1 / 40

Future of Marine Diesel Engines

Future of Marine Diesel Engines. John Deere Power Systems Deere & Co. 4045DFM 4045TFM. 6068TFM. 6081AFM. 6125AFM. Deere Power Systems Group Manufacturing Sites. Saran, France. Waterloo, Iowa. Dubuque, Iowa. P OWER T ECH 2.9 L, 4.5 L & 6.8 L. P OWER T ECH 8.1 L, 10.5 L, 12.5 L.

hallie
Télécharger la présentation

Future of Marine Diesel Engines

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Future ofMarine Diesel Engines John Deere Power Systems Deere & Co.

  2. 4045DFM 4045TFM 6068TFM 6081AFM 6125AFM

  3. Deere Power Systems Group Manufacturing Sites Saran, France Waterloo, Iowa Dubuque, Iowa POWERTECH 2.9 L, 4.5 L & 6.8 L POWERTECH 8.1 L, 10.5 L, 12.5 L POWERTECH 4.5 L & 6.8 L Torreon, Mexico Pune, India Series 300 Rosario, Argentina POWERTECH 4.5 L & 6.8 L Series 300

  4. Local Distributor Slide

  5. Robert Fulton’sLetter to an engine manufacturer in 1794

  6. Innovations Leading to Today’sMarine Diesel Engines 1800 - 1900 • 1807 Robert Fulton sails the paddlewheel steamboat Clermont, dubbed “Fulton’s Folly”, up the Hudson • 1839 John Ericsson invents the screw propeller • 1840 SS Great Britain (322 ft LOA) is the first screw driven iron ship to cross the Atlantic • 1876 Nikolaus Otto designs the first four stroke gasoline engine • 1886 Ottomobile is developed by Karl Benz and Gottlieb Daimler • 1886 First oil tanker, the “Gluckauf”, is built in England • 1892 Rudolph Diesel patents the compression ignition engine • 1894 Diesel's engine runs for the first time • 1899 Chris & Henry Smith (Chris Craft) put a gasoline engine into a recreational boat

  7. Innovations Leading to Today’sMarine Diesel Engines1900-1918 • 1900 Automobile is welcomed to New York City to bring relief from manure pollution • 1901 Oil Drilling begins in Persian Gulf region • 1912 Maiden voyage of the “Selandia”, the first diesel powered ocean going ship • 1913 Rudolph Diesel drowns at sea • 1913 Charles Kettering invents electric starter and engine generator at his Dayton Engineering Laboratories Company (DELCO) • 1916 General Motors buys DELCO and makes Kettering head of GM Laboratory • 1918 John Deere buys Waterloo Gasoline Engine Co.

  8. HISTORIC JOHN DEERE ENGINES “Waterloo Boy” • 1911“Waterloo Boy” (1.5 hp @ 500 rpm & cost $32) • In 1918, Deere & Co. acquired the Waterloo Gasoline Engine Co. in Waterloo, Iowa. This was John Deere’s first venture into internal combustion engines.

  9. HISTORICJOHN DEERE ENGINES Model “E”” • 1929 Model “E” Gas Engine (6 hp @ 600 rpm) • First engine to have John Deere name and green & yellow colors

  10. Innovations Leading to Today’sMarine Diesel Engines 1938-1959 • 1938 GM Laboratory develops Detroit Diesel Series 71 diesel engine • 1939 Carl Kiekhaefer starts Kiekhaefer Mercury • 1941 Thousands of Series 71 diesel engines built for W.W.II landing craft • 1949 Deere introduced their first diesel tractor • 1954 First production of turbo diesel trucks • 1959 Volvo Aquadrive designed by Jim Wynne is introduced

  11. HISTORIC JOHN DEERE ENGINES In 1962 the 6 cyl. 531 cu. in. Series 500 engines were introduced in the 5010 Tractor. In 1960 the 4 cyl. 254 cu. in. and 6 cyl. 381 cu. in. were introduced. These were the first Deere in-line multi-cylinder diesels.

  12. Innovations Leading to Today’sMarine Diesel Engines 1960 - 2000 • 1964 Cummins produces VT8-370 marine engine at 370 hp • 1972 Caterpillar introduces 3208 marine at 165 hp • 1975 to 1982 Deere engines marinized by American Marine, Alaska Diesel (Lugger) & Moteurs Baudouin (France) • 1988 First production Electronic Unit Injector (EUI) engine in a truck • 1991 Deere markets first Deere designed marine engines • 1996 EUI launched in off highway applications by John Deere

  13. HISTORIC JOHN DEERE ENGINES • In 1972 the first engines were sold to customers outside of John Deere. • In 1987 Deere Power Systems Group is formed in Waterloo, Iowa. • In 1995POWERTECHEngines were introduced. From 1978 - 1988 the 8 cyl. 955 cu. in. engine (V-8) Series 700 was produced.

