To meet the global climate change challenge and the International Maritime Organization’s (IMO) greenhouse gas emission reduction strategy, and promote the shipping industry’s transition to clean energy, this study focuses on the 6S35 2-stroke marine low-speed engine to explore hydrogen fuel combustion and emissions in the cylinder. A detailed chemical reaction kinetics model is constructed on the CONVERGE platform, coupling 42 components and 168 elementary reactions, integrating the SAGE combustion model with the extended Zeldovich NOx mechanism for refined numerical simulation of hydrogen combustion. Model validation shows the cylinder pressure peak simulation error is within 5%. Research results indicate hydrogen fuel has significant premixed combustion characteristics with a violent and concentrated heat release. Under simulation, the cylinder explosion pressure reaches about 28 MPa, and the max combustion temperature nears 3000 K, far exceeding traditional diesel engines. In terms of emissions, hydrogen’s carbon-free characteristic keeps CO2 and CO emissions at extremely low levels (concentrations of approximately 0.02 and 0.085, respectively); whereas NOx emissions exhibit strong “high temperature dependence” and “expansion cooling effect,” with peak concentrations approaching 0.00042. This numerical model can effectively predict the combustion performance of hydrogen fuel, potentially providing a reference for optimizing fuel injection strategies and combustion chamber design to achieve efficient and clean combustion, and offering a theoretical basis for the development and commercial application of marine hydrogen fuel engines.
Wang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.