1. Introduction
In 2021, the maritime transport sector of the European Union accounted for 3–4% of all EU CO
2 emissions, which are one of the main components of greenhouse gas emissions [
1]. To reduce CO
2, IMO purposefully introduced regulatory measures for newly built and operated ships [
2,
3]. In 2011, the Energy Efficiency Design Index (EEDI) was introduced for newly built ships, increasing energy efficiency through technological solutions while reducing emissions. Since 2023-01, ships in operation over 400 GT are indexed according to the Energy Efficiency Existing Ship Index (EEXI) and must meet the minimum requirements of the energy efficiency standard. Moreover, ships in operation over 5000 GT are obliged to collect and declare data of efficient energy use, and in case of insufficient energy efficiency assessment (CII), owners have to take corrective actions [
3]. Addressing the climate change issue, IMO updated their GHG reduction strategy in 2023, and aim to reduce GHG emissions by 70–80% by 2040 compared to 2008 levels, and to reach zero GHG by 2050 [
4]. In parallel, the EU has also set long-term targets for maritime transport to reduce GHG emissions by 90% by 2050 compared to 1990 levels according to SEC (2021) 562 directive [
1]. To achieve the set targets, a significant reduction of CO
2 emissions in maritime transport sector is required, mainly by increasing energy efficiency use and using renewable and low-carbon fuel (hydrogen, ammonia). Logistic, hydrodynamic, and technological measures can potentially reduce GHG emissions from ships by 5–20% using renewable and low-carbon-dioxide-generating fuel—up to 100%, according to DNV [
5]. In 2023-07, the EU adopted a regulation on additional measures related to the use of renewable and low-carbon fuels (FuelEU Maritime) [
1]. The envisaged measures will ensure that the greenhouse gas intensity of the fuel used in the maritime transport sector gradually decreases over time from 2% in 2025 to 80% in 2050.
Different evaluations have found that existing IMO, EEDI, and EEXI (CII) measures are insufficient to achieve ambitious EU and IMO targets. It is expected that the use of zero or almost zero GHG technologies and fuel in international fleets will reach at least 5% by 2030, according to the 2023 IMO strategy plan [
4]. The average operational age of ships in operation is 21.1 years in the economies of developed countries, and 28.6 years in the economies of developing countries [
6]. Recently, on average, 79% of newly built ships annually choose traditional fuel, while 98.4% of ships in operation use petroleum fuel [
7]. After evaluating the facts, it becomes obvious that the achievement of EU and IMO GHG reduction targets is related to retrofitting of newly built ships and operating ship power plants with renewable and low-carbon fuels such as ammonia.
Ammonia in shipping among renewable and low-carbon fuel species is assessed prospectively for the short-term 2025–2030 and the long-term 2050 period. Ammonia stores 50% more energy by volume than hydrogen [
8], which is important considering limited fuel tank volume on board. Ammonia is also valued positively from a decarbonization perspective, as its chemical elemental composition does not contain carbon atoms which lead to the formation of CO
2 emissions when fuel is burned. However, there are a number of problematic aspects to using ammonia in maritime transport: due to nitrogen atoms in the chemical composition of ammonia, NO
x emissions are more intensively formed during combustion than compared to diesel [
9]. In addition, a fraction of unburnt NH
3 emissions slip to the exhaust system during exhaust stroke. Ammonia emissions contribute to air pollution and can have detrimental effects on ecosystems, including acidification of soil and water bodies, which can harm plant and aquatic life. Moreover, ammonia emissions can lead to various human health issues. When individuals are exposed to elevated levels of ammonia over time or in concentrated forms, it can cause irritation and inflammation of the respiratory tract. Therefore, a solution to reduce these emissions is a priority in order to use ammonia in DE. Using ammonia in DE also requires solutions due to its unfavorable physical properties. In particular, ammonia combustion characteristics differ significantly from those of petroleum-based fuels and most renewable fuels (see
Table 1). Due to a low fuel cetane number (5–7 units) and high auto-ignition temperature (650 °C), ammonia ignition is possible at an engine compression ratio of 35:1 and more, which is unrealistic to achieve considering the geometrical parameters of marine engines [
10]. Therefore, to ensure ammonia combustion in diesel engines whose compression ratio usually reaches up to 20:1, pilot fuel with good auto-ignition characteristics is required (diesel, biodiesel).
