Madeleine L.
Wright
a and
Alastair C.
Lewis
*b
aDepartment of Chemistry, University of York, Heslington, York, YO105DD, UK
bNational Centre for Atmospheric Science, University of York, Heslington, York, YO105DD, UK. E-mail: ally.lewis@ncas.ac.uk
First published on 21st July 2022
As countries seek ways to meet climate change commitments, hydrogen fuel offers a low-carbon alternative for sectors where battery electrification may not be viable. Blending hydrogen with fossil fuels requires only modest technological adaptation, however since combustion is retained, nitrogen oxides (NOx) emissions remain a potential disbenefit. We review the potential air quality impacts arising from the use of hydrogen–diesel blends in heavy-duty diesel engines, a powertrain which lends itself to hydrogen co-fuelling. Engine load is identified as a key factor influencing NOx emissions from hydrogen–diesel combustion in heavy-duty engines, although variation in other experimental parameters across studies complicates this relationship. Combining results from peer-reviewed literature allows an estimation to be made of plausible NOx emissions from hydrogen–diesel combustion, relative to pure-diesel combustion. At 0–30% engine load, which encompasses the average load for mobile engine applications, NOx emissions changes were in the range −59 to +24% for a fuel blend with 40 e% hydrogen. However, at 50–100% load, which approximately corresponds to stationary engine applications, NOx emissions changes were in the range −28 to +107%. Exhaust gas recirculation may be able to reduce NOx emissions at very high and very low loads when hydrogen is blended with diesel, and existing exhaust aftertreatment technologies are also likely to be effective. Recent commercial reporting on the development of hydrogen and hydrogen–diesel dual fuel combustion in large diesel engines are also summarised. There is currently some disconnection between manufacturer reported impacts of hydrogen-fuelling on NOx emissions (always lower emissions) and the conclusions drawn from the peer reviewed literature (frequently higher emissions).
Environmental significanceIn sectors considering the blending of hydrogen with fossil fuels for decarbonisation, policy and technical decisions should, as a minimum, ensure that NOx emissions which impact health and ecosystems do not increase. We find that hydrogen–diesel fuel blends, if used in lower load construction machinery and heavy goods vehicles could lead to a reduction in NOx (and PM2.5) emissions compared to pure diesel. However, if used in other sectors with high loads, such as electrical generators (e.g. ‘diesel farms’), NOx emissions could be higher than pure diesel, if not additionally abated. End use specific research and testing is required such that the outcome of any hydrogen-blending climate policy also delivers optimal air quality outcomes. |
Hydrogen fuelling is a potential method for decarbonising diesel engines used in heavy-duty applications, offering similar refuelling and versatility characteristics as diesel.7,8 As an alternative to pure diesel, hydrogen can either be combusted or used in a fuel cell. Hydrogen fuel cells (HFCs) are the most environmentally beneficial option from an end-use emissions perspective since their only by-product is liquid water. HFC passenger vehicles and buses are currently in use in small numbers, but more widespread uptake in buses, rail and HGVs is anticipated by 20309,10 as they become more cost competitive with diesel.11 Plans for the use of hydrogen to decarbonise NRMM and industrial processes are less developed. Combustion of hydrogen appears a likely short and medium-term end-use, due to simpler technological transformation requirements and lower hydrogen fuel purity requirements.9,12,13
Although there are many significant barriers to the development of a hydrogen economy, the UK government has recently doubled its low-carbon hydrogen production pledge to 10GW by 2030.14 It hopes for widespread use in heavy-duty transport, industry, power and heating sectors by 2050.9 Challenges such as gas pipeline conversions and the scaling of production are being considered, with investment from government, project developers and companies.9
Hydrogen can be blended with diesel for combustion in existing all-diesel engines, requiring minimal structural changes to the powertrain. This allows for cheap and simple initial deployment of hydrogen and offers a low barrier to entry stimulus for the development of a hydrogen economy.7 Although hydrogen supply will likely be limited during initial years of a (UK) hydrogen economy, the fraction of hydrogen used in a hydrogen–diesel (H2D) fuel blend could be increased as production capacity increases.9 Passenger vehicles with hydrogen internal combustion engines (H2-ICEs) seem unlikely to become a widespread reality since battery electric vehicles offer a more mature solution with cheaper running costs.5 However, the straightforward conversion to a dual fuel engine provides a potential low-regret option in the heavy-duty sector on the path to net zero.
