delay, as shown in Equation (10).
The timing of fuel injection is controlled by the fuel pump in liquid fuel mode. The timing of ignition oil injection is controlled by ECU in gas fuel mode. The value of combustion beginning angle will be regular in liquid fuel mode and will be irregular in gas fuel mode. When the engine load increases from light to heavy, the internal energy of the working medium gradually increases during the compression process. The higher compression temperature results in more rapid evaporation after fuel injection. Thus, the suitable fuel vapor for auto-ignition will be formed in a shorter time at heavy load. Considering the same injection timing, the combustion beginning angle will be advanced, according to Equation (10). Thus, the combustion beginning angle can be modeled as a function of engine load, as shown in Equation (11).
For the fuel sharing model, the three Wiebe parameters are assumed to be a linear combination of the values in liquid fuel mode and gas fuel mode. On the basis of these assumptions, the parameter models of the dual-fuel engine can be established, as shown in Equations (12)–(14).
As the engine runs at a constant speed, the effect of speed at different loads can be neglected. For the four-stroke medium speed engine, the effect of the temperature history on the combustion distribution factor during the compression will be much less than the effect of the quantity of burned fuel. For the constant speed engine, the engine power is directly related to the injected fuel, and it is nearly a linear relationship. Thus, we assumed these functions are linear. Then, the parameter models of the dual-fuel engine can be rewritten, as shown in Equations (15)–(17). This model is called the SL model.
To validate our proposition, a zero-dimensional two-zone model is used. As the focus is on the heat release rate model, the engine cylinders, intake manifold, and exhaust manifold are modeled only on AVL BOOST, and the turbocharger model is omitted. The combustion-related performance parameters, such as the thermal parameters and NOx emissions, are included. The air cooler outlet cross-section and the turbine inlet cross-section are selected as the inlet and outlet boundaries, respectively. Since the exhaust manifold temperature is not measured in the shop test, the turbine inlet temperature is used instead. The details of engine modeling can be found in our previous work and peer literature [
12,
37,
38,
39,
40]. The 100% load is selected as the reference load. For a further discussion, four types of combinations in fuel sharing mode and replacement of the correlation function are studied. The idea for this study is presented in
Figure 1.
4. Model Validation in Liquid Fuel Mode
4.1. Wiebe Parameters according to the SL Model
In order to validate our assumption, the Wiebe parameters for dual-fuel engine running in liquid fuel mode are given in
Table 2. They are given according to our experience in model calibration and the rules we analyzed above. In
Table 2, the crank angle at the top dead center is defined as zero.
is the value without the correction of VIT.
The fuel injection system of the dual-fuel engine contains a variable injection timing (VIT) mechanism. According to the engine test report approved by LR (Lloyd’s Register of Shipping), CCS (China Classification Society), and RINA (Registro Italiano Navale), the VIT reading values are −20 at 50% load and 75% load and +40 at 25% load, 85% load, 100% load, and 110% load. Although the actual crank angle corresponding to the VIT value is not known, it is certain that the 25% load, 85% load, 100% load, and 110% load have the same injection timing, and the 50% load and 75% load also have the same injection timing. The difference in VIT values is 60. If +4 crank angles are assumed to correspond to the 60 VIT value, then the combustion beginning angles at 50% load and 75% load should be −3 and −4, respectively.
4.2. Performance Validation of the SL Model
Since the SL model is specified for the dual-fuel engine performance calculation, the performance of the engine is used for the validation of the SL model. The performance of the engine model is given in
Table 3 and
Figure 2. In
Table 3,
M stands for the measured value,
C stands for the calculated values,
is the single-cylinder injected fuel per cycle,
P is the engine shaft power,
is the peak fire pressure,
is the intake air flow rate,
is the exhaust gas outlet temperature,
is the exhaust manifold temperature, and
is the NOx-specific mass flow rate. The symbol
E is the error between the calculated value and the measured value, as Equation (18) shows.
The RMSE is the root mean square error. It is defined in Equation (19).
In
Table 3, the measured value of the pressure is the gauge pressure. The calculated value of the pressure is the absolute pressure. For the calculation of the error and the RMSE, the gauge pressure is converted to the absolute pressure by adding one atmospheric pressure.