Ammonia has a rapid and even kinetic combustion phase due to an efficiently mixed and evenly distributed ammonia and air mixture. On the other hand, it has more intense heat release compared to diesel, due to the kinetic ammonia combustion phase which leads to an increased maximum cyclic pressure (P
max). For example, with dual-fuel ratio D39/A61 (diesel 39% and ammonia 61%) [
12], maximum cycle pressure reaches 86.2 bar when D100—76.3 bar. This has a negative impact on mechanical and thermal piston-rod group part loading, which reduces engine reliability. Reviewed studies in the literature are divided into two categories of dual ammonia diesel fuel injection into the cylinder: low-pressure dual-fuel strategy (LPDF), when ammonia in gaseous phase is introduced into the cylinder through the gas valve at low 2–3 bar pressure together with compressed air to intake manifold; and high-pressure dual-fuel strategy (HPDF), when ammonia in liquid phase is directly injected into the cylinder at high pressure through a separate fuel injector. Studies show that in both cases, engine ITE is close to that of a diesel engine, and with a fuel ratio of D20/A80 (diesel 20%, ammonia 80%) with LPDF strategy, ITE increases by 3.5% [
13]. Nadimi et al. [
12] have also found that higher engine ITE is achieved using ammonia, and that the difference in ITE compared to diesel engine mode is 17% (D100 (100% diesel) ITE—32%; D16/A84 ITE—37.6%). Indicative thermal efficiency increases when the engine is running on ammonia using LPDF strategy due to several reasons. According to the authors of [
12], first of all, ammonia tends to have an ignition delay due to its high octane number and high autoignition temperature. Therefore, when transitioning to ammonia, an advanced start of diesel injection is necessary to achieve heat release characteristics similar to a diesel engine. Due to the advanced start of diesel injection, diesel has enough time to be evenly distributed in the combustion chamber. This results in a short and intense homogeneous heat release of the ammonia-diesel mixture. As a result, a lower combustion cycle temperature is achieved, leading to reduced heat losses through the cylinder walls to the cooling system. Heat loss decreased from 320 J/cycle when the engine was running only on diesel to 240 J/cycle at the fuel ratio A84/D16, when engine work did not change [
12]. Also, less heat was lost through exhaust system as the exhaust gas temperature at the fuel ratio A84/D16 decreased by 132 °C compared to D100 [
12]. Therefore, the distribution of the engine’s heat balance components towards an increase in thermal efficiency is taking place. Aaron Reiter et al. [
9] determined the highest ammonia diesel dual-fuel ratio at D5/A95 by energy value using LPDF strategy. However, engine fuel efficiency and ITE results under these conditions were very low, with ITE reaching 18.9%. Therefore, according to Aaron Reiter et al., this mode of engine operation is not rational. Nadimi et al. [
12] used a wide range of ammonia ratios (0–84%) in a dual-fuel balance using LPDF strategy. However, at a higher percentage of ammonia, according to the authors, the engine lost its starting properties and did not start. Numerical studies by Tie Li and Xinyi Zhou et al. [
13] also showed that at 90% ammonia in the dual-fuel balance, the combustion process became unstable when LPDF strategy was applied, and the mass fraction of unburnt NH
3 in the exhaust system increased more than six times. As a result, using LPDF strategy, the share of ammonia in the dual-fuel balance is limited to 80–84%. On the contrary, with HPDF strategy, the optimal proportion of ammonia in the dual-fuel balance is 95–97% [
13,
14]. In Tie Li and Xinyi Zhou et al., numerical studies [
13] using HPDF strategy at the fuel ratio A97/D3 ITE practically did not change, and reached 45.3% while at D100—45.4%. Using LPDF strategy and the ratio, A80/D20 ITE reached 47.0% [
13]. The increase of ITE is associated with lower heat losses to the cooling system due to the reduced interaction between the flame and cylinder walls close to top dead center (TDC) [
13].