Unlike fuel cells, hydrogen engines are not emissionsfree. Nitrogen oxides (NOx – sum of NO2 and NO) form due to the high temperatures of combustion, as described by the Zel'dovich mechanism. The basics around mechanisms of NOx formation from H2 combustion, air quality and emissions impacts have been reviewed recently.13 The adverse health and environmental impacts of NO2 have an economic cost in the UK of around £5 billion a year.15,16 Application of emissions abatement and control strategies in energy and transport sectors have led to sustained NOx emissions reduction over the last 30 years, however international obligations require further NOx reductions across Europe well into the 2030s.17 Although NOx emissions from diesel engines have been under considerable scrutiny following the VW emissions scandal in 2015,18 NOx from future hydrogen combustion has received little attention as a consequence of decarbonisation strategies.10,19 In the research literature it is common for the environmental impacts of hydrogen production to be considered in detail and on an international scale,20,21 often assuming that hydrogen will be exclusively used in fuel cells.22 Downstream point-of-use impacts of its combustion, especially on a national or city scale, are however less reported.
There are other lower-carbon alternatives for fuelling heavy-duty engines, such as biodiesel, biogas, compressed natural gas (CNG) and liquid natural gas (LPG). Like hydrogen, these can be integrated relatively easily into existing infrastructure and much of the original powertrain can be retained. Biodiesel can be used directly in diesel engines without any modifications to powertrains or petrol stations. To be truly sustainable and avoid the environmental concerns surrounding land-use change, advanced biodiesel, produced from biogenic waste and residue feedstocks, is required. The extent to which this can contribute to decarbonisation is therefore highly dependent on the amount of waste produced.23 Since waste may decline in the future due to improved management practices,24 this energy source may only be able to contribute to decarbonisation in the short to medium term. Similarly, life cycle assessments for use of natural gas in heavy-duty engines sector suggest that deeper decarbonisation methods alongside CNG/LNG would be necessary to meet UK decarbonisation targets for 2030 and beyond.25 Hence these are only likely to be useful as interim technologies. H2D is a more intuitive option considering the potential to create the hydrogen from renewal energy (green H2), and as a technology provide a bridge to later 100% hydrogen combustion or fuel-cell end use, necessary for full decarbonisation.
With any internal combustion engine, there are trade-offs between optimising for different air quality and CO2 emissions, energy efficiency and mechanical or thermal performance.13 It has frequently been the case that efficiency and mechanical performance are prioritised, leading to some compromise on NOx emissions. If H2D or pure hydrogen is to be deployed at scale in internal combustion engines, an additional reduction in NOx emissions alongside gradual decarbonisation would be desirable as a co-benefit. As an absolute minimum the expectation should be that NOx emissions should not increase if a fuel switch occurs. This is especially desirable in the UK since, with gradual electrification of the passenger vehicle fleet, based on emissions inventory data,16 non-electrified diesel engines could become the major source of NOx if no further action is taken. This review presents an evaluation of the possible impacts on NOx of H2D combustion in heavy-duty diesel engines. Through qualitative and quantitative literature review, we aim to make recommendations, from a NOx emissions perspective, on the optimal deployment of hydrogen for decarbonisation of NRMM, HGVs and power generators. For completeness, an evaluation of changes in other air quality relevant pollutants are also presented.
N2 + O → NO + N |
N + O2 → NO + O |
N + OH → NO + H |
In a CI engine, this mechanism is elevated by high temperatures, high oxygen concentrations and extended residence time of nitrogen in high temperature regions of the combustion chamber.28 In theory, adding hydrogen to the combustion process has two opposing effects on NOx formation. The higher adiabatic flame temperature of hydrogen acts to increase NOx emissions through the Zel'dovich mechanism. However, the higher flame velocity means the high temperature conditions exist for a shorter period of time, reducing NO formation. If hydrogen is added through the intake air manifold, it can reduce the amount of oxygen entering the chamber, also reducing the yield from the Zel'dovich mechanism. The overall effect of hydrogen addition on NOx emissions depends on these competing processes. The balance of effects will depend upon many operational factors such as engine load, speed, combustion-system design and fuel injection parameters.29 For pure diesel combustion, NOx increases with load due to elevated combustion temperatures, but decreases with engine speed due to reduced residence time of combustion gases.30
NOx emissions are also influenced by relative injection timings of diesel and hydrogen. NOx is produced in high temperature zones of the combustion chamber, whose existence depends on the heat release rate. NOx formation can be limited by increasing the ignition delay (the time between start of fuel injection and start of combustion).31 Further complications therefore arise if the presence of hydrogen affects that ignition delay time.
