The fuel valve design was
changed a few years ago from a conventional type to the mini-sac type. The aim
was to reduce the sac volume in the fuel nozzle and curb dripping, thus
improving combustion; introducing the mini-sac valves reduced the sac volume to
approximately one third of the original (see the chapter on Fuel Injection).
To improve combustion even further,
however, a new slide-type valve was introduced for all large bore engines,
completely eliminating the sac volume (see the chapter on Exhaust Emissions and
Control). A significant improvement in combustion is accompanied by reduced
NOx, smoke and particulate emissions. The reduced particulates also improve the
cylinder condition, and the wear rates of cylinder liner, piston rings and ring
grooves are also generally lower with slide-type fuel valves. Slide-type valves
were introduced on the K98MC engine from the beginning, their positive effect
confirmed on the testbed. With fuel nozzles optimized with respect to heat
distribution and specific fuel consumption, the NOx emission values associated
with this engine are described as very satisfactory.
The increased mean effective pressure ratings of modern
engines require increased flow areas throughout the fuel valve which, in turn,
leads to increased sac volumes in the fuel nozzle itself and a higher risk of
after-dripping. Consequently, more fuel from the sac volume may enter the
combustion chamber and contribute to the emission of smoke and unburned
hydrocarbons as well as to increased deposits in the combustion chamber. The
relatively large sac volume in a standard design fuel nozzle thus has a
negative influence on the formation of soot particles and hydrocarbons. The
so-called mini-sacfuel valve introduced by MAN B&W Diesel incorporates a
conventional conical spindle seat as well as a slide inside the fuel nozzle.
The mini-sac leaves the flow conditions in the vicinity of the nozzle holes
similar to the flow conditions in the conventional fuel nozzle. But its much
reduced sac volume—only about 15 per cent that of the conventional fuel
valve—has demonstrated a positive influence on the cleanliness of the
combustion chamber and exhaust gas outlet ducts. Such valves also reduce the
formation of NOx during combustion. A new type of fuel valve—essentially
eliminating the sac volume— was subsequently developed and introduced by MAN
B&W Diesel as standard to its larger low speed engines (Figure 3.9). The
main advantages of this slide-type fuel valve are reduced emissions of NOx, CO,
smoke and unburned hydrocarbons as well as significantly fewer deposits inside
the engine. A positive effect on the cylinder condition in general is reported.
Applying slide fuel valves to a 12K90MC containership engine yielded a 40 per
cent reduction in smoke (BSN10) compared with the minisac valved engine, while
hydrocarbons and CO were reduced by 33
per cent and 42 per cent, respectively, albeit from a low level. NOx was
reduced by 14 per cent, while the fuel consumption remained virtually unchanged
and with a slight reduction at part load.
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