According to the data in
Table 3, it shows excellent overall performance. For all the parameters, their errors are within ±4% in all the considered loads, and many are even within ±1%. All the calculated parameters are accurate. According to
Figure 2, it can be seen that the injected fuel per cylinder
, the engine shaft power
P, the peak firing pressure
, and the intake air flow rate
are nearly linearly varied with the engine load. However, the calculated exhaust gas outlet temperature
is poorer in value prediction than the other parameters. However, the calculated exhaust manifold temperature
shows higher accuracy than
in both trend prediction and value prediction. In an intuitive sense, the
and the
should have similar accuracy since the exhaust gas entering the exhaust manifold is the same gas. In fact, the exhaust gas temperature is difficult to model. For two-stroke and four-stroke engines, the exhaust process occupies only a portion of an engine cycle, approximately 40%. During this period, the exhaust gas temperature changes rapidly, but the temperature measured by sensor lags far behind the actual temperature because of the existence of thermal inertia. At the same time, a portion of the internal energy is converted to the kinetic energy near the place of the exhaust temperature sensor. Then, this portion of kinetic energy is converted back to internal energy at the exhaust manifold. It is a challenge for a model to truly play back the heat exchange process between the temperature sensor and its surrounding gas. The calculation method is not given in BOOST. However, there are generally three methods for calculating the exhaust gas temperature, namely the time-based average temperature model, the flow-based average temperature model, and the energy-based average temperature model. The exhaust gas temperatures calculated by the three models are inconsistent with each other and have a certain deviation from the measured exhaust gas temperature.
According to the above analysis, the calculated performance of the engine model using the SL model is generally well matched with the actual engine performance. It demonstrates that the SL model is suitable for control-oriented dual-fuel engine models.
To give insight into the heat release of the dual-fuel engine, the curves of heat release distribution and the heat release rate at 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100% load are presented in
Figure 3. In this figure, the heat release rate curve is the product of Wiebe function and injected fuel per cylinder. The combustion beginning of all the curves is shifted to the zero crank angle.
According to the curves of heat release distribution, it can be seen that as the load increases, the peak value of the curve decreases, but the rate of decline slows down. It can also be seen that the rate of fuel-burned mass to the total mass in the early combustion decreases when the load increases. This is because there is more fuel that needs to be burned at heavy loads. According to the curves of the heat release rate, it can be seen that as the load increases, the maximum value increases and occurs later. However, the heat release rate at the early crank angle remains almost constant for all the loads. These characteristics of this heat release model are consistent with the actual trend.
4.3. Further Discussion of the Woschni/Anisits Model
In order to further investigate the performance of the Woschni/Anisits model (WA model), the Wiebe parameters are also calculated using the WA model, as shown in
Table 4. The 100% load is the reference load. From the data in
Table 4, it can be seen that the calculated combustion duration is inconsistent with the actual trend and has no obvious regularity. The combustion distribution factor is almost linear with the engine load.
In
Table 4, the air–fuel equivalence ratio is calculated by the air mass flow rate and fuel equivalent air mass flow rate, as Equation (20) shows.
Since there are no measured values for the pressure and the temperature at the beginning of compression, the calculated values from the dual-fuel engine model are used instead. As the calculation for ignition delay will introduce other parameters and there is no widely accepted model, the ratio of ignition delay is set to 1. The WA model has no method to calculate the combustion beginning angle. It retains the same values as the SL model.
In order to test the performance of the WA model, the same engine model is used, but the Wiebe parameters are derived from the WA model. All the factors in the engine model remain the same as that in the SL model. Results are shown in
Table 5.
From the view of the parameters at single load, the maximal error of the power prediction is 1.62% at 85% load. It is −3.16% for the peak firing pressure at 25% load, 2.68% for the mass flow rate at 25% load, 4.84% for the exhaust gas temperature at 25% load, −4.12% for the exhaust manifold at 110% load, and 13.09% for the NOx emission at 25% load. The mass of injected fuel is the input parameter. Its value is assigned.
From the view of the RMSE of each parameter, the NOx emission has the maximum RMSE, approximately 9.79. The second is the exhaust gas temperature, approximately 2.62. Then, it is the exhaust manifold temperature, approximately 2.26. The RMSE of mass flow rate from the intake manifold to the cylinder is 1.94, and the RMSE of peak firing pressure is 1.75. Additionally, the RMSE of the engine power is 0.91. From the data, it can be seen that the NOx emission has the maximum error. This is caused directly by the temperature difference in the cylinder and indirectly by the heat release rate.