The emissions of NOx from diesel combustion can be abated to a degree by internal measures combined with exhaust after-treatment, techniques. Both approaches can also be applied to H2D engines. After-treatment such as selective catalytic reduction (SCR) and lean NOx traps (LNT) are efficient methods that can reduce NOx in dual-fuel applications,13 although they increase cost and complexity of the combustion system and add to overall equipment costs.32 Internal measures include fuel lean conditions, water injection and exhaust gas recirculation (EGR). Although these methods act to produce a cleaner combustion system, each has its trade-offs. Fuel-lean conditions inherently reduce engine efficiency;13 water injection causes elevated CO and unburnt hydrocarbon emissions;33 and high EGR rate causes elevated emissions of particulate matter (PM).34
There is however considerable literature on air pollution emissions from small CI engines running on H2D dual fuel, both single-cylinder test-engines and those found in passenger cars. This can provide helpful insight for interpreting possible outcomes from H2D use in larger (CI) engines, for which the literature is noticeably less extensive. Dimitriou and Tsujimura reviewed the performance and emissions of CI engines run on H2D dual fuel up to 2017.37 Almost all experiments considering NOx emissions were based on either a low-power single-cylinder engine or a multicylinder passenger car engine. Experiments varied in engine design, load, speed, fuel injection method and hydrogen fraction range. There was general consensus that hydrogen addition beneficially decreased emissions of CO, CO2, PM and SO2, however results for NOx were more mixed. Compared to diesel-only operation, studies could be found that reported decreases in NOx emissions, increases in emissions or little change. There also appeared to be no clear correlation between EGR rate and NOx emissions.34 A similar conclusion was drawn in another review,38 which suggested the highly variable results were due to substantial differences between test facilities and accuracy of simulation methods.
Engine loading does however appear to be a key factor that in past literature has affected NOx emissions in single cylinder test-engines. This is likely to translate to larger multicylinder engines due to its basic dependence on combustion chamber temperature. However, whilst some studies report that hydrogen addition caused an increase in NOx emissions at high loads,39,40 others found a reduction, even without an anticipated reduction in efficiency.41 This hints at the complexity of the dual-fuel combustion process. The most common hydrogen injection applied in dual-fuel CI engine studies have been port fuel injection (PFI), manifold injection and direct injection (DI). PFI and manifold injection methods are associated with combustion limitations and reduced volumetric efficiencies.42 DI is a more recent concept aimed at overcoming these performance limitations. In an SI engine, DI fueling has also been shown to produce lower NOx emissions when compared to PFI methods under high load conditions.43 However, the use of DI requires more modifications to the original diesel engine.44 A recent CI engine simulation suggested that NOx formation only falls lower than a diesel-only case with a hydrogen energy share above 80%,45 arising due to improved fuel mixing and the increase in ignition delay caused by hydrogen addition.
Authors (reference) | Dataset | Engine | H2 supply (%) | H2 injection | Load (%) | Speed (rpm) | EGR | NOxvs. diesel | PM vs. diesel | HC vs. diesel | CO vs. diesel | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dimitriou et al. (ref. 46) | 1 | a | 5.4L 4-cylinder | 0–98 e | Port | Low | 1500 | No | Decrease (H2 fraction-dependent) | Decrease | Negligible | Decrease |
b | 0–85 e | Medium | Decrease low H2/increase high H2 | Decrease | Negligible | Decrease | ||||||
Hosseini and Ahmadi (ref. 38) | 2 | Caterpillar 3401 1-cylinder | 0–70 e | Direct | 100 | 1600 | No | Decrease | Decrease | Slight increase | Increase | |
Wang et al. (ref. 28) | 3 | 10.8L 6-cylinder | 0–18 vol | Manifold | 70 | 1800 | Yes | Increase low H2/decrease high H2 | Decrease | N/A | N/A | |