In addition to positive increase of ITE, GHG harmful components and CO
2 emissions are also higher with LPDF strategy. Using LPDF, more CO
2 emissions are released during the combustion cycle than compared to HPDF, as LPDF has a relatively large share of pilot fuel (diesel) in the dual-fuel balance ~20%. The amount of released CO
2 emissions during combustion depends solely on injected diesel mass [
9,
13]. It was also observed that N
2O, one of the GHG components, decreases in parallel with the increase of ammonia ratio in the dual-fuel balance. In the literature [
12,
15], it is hypothesized that during ammonia combustion, N
2O from the elemental chemical composition of ammonia is formed mainly in low-temperature zones during expansion stroke when NH
3 stuck in the gap between piston crown and cylinder liner turns into NH
2 and reacts with NO
2. This means that unburnt NH
3 and N
2O emissions correlate [
15]. Numerical studies by Tie Li and Xinyi Zhou et al. [
16] evaluated the differences between low and high dual-fuel injection strategies. NO
x emissions were found to be on average three times higher with LPDF than with HPDF strategy. Meanwhile, unburnt NH
3 emissions using HPDF injection strategy reached ~0.02 mg/kWh, while LPDF resulted 10–480 mg/kWh, depending on the fuel injection start angle. In continued numerical studies, Tie Li and Xinyi Zhou et al. [
13], at fuel ratio A97/D3 using HPDF strategy, recorded NO
x emission levels approximately four times lower than at the fuel ratio A80/D20 with LPDF, and NH
3 emissions were also up to seven times lower. The reduction of NO
x emissions is associated with thermal deNO
x process of nitrogen oxides, during which active NH
2 radicals react with NO to form N
2 + OH at 1000–1400 K cylinder temperatures [
17]. The reduction of NH
3 emissions is attributed to more efficient combustion characteristics due to liquid ammonia penetration to the pilot fuel spray flame zone [
13]. As a result, HPDF compared to LPDF injection strategy does not make a significant difference in terms of ITE, but in terms of emissions, HPDF injection strategy emits less NH
3, NO
x, and CO
2 emissions in all cases. HPDF injection strategy also has the potential to reduce CO
2 and NO
x emissions compared to a diesel engine.
One of the important aspects of ongoing research is the arrangement of ammonia and diesel injector nozzle holes. The literature analysis shows that arrangement angle of diesel and ammonia nozzle holes has no significant effect on ITE, but ecological indicators differ. Tie Li and Xinyi Zhou et al. [
16] found that, when ammonia and diesel fuel injector nozzle holes are overlapped (0° angle), a more efficient combustion process takes place. As a result, ammonia penetrates more efficiently into the pilot fuel combustion zone from the start of injection, and the induction period (from the start of injection till combustion) is shorter, and due to which the emission level of NO
x and NH
3 is lower. Meanwhile, ITE practically did not change and reached 51.6% when nozzle holes were overlapping, and 51.8% when nozzle holes were separated [
16]. Valentin Scharl and Thomas Sattelmayer et al. [
14], in their experimental studies of ammonia and diesel nozzle holes’ arrangement influence on the induction period using HPDF injection strategy (2000 bar), also determined the optimal (0–7.5°) hole overlap range at which the shortest induction period and the most efficient fuel combustion, in terms of unburnt NH
3, were observed.
