Methanol is typically
produced from natural gas, an abundant domestic resource, and converting it
into a liquid allows easier storage and handling. However, methanol does not
ignite easily, creating a barrier for vessels that rely on compression-ignition
diesel engines. ORNL’s approach to the challenge of methanol ignition in diesel
engines pairs methanol with a small amount of diesel used as a pilot fuel to
start combustion, enabling methanol dual fuel operation across a much wider
range of conditions.“This system allows marine engines to use more than 75%
methanol under a wide range of power levels and without reducing performance,”
said ORNL’s Derek Splitter, project lead for the Cooperative Research and
Development Agreement with Caterpillar announced in December 2023.
Although deployment would require engine updates,
the method avoids a full redesign and allows the engine to operate on either
diesel or dual-fuel methanol