Liew et al. (ref. 52) | 4 | a | 2004 Mack MP7 355E 6-cylinder | 0–7 vol | Manifold | 10 | 1200 | Yes | Decrease | Decrease | Decrease | Decrease |
b | 15 | Increase | Decrease | Decrease | Decrease | |||||||
c | 20 | Increase | Decrease | Decrease | Decrease | |||||||
d | 50 | Increase | Negligible | Decrease | Decrease | |||||||
e | 0–6 vol | 70 | Decrease low H2 | Negligible | Decrease | Negligible | ||||||
Liew et al. (ref. 53) | 5 | a | 1999 Cummins ISM370 6-cylinder | 0–6 vol | Manifold | 10 | 1200 | No | Decrease high H2 | Negligible | Increase | Decrease |
b | 15 | Decrease high H2 | Negligible | Increase | Decrease | |||||||
c | 20 | Negligible | Negligible | Increase | Decrease | |||||||
d | 30 | Increase | Decrease | Negligible | Decrease | |||||||
e | 50 | Increase | Negligible | Negligible | Decrease | |||||||
f | 70 | Increase | Negligible | Negligible | Negligible | |||||||
Jhang et al. (ref. 47) | 6 | a | Cummins B5.9-160 6-cylinder | 0–1.2 vol | Direct | Idle | 800 | No | Decrease | Decrease | Decrease | Decrease |
b | 25 | 1840 | Decrease | N/A | Increase | Decrease | ||||||
c | 50 | Negligible | N/A | Increase | Negligible | |||||||
d | 75 | Increase | N/A | Increase | Negligible | |||||||
Cernat et al. (ref. 54) | 7 | D2156 MTN8 6-cylinder | 0–4.81 e | Manifold | 40 | 1400 | Yes | Negligible | Decrease | Decrease | Negligible | |
Cernat et al. (ref. 55) | 8 | D2156 MTN8 6-cylinder | 0–3.85 e | Manifold | 55 | 1450 | Yes | Decrease | Decrease | N/A | N/A | |
Cernat et al. (ref. 56) | 9 | D2156 MTN8 6-cylinder | 0–3.15 e | Manifold | 70 | 1450 | Yes | Negligible | Decrease | Decrease | Negligible | |
Aldhaidhawi et al. (ref. 57) | 10 | a | Tractor engine 4-cylinder | 0–4.87 e | Manifold | 100 | 1400 | No | Increase | Decrease | Decrease | Decrease |
b | 2400 | No | Negligible | Decrease | Decrease | Decrease | ||||||
Avadhanula et al. (ref. 48) | 11 | Detroit Diesel series 50 4-cylinder | 0–16.2 e | Manifold | 45 | 1200 | No | Negligible | N/A | N/A | Decrease | |
Zhou et al. (ref. 49) | 12 | a | ISUZU 4HF1 4-cylinder | 0–40 e | Manifold | 10 | 1800 | No | Negligible | Increase | Increase low H2/decrease high H2 | Decrease |
b | 30 | Decrease | Decrease | Increase low H2/decrease high H2 | Decrease | |||||||
c | 50 | Negligible | Decrease | Negligible | Decrease | |||||||
d | 70 | Increase | Decrease | Negligible | Decrease | |||||||
e | 90 | Increase | Decrease | Negligible | Decrease | |||||||
Köse and Ciniviz (ref. 50) | 13 | a | Tumosan 185 B 4-cylinder | 0–7.5 vol | Manifold | 100 | 1000 | No | Decrease high H2 | N/A | Decrease | Increase |
b | 1250 | Decrease high H2 | N/A | Decrease | Increase | |||||||
c | 1500 | Increase | N/A | Decrease | Increase | |||||||
d | 1750 | Increase | N/A | Decrease | Negligible | |||||||
e | 2000 | Increase | N/A | Decrease | Negligible | |||||||
f | 2250 | Increase | N/A | Decrease | Negligible | |||||||
g | 2500 | Increase | N/A | Decrease | Negligible | |||||||
Kumar et al. (ref. 51) | 14 | a | ISUZU 4HK1 4-cylinder | 0–80 e | Manifold | Low | 1500 | No | Decrease | N/A | N/A | N/A |
b | 0–86 e | Medium | Increase high H2 | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||||||
c | 0–54 e | High | Increase | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Although NOx is the primary pollutant of interest in our review, it is important to cnsider other point-of-use emissions arising from H2D. In all cases CO2 emissions decrease linearly with hydrogen addition by energy share, due to the reduction in the amount of carbon-containing fuel. In most cases, CO decreased for H2D combustion compared to diesel due to increased H/C ratio, improved air-fuel mixing and shorter combustion duration. However, the studies corresponding to datasets 2 and 13 found CO emissions increased on hydrogen addition, due to the increased ignition delay reducing temperatures enough to increase the extent of incomplete combustion.38,50 Reduced oxygen content also contributed to this through a reduction in CO oxidation.50 Studying Table 1, this is likely to be due to engines being run at full load, causing increased total fuel consumption.