In summary, direct diesel engine transition to ammonia is limited due to ammonia’s unfavorable physical characteristics, specifically, high exhaust gas emissions. Therefore, solutions to improve energy efficiency and reduce exhaust gas emissions while the engine is operating with ammonia is necessary. The optimization of the combustion cycle primarily involves adjusting fuel injection pressure, injection phase, and duration. The evolution of trends in modern diesel engines is grounded in numerous theoretical and experimental studies and justifications. Therefore, the systematic solutions they offer, including the identification of the main optimized parameters and their determining factors, are also rational in the case of ammonia use. Since the period of strategic thermal efficiency parameters increase for diesel engines, studies [
18,
19,
20,
21] have shown that under the condition P
max = const, heat release forming in the diesel engine cylinder practically does not affect ITE. The main factor influencing ITE is the heat release process duration. Based on these principles, the optimization of DE combustion cycle towards reducing the combustion duration primarily involves increasing fuel injection pressure. The increase in maximum combustion pressure is constrained by adjusting fuel injection timing towards TDC while simultaneously raising compression ratio. This approach was executed in MTU 396 series engines. Increased injection pressure was matched by adjusting the start of fuel injection to 4° CAD before TDC, and an increase in compression ratio (CR) from 15 to 17.8. Consequently, a 20% reduction in heat release duration was achieved, which resulted in improved fuel efficiency and NO
x reduction by 35% [
21]. Thus, one of the most effective ways to influence heat release intensity is to increase fuel injection pressure. At the same time, increasing heat release intensity reduces combustion duration and increases combustion cycle dynamics and ITE. In parallel, adjusting the start of the injection angle closer to TDC, together with fuel injector design and parameters optimization, allows to improve ITE without the exceeded P
max limitation. Since the 1990s, a trend for optimizing the combustion process of market-leading diesel engines has emerged. During this period, studies were conducted on the influence of fuel injection pressure on fuel ignition and combustion dynamics [
22,
23,
24,
25]. Additionally, the ACE Company and the Japan Automotive Research Institute compared the effects of the duration and intensity of the initial fuel injection stage on air swirl parameters. Furthermore, comprehensive improvements were made to exhaust gas toxicity indicators by companies such as MTU, YaMZ, and Fev Motorentechnik GmbH & Co., KG [
22,
24,
26].
The application of combustion cycle optimization trends, such as advancing the start of pilot fuel injection, changing injection rate and pressure, and organizing multi-stage injection, have enabled market-leading companies (Wärtsilä, MAN B&W, Caterpillar, etc.) to develop dual-fuel engines with LNG. These advancements have allowed them to achieve thermal efficiency similar to diesel engines and reduce PM and NO
x emissions by up to 90% compared to diesel engines [
27,
28,
29]. Therefore, to increase ITE and reduce emissions by optimizing combustion cycle parameters, this research is based on fuel injection intensification by increasing injection pressure.
Considering the wide variety of diesel engines and models of ship power plants in operation, it is rational to base marine transport sector decarbonization with engine retrofitting based on numerical studies to reduce time and financial costs. Engine retrofitting for operation with other types of fuel by numerical methods is basically related to research and optimization of combustion cycle characteristics. Numerical research tasks for the ship’s main propulsion diesel engine’s operation on ammonia fuel are based on multi-zone mathematical models (MM), for example, using simulation software “AVL FIRE M”. The use of multi-zone MM allows us to study combustion cycle physical processes with sufficient accuracy for solving practical problems. Klaipeda University conducted comprehensive marine diesel engine decarbonization research, including solutions for the rational use of renewable and low-carbon fuels [
30,
31,
32], the use of secondary heat sources in engine cogeneration cycle [
33], etc.
In this article, the research of ammonia combustion was performed to identify physical combustion process conditions and to provide rational technological solutions for ammonia applicability in ship power plants. The novelty of this article lies in the organization of combustion process. Marine engines operate under different conditions compared to automotive engines. One significant difference is in how the fuel interacts with the engine components. Unlike automotive engines, where the fuel film along the cylinder walls is common, marine engines are designed to avoid direct contact between the fuel jet and the cylinder walls. This difference in design and operation significantly alters the combustion characteristics of marine engines. Therefore, the purpose of this article is to evaluate the changes in combustion cycle parameters and exhaust gas emissions for the ship’s propulsion diesel engine operating on ammonia, and to determine the limits of combustion cycle regulation parameters (NH3 injection intensity when increasing the injection pressure). At the time of writing, the authors are not aware of any similar published articles, making this approach unique in optimizing the ammonia combustion cycle. The presented research approach could provide valuable insights for combustion cycle optimization during the transition of marine diesel engines to ammonia, requiring minimal changes to the engine structure. In addition, the NH3 combustion cycle optimization strategy by injection intensification is related to optimization of the pilot diesel and ammonia injection phases, and is planned for continuous studies.