An overall
stoichiometric mixture of air, gaseous ammonia and gasoline
was metered into a single cylinder, variable compression ratio,
supercharged CFR engine at varying ratios of gasoline to ammonia.
The engine was operated such that the combustion was knock-free
with minimal roughness for all loads ranging from idle up to
a maximum load in the supercharge regime. For a given load,
speed, and compression ratio there was a range of ratios of
gasoline to ammonia for which knock-free, smooth firing was
obtained. This range was investigated at its roughness limit
and also at its knock limit. If too much ammonia was used, then
the engine fired with an excessive roughness. If too much gasoline
was used, then knock-free combustion could not be obtained while
the maximum brake torque spark advance was maintained. Stoichiometric
operation on gasoline alone was also investigated, for comparison.
It was found
that a significant fraction of the gasoline used in spark ignition
engines could be replaced with ammonia. Operation on mostly
gasoline was required near idle. However, mostly ammonia could
be used at high load. Operation on ammonia alone was possible
at some of the supercharged load points. Generally, the use
of ammonia or ammonia with gasoline allowed knock-free operation
at higher compression ratios and higher loads than could be
obtained with the use of gasoline alone. The use of ammonia/gasoline
allowed practical operation at a compression ratio of 12:1 whereas
the limit for gasoline alone was 9:1. When running on ammonia/gasoline
the engine could be operated at brake mean effective pressures
that were more than 50% higher than those achieved with the
use of gasoline alone. The maximum brake thermal efficiency
achieved with the use of ammonia/gasoline was 32.0% at 10:1
compression ratio and BMEP = 1025 kPa. The maximum brake thermal
efficiency possible for gasoline was 24.6% at 9:1 and BMEP =
570 kPa.