PM emissions generally decreased for H2D compared to diesel, due to a reduced diesel-to-air equivalence ratio. The reduction was usually most significant at low loads for this same reason. Exceptions were commonly due to decreased soot oxidation rate and incomplete combustion, especially at low loads.49,52,53
Results for hydrocarbon emissions are somewhat discordant and appear to be dependent on operational parameters affecting the amount of diesel being burned and the flowrate of diesel. Decreases were observed for studies which were accompanied by increased combustion efficiency, these decreases commonly being largest at high hydrogen energy shares and low loads. An overall increase in HC emissions was observed when the extent of incomplete combustion increased.38,49,52,53 Experimental variation, including the presence/absence of EGR, is likely to have influenced results here.46
Similar to results seen in smaller engines, the relationship between NOx emissions and hydrogen fraction is very variable in literature reports, likely impacted by experimental factors such as engine model, hydrogen injection method, load, speed and the application of exhaust gas recirculation. Many studies only considered very small hydrogen energy shares.48,54–57 The observed variation in NOx emissions from hydrogen addition compared to pure diesel combustion were small, and there was often no clear trend. Other studies have showed that the trend in change in NOx emissions was only apparent for higher hydrogen fractions.53
The effect of engine load on NOx emissions has been investigated in multiple studies.45–47,51–53 Most found that when hydrogen is added to diesel, NOx emissions tend to decrease at low loads and increase at high loads. However, different experimental conditions mean that the definition of what constitutes ‘low’ and ‘high’ load varies between studies, as well as the relative amount by which NOx emissions change. At low loads, Liew et al. observed a delay to the start of combustion on hydrogen addition, possibly explaining the NOx decrease observed.53 Zhou et al. also found that ignition delay varies with both hydrogen addition and load, affecting NOx through altering heat release characteristics.49 An increased ignition delay at low load would result in a narrower heat release peak, resulting in reduced thermal NOx formation.58 Kumar et al. used supporting temperature, oxygen and unburned hydrogen measurements to explain the load-dependency of the effect of hydrogen on the combustion process.51 Lower temperatures, reduced oxygen content and increased unburnt hydrogen emissions suggested that at low loads, hydrogen acted as a heat sink due to its higher specific heat capacity. At higher loads, reduced emissions suggested it acted as a heat source to enhance the combustion process. We suggest that at higher load, the effect of load on temperature becomes more important than the effects of hydrogen addition which cause a reduction in temperature, thereby causing an overall increase in thermal NOx formation.
A similar effect of increased ignition delay was also observed by Hosseini and Ahmadi, who conducted a numerical investigation of DI of hydrogen into a heavy-duty engine.38 A large and approximately linear decrease in NOx emissions was observed when hydrogen energy share was varied from 0 to 70% at full load. Similar results were found for both hydrogen addition and hydrogen replacement cases, with larger emissions reduction found in the replacement case due to a larger reduction in temperature. DI was found to increase ignition delay significantly, which may explain the observed decrease in NOx emissions. Only results from the substitution case are provided in Table 1 because addition of hydrogen does not result in decreased diesel usage, something with no benefits for reducing carbon emissions, and hence outside a net zero scope.
Cernat et al. conducted multiple tests on a heavy-duty 6-cylinder engine ranging from 40 to 70% load operation, but did not observe the relationship between NOx emission and load that was found in most other studies.54–56 The expected increase in NOx emissions with load was observed at small hydrogen energy shares of up to 2%, but not for higher hydrogen intake. Inferring trends has likely been complicated through application of EGR and the fact that only small hydrogen energy shares of up to 5% were tested. Other studies also found that the application of EGR complicated results. For example, Liew et al. compared NOx emissions from two heavy duty diesel engines, one with and one without EGR.52,53 For the engine without EGR, NOx decreased at low loads and increased at high loads as hydrogen intake increased. However, this effect was not observed for the engine with EGR, and unexpected changes in EGR flow rate were observed at times. Hydrogen inclusion changes exhaust gas composition, making it difficult to predict how temperature, and therefore NOx emissions, are affected by EGR when hydrogen is present.
Only two papers have reported the effect of engine speed on NOx as hydrogen fraction was added.50,57 NOx emissions were higher at the lower engine speed, as expected. Increasing hydrogen intake slightly reduced NOx at low engine speeds, whilst dramatic increases in NOx emissions were observed at high speeds. The authors acknowledged that the impact of hydrogen on NOx emissions varied depending on engine speed, but did not propose an explanation for this. The complexity of dual fuel combustion is evident and current understanding required for accurate emissions prediction is not complete. Despite this, some important conclusions can be drawn:
NOx emissions tend to decrease at low loads and increase at high loads when the hydrogen fuel fraction is increased.