From the view of the RMSE of each load, it can be observed that the 25% load has the largest root mean square error, followed by the 50% load. Under both loads, their RMSEs are significantly higher than the others. This fact indicates that the WA model is more accurate under moderate to heavy loads than under light loads. In general, the WA model provides a good performance prediction for all the parameters under all the loads.
The heat release characteristics of the engine with the WA model are presented in
Figure 4. The trends of the heat release distribution and heat release rate are almost the same as those of the engine with the SL model. However, the values are different in the two models. The combustion duration at 25% load is almost equal to that at 100% load in the WA model. This may be unreasonable. At 25% load, more than 50% of the fuel burns in 25% time of combustion. At 100% load, approximately 30% of the fuel burns in 25% time of combustion.
According to the curves of heat release rate, the heat release rate at 25% load is much greater than that at 100% load. It seems that combustion knock is apt to occur at 25% load rather than at 100% load. This contradicts the common principle of combustion. The heat release rate is proportional to the concentration of fuel and oxygen. The concentrations of fuel and oxygen at 25% load are lower than those at 100% load. The heat release rate at 25% load should be lower than that at 100% load.
8. Conclusions
In our simulator development, there is a fixed-speed four-stroke NG-diesel dual-fuel engine that is able to run in liquid fuel mode, gas fuel mode, fuel sharing mode, and backup mode. As the current control-oriented heat release rate model is specifically used for diesel engines or gasoline engines or gas engines, there is a lack of a commonly accepted heat release model that can be used for the dual-fuel engine operating at all the modes and loads. On the basis of our experience and practice, a Wiebe-based heat release rate model is used. In order to make the Wiebe model available for the dual-fuel engine, the Wiebe parameters are assumed to be linear functions, and they are modeled. To validate our hypothesis and models, the Wiebe parameters in liquid fuel mode and gas fuel mode are given, four types of combinations in fuel sharing model are discussed, and the engine performance is checked and analysed. Results show that the proposed SL model is a well-performing model. The following conclusions can be derived from this study.
The proposed SL model shows high accuracy and can be used for control-oriented dual-fuel engine models. In the liquid fuel mode, the errors of all the parameters are within ±4%, and many are even within ±1%. Its average RMSE is 1.45% for all the considered loads. In the gas fuel mode, the errors of almost all the parameters are within ±5%. Its average RMSE is 2.22% for all the considered loads. In the fuel sharing mode, the errors of all the parameters are within ±5% for Case 2. Its RMSE is 2.53%. For the fixed-speed four-stroke NG-diesel dual fuel engine, the Wiebe parameters can be modeled as a linear function. The SL model is accurate for control-oriented applications.
The SL model is able to generate Wiebe parameters that are better than the carefully tuned parameters. In fuel sharing mode, four types of combinations and two cases of comparisons are investigated. For the four types of combinations, the heat release rate in fuel sharing mode is derived from the heat release rate models in liquid fuel mode and gas fuel mode. For Case 5 and Case 6, the heat release rate in fuel sharing mode is derived separately from the carefully tuned Wiebe parameters and carefully tuned engine parameters. For the SL model, the RMSE of Case 4 is 0.03% lower than that in case 5. For the WA model, the RMSE of Case 4 is 0.08% lower than that in Case 5, and the RMSE of Case 2 is 0.10% lower than that in Case 5. The model generated Wiebe parameters are comparable to the carefully tuned Wiebe parameters.
The WA model is not suitable for engine models that require NOx-emission-related parameters. In the liquid fuel mode, the errors of the NOx emission are within ±14%, and other thermal parameters are within ±5%. Its average RMSE is 2.92% for all the considered loads. The RMSE of the NOx emission is 9.79%. For other thermal parameters, it is within 6%. In the gas fuel mode, the errors of the NOx emission are within ±66%, and other thermal parameters are within ±12%. Its average RMSE is 9.07% for all the considered loads. The RMSE of the NOx emission is 45.20%. For other thermal parameters, it is within 6%. The error of NOx emission is much higher than that of the other parameters. This is the result of the inappropriate heat release rate model.