  14. Marine Engine Power Growth

  15. Looking to the Future • Marine engine design in the future will be defined by engine emissions regulations

  16. Marine Engine Emissions Regulations • What is regulated? • NOx – Nitrous Oxides • VOC’s – Volatile Organic Compounds or hydrocarbons (HC) • CO – Carbon Monoxide • PM – Particulate Matter (soot)

  17. Marine Emissions Tiers • Tier I • 9.8 g/kW-hr NOx • 1.0 g/kW-hr PM • Tier II • 7.2 g/kW-hr NOx • 0.2 g/kW-hr PM • 5.0 g/kW-hr CO • Not-to-Exceed Zone limits

  18. Marine Emissions Tiers

  19. Marine Engine Tier I Emissions Standards • Bodensee Stage 2 (1996) • US EPA Recreational Rule for gasoline outboards (1999 model year) & personal watercraft (2000 model year) • US EPA under 37 kW Rule for diesel engines (1999) • International Maritime Organization MARPOL Annex VI (retroactive to 2000)

  20. NOx vs. PM Trade-off

  21. Technology Requiredto meet Tier I • Evolutionary Changes to Engine Design • Retarded Fuel Injection Timing • Fuel economy goes DOWN  • Heat rejection to coolant goes UP  • Longer cranking time when starting • Reentrant Piston Bowl Design • Combustion System Optimization • Tamperproof Emissions Adjustments • Sea Water Aftercooling for a few engines • A few engines dropped from production

  22. IMO MARPOL Annex VI Applications for EPA Voluntary Compliance Certificates being submitted

  23. Canadian Marine EngineEmissions Legislation • Canadian Environmental Protection Act (CEPA), 1999 • Environmental Performance Agreements • Marine Engine MOU • Outboard Motors & Personal Watercraft (PWC) • Voluntary compliance to US EPA Standards • Effective in 2001

  24. Pending US Marine EngineEmissions Legislation • US EPA Commercial Marine Rule for diesel engines (effective starting 2004) • US EPA Recreational Marine Rule for diesels and gasoline inboard engines • California Air Resources Board - Harbor Craft Workgroup • Houston-Galveston State Implementation Plan (SIP)

  25. Pending InternationalMarine EngineEmissions Legislation • Central Commission for Navigation on the Rhine (CCNR) in central Europe - effective January 1, 2002 • EC Recreational Craft Directive 94/25 may be effective by 2003 • IMO Tier II - no proposal yet

  26. Tier II Levels2004 to 2008 US EPA Commercial Diesel Rule Emission Limits for 6.8L to 15L liter engines* • 7.2 g/kW-hr NOx • 0.2 g/kW-hr PM • 5.0 g/kW-hr CO • Not-to-Exceed Zone limits * Other displacements have higher limits

  27. Tier II Technology • Engine Electronics • Higher Pressure Fuel Injection Systems • Sea Water Aftercooling • Closed vent systems

  28. Engine Electronics • Flexible Engine Control • Performance Optimized for Emissions • Output Engine Power for EPA In-Use NTE Zone Measurements • Compensation for Ambient Air & Fuel Temperature • Engine Protection Features More on Electronics Later!

  29. High Pressure Fuel Injection • Inject Fuel in a shorter time • More Precise & Flexible Injection Timing Control • Better Air / Fuel Mixing • Less Soot Formation

  30. Cool Intake Air • Sea Water Aftercooling for Lowest Possible Air Temperature into Cylinder • Reduces NOx, but causes other problems • “White Smoke” at startup & idle • Condensation in Intake Manifold

  31. Effect of Air Temperature into cylinderon Emissions and Fuel Economy

  32. Engine Aspiration & NOx Formation

  33. Closed Crankcase Vent System • Closed crankcase vent system • Vent Gases included in engine emissions By-pass Indicator

  34. How Will Tier II Affect You? • Sea Water Aftercooled engines have the lowest NOx potential • Engine Water Aftercooled engines probably will not meet Tier II emissions • Turbocharged only engines may not meet Tier II emissions • Naturally Aspirated engines must be derated to meet Tier II emissions

  35. Tier III Technology2008 & beyond • Advanced Turbocharging • Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) • Injection Timing Control • Combustion Chamber Refinements • Aftertreatment – deNOx catalysts • Soot Traps and Catalysts • Low Sulfur Fuel • Improved Lube Oil

  36. Advanced Turbocharging • Variable Geometry Turbo or Wastegate Turbo • Adjust Turbocharger Performance to Better Match Engine Needs • More Air at Low Speeds • Controlled Engine Acceleration • Optimize EGR Performance

  37. Exhaust Gas Recirculation(EGR) • Return small amounts of Exhaust Gas to intake when NOx formation is Highest • Prevents combination of Nitrogen and Oxygen • Cool vs. Hot EGR

  38. New Fuel for Tier III • New Diesel Fuel Technology • Water Injection • Water / Fuel Emulsion • Fuel Additives • Bio-Diesel • Soy Bean or Corn based • Natural Gas (CNG or LNG) Liquid Propane (LP) is Hazardous on a Boat

  39. The End of Part 1

More Related