The presence and rate of EGR complicates the relationship between hydrogen fraction and NOx.
If results are to be useful for future policies supporting H2D combustion, experimental conditions need to mimic real-world diesel engine operation. This could give insight into the most suitable areas for H2D diesel engine combustion from a NOx emissions perspective, since the load at which a large diesel engine will run depends on its end-use application. For example, electrical generators and other stationary machinery tend to run at relatively constant, higher loads, typically above 50%.59 NRMM and heavy-duty road vehicles run at a much wider range of loads, with a lower average load of around 20–30%.59–61
Least squares regression analysis was performed on each dataset to give a simple expression of change in NOx for different hydrogen fractions. Only 0–40 e% points were included in the regression analysis because the literature review revealed that the effect of hydrogen addition on NOx emissions can change at very high loads (e.g. dataset 5). A linear relationship under these hydrogen fractions, whilst not wholly accurate, is suitable in providing a range of possible outcomes for NOx, especially when combining multiple datasets.
The data was split into 0–30% load and 50–100% load, to approximately correspond to the use characteristics found for mobile machinery (0–30) and stationary engine (50–100) end uses. For datasets 1 and 14, where loads were not provided, the low load cases were assumed to be within the 0–30% range and the high load cases in the 50–100% range. This assumption was considered preferable to excluding the data, due to the limited number of datasets. Dataset 14b was a medium load case and therefore excluded from the analysis. Best-case, median and worst-case changes in NOx emissions were calculated for hydrogen fractions of 10, 20, 30, 40 e%. Best-case is the largest reported literature reduction in NOx emissions compared to diesel combustion, whilst worst-case refers to the largest increase. Focusing analysis on these three cases reduced the error associated with those few datasets whose regression analyses produced low R2 values.
Fig. 1 Meta-analysis of effect on NOx emissions for H2D combustion in large diesel engines for different H2D fuel compositions. (a) 0–30% low load case (b) 50–100% high load case. Numbers in the legend correspond to datasets in Table 1. The median dataset is presented as a red dashed line. (c) Worst (grey), median (orange) and best-case (blue) NOx scenarios for 0–30% load (d) worst (grey), mean (orange) and best-case (blue) scenarios for 50–100% load. |
An initial addition of 10 e% hydrogen for low load applications appears to be the lowest-regret option. Fig. 1c suggests NOx emissions would only increase by 6% in the worst-case scenario. If only initially deployed in industrial NRMM, this would increase total UK NOx emissions from fuel combustion activities by ∼0.2%.16 This is a negligible change placed in the wider context of NOx emissions decreasing by about 3% per year in recent years.16 Aside from the reality that blending hydrogen initially in small amounts is likely an economic necessity to facilitate a later full transition to hydrogen, a potential upside reduction of NOx up to 15% makes this a reasonable first step.
Fig. 1d shows the same hydrogen addition for high load applications comes with higher risk in terms of NOx, with a possible 27% increase in emissions in the worst-case scenario for only a 10 e% fuel share. This is higher than the worst-case scenario of 40 e% hydrogen at low load. The potential reward in emissions reduction is also much smaller, at just 7.5%. This analysis suggests that H2D combustion in large diesel engines would be best used in applications which have lower average loading. This would include a range of NRMM typically used on construction sites, such as excavators and dumpers. Hydrogen energy shares should be low at first, until NOx emission factors could be evaluated in the practice in the field. Using H2D in electrical generators, which operate at higher loads for longer periods of time, appears more likely to lead to increase in NOx when compared to current pure diesel engine emissions.
Whilst there is a clear difference in results for high and low load cases, the limited database should be kept in mind. Additionally, we have linked load to application by reported average engine load. In reality, especially for mobile engine applications, the engine will run at a wide range of loads depending on driving conditions/power demands.
The effect of age/era of the test engine as a contributing factor to the wide range of NOx emissions reported has been considered. Newer engines are designed to be compliant with more stringent NOx regulations, hence older engines in the analysis are likely to have produced more NOx because of their design. Although the above meta-analysis uses relative NOx emissions, it is likely the effects of hydrogen fraction change depending on engine era due to different engine designs. Since production year is not available for most of the engines in the literature, it is not clear how important this consideration is. All literature used has been published in the last 13 years. NRMM tend to have long working lifetimes, so it is plausible that some older engines might be retrofitted to accommodate hydrogen, particularly large stationary installations such as diesel farms.
Fig. 2 NOx emissions from combustion of H2D dual fuel of composition 40 e% hydrogen, for engine loads 10–40%. Raw data for the engine with EGR (blue) is taken from dataset 4 (see Table 1). Raw data for the engine without EGR (orange) is taken from dataset 5 (see Table 1). |
Whilst the data at 70% load suggest EGR could reduce NOx, and thus support a case for H2D use in high load applications, two studies is a very limited evidence base. In addition, studies have found that for engines running on H2D, EGR reduces engine efficiency and increases PM emissions.37,46 H2D in low average load applications is still recommended as the low-regret option of hydrogen combustion in large diesel engines. Fig. 2 suggests that EGR may not be necessary in these cases and may in fact significantly increase NOx emissions. Again, the limited data available means this is not definitive.
Company | H2 combustion products | Current progress | H2 addition | NOx | Other decarbonisation methods | Hydrogen production solutions | Future decarbonisation targets |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
JCB66–72 | H2-ICE telescopic handler | Prototypes in testing and refinement phases | 100% | Less than diesel | HFC | Imports from Australian company, Fortescue Future Industries | H2-ICE products on the market by end of 2022 |
H2-ICE backhoe loader | BEV for small machines | Green hydrogen imports from 2022 | |||||
Cummins73–80 | 6.7L medium duty H2-ICE | Prototypes in testing and refinement phases | 100% | Reduced using after-treatment | HFC | Megawatt scale electrolysers | H2-ICE in Class 8 trucks in 2nd half of 2022 |
15L heavy duty H2-ICE | BEV for small machines | Goals for Gigawatt scale electrolysers in China | Major role in transport decarbonisation from 2025 | ||||
Hydra81–83 | H2D dual fuel truck retrofits | One fleet converted | Up to 40 e% | Comparable to diesel | N/A | Waste hydrogen sourced from industrial processes, sold to customers at a price 5% lower than diesel | Plans to convert 200 fleets |
50 e% by 2023 | |||||||
100 e% long term goal | |||||||
HYDI84–87 | On-board H2 production unit for H2D dual fuel | Installed in a range of HGVs | N/A (<100%) | Up to 45% less than diesel | N/A | On-board H2 production | Expanding the applications of the unit |
Develop model for export | |||||||
ULEMCo88–91 | H2D dual fuel retrofits | A number of HGVs in real-world operation | 30–70 vol% | 50–70% less than diesel | HFC | N/A | Design HFC powertrain for emergency vehicles in UK |
‘Hydrohog’ being trialled for highways maintenance | H2-ICE | ||||||
HyTech Power92,93 | Diesel engine combustion assistance retrofits | Available for purchase | N/A (<100%) | 50–90% less than diesel | N/A | On-board H2 production | Zero emissions vehicle (100% H2) |
Reduced using after-treatment | Scalable energy storage | ||||||
New Holland Agriculture94 | H2D dual fuel retrofit for 140hp tractor | Available for purchase | 30–60 e% | Less than diesel | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Hydra, a Canadian company, introduced hydrogen to the engine by manifold injection,82 similar to most of the research literature in Table 1. They claim there is no loss in engine performance, whilst tailpipe CO2 emissions from each vehicle are reduced by up to 40%. Both the Canadian government and Hydra have put in place incentives to encourage users to transition to dual fuel.82,97 Whether government incentives are best targeted at HGVs or NRMM may depend in part on the relative contribution each sector makes to emissions: HGVs contribute a higher fraction of GHG emissions from transport in Canada (38% in Canada, compared to 27% in UK) due to greater mileage.98,99
Both HYDI and HyTech Power use on-board electrolysers supplied with water to produce hydrogen which is injected into the air-fuel mixture prior to combustion.85,92 On-board hydrogen production has also been explored in the research literature, both by electrolysis and steam-methane reforming.47,100–102 HYDI have reported an increase in power and improved fuel efficiency.84 The system takes 4–8 hours to fit and does not require engine modification, since only a small energy share of hydrogen is used.86
For dual fuel engines that run on a range of fuel compositions, the amount of hydrogen can be varied. For example, New Holland dual fuel tractors increase the hydrogen fraction at lower loads.94 Results from the meta-analysis in this paper indicated that, when considering NOx emissions, lower loads are indeed more suited to dual fuels and higher hydrogen fractions. Since technology exists to control the amount of hydrogen added based on engine load, and this could make dual fuel suitable for a range of applications. This may inevitably add cost however to combustion retrofits, which would need to be weighed up against the benefits from NOx emissions reduction.
Peer-reviewed studies of large CI engines run on H2D are limited. The relationship between NOx emissions and hydrogen fraction can difficult to discern due to experimental variation across studies. It was clear, however, that engine load and the application of EGR were key factors in affecting results. A range of possible outcomes for NOx were found, resulting from H2D combustion of up to 40 e% hydrogen in large CI engines. A meta-analysis was used to quantify the range of possible NOx emissions resulting from H2D combustion, of up to 40 e% hydrogen, in large CI engines. A range of possible outcomes for NOx were found, from a small decrease to a large increase. The median increase in NOx emissions from H2D (compared to diesel) was smaller for low loads than high loads. Considering the highest reported NOx emissions, H2D of 10 e% hydrogen under high load was worse than 40 e% hydrogen under low load. A quantitative comparison of similar engines with and without EGR revealed no clear trend for NOx under different loads. It is possible that EGR can reduce NOx at both very high and very low loads, but there is not enough data to confirm this. Without additional abatement/aftertreatment technologies, H2D would be best used in lower average load applications such as excavators, dumpsters and cranes. It should be noted that this conclusion is based on a relatively limited database, hence we suggest that more research and testing should be conducted to confirm this result.
EGR may be effective for reducing NOx at both very high and very low loads when H2 is added, but there is not enough data to have high confidence in this conclusion. The impact of EGR is likely to vary depending on the engine application, hence choices around the use of H2D in a hydrogen economy should be matched to specific end-uses. Similarly, the use of higher hydrogen fuel fractions at idle may help reduce NOx from construction machinery, a notable benefit given these often occur in urban areas.
More data is needed on the effects of other aspects of engine operation on NOx emissions, such as engine speed and hydrogen injection method. This may help to separate individual NOx contributions to gain a better understanding of the relationship between engine operation, fuel composition and NOx emissions. Additionally, confirmation through experiment is needed to establish that engine load is the dominant factor controlling NOx emissions from H2D combustion in CI engines.
A follow on from this review would be the creation NOx emission scenarios from the meta-analysis with studies weighted according to the different engine designs likely to be used in the UK (or any country looking to use H2D in heavy duty engines). This could support the development of a refined ‘most likely’ outcome for NOx emissions, which alongside real-world testing, may help to determine whether hydrogen-specific NOx standards and therefore additional aftertreatment technologies are required.103–105 A larger range of studies would be needed for this analysis if uncertainties in projections were to be narrowed.
Both H2-ICE and H2D dual fuel retrofits are being demonstrated commercially, many of whom are also developing green hydrogen production and supply routes. NOx emissions are explicitly considered by manufacturers and are claimed to be reduced either by internal or external measures. For example, one dual fuel manufacturer used adaptive technology to reduce hydrogen fraction as engine load increased. It was not clear from public information sources whether this was to specifically limit NOx emissions, however it may well have had this beneficial effect. This showed that if the cost is reasonable, additional technology could be applied to actively control hydrogen fraction based on engine load, and to minimise NOx emissions.
Taking the evidence in this review the following five recommendations for policy consideration emerge:
1. H2D as a technology would be best used in lower average load applications such as excavators, dumpsters and cranes if avoidance of NOx emissions was a major consideration. The scale of NOx benefits is difficult to judge and would depend on the sophistication of the aftertreatment system supplied. Replacement of diesel with H2D would however likely provide more universal reductions in emissions of SO2 and PM including in high load applications.
2. Technology could be applied to actively vary the hydrogen fraction used based on engine load, such that NOx emissions were minimised. Use of higher H2 fuel fractions during periods of idle may help reduce NOx emissions, particularly in construction applications. This would be a notable benefit given these engines are often used in urban areas.
3. There is uncertainty about the impacts of EGR regimes and their application in H2D dual fuel combustion engines. The impact of EGR is likely to vary depending on the engine application, and research is needed to understand how best to match EGR with each end-use.
4. More evidence is needed to determine whether hydrogen addition to diesel would benefit NOx emissions under idle conditions for a wider range of engine applications (beyond the construction sector) and if used in combination with abatement/aftertreatment approaches.
5. The long-term trajectory for the use of hydrogen as a fuel may be influenced by an early adoption of H2D dual fuel in sectors such as capacity market power generation, construction and agricultural sectors. Moving later from H2D to H2-ICE, rather than fuel cell power trains, would be an incremental progression that would allow manufacturers to continue to exploit past investments in ICE production facilities and existing technological know-how. Policy support for early adoption of H2D may set a pathway that retains combustion appliances for the longer-term, along with the need to manage their possible NOx air quality impacts.
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