Emissions of Compressed Natural Gas in a Wankel Rotary Engine Comparison with Gasoline Emissions
Purpose
       Conventional piston engines running on gasoline pollute the atmosphere and further the current energy crisis. Modifying cars to run on the wankel rotary engine powered by Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) would serve to reduce the impact of cars on the environment as well as help to resolve the energy crisis. The purpose of this experiment is to convert a wankel engine to run on CNG and compare the emissions of the engine running on gasoline and CNG.
Hypothesis
       CNG is a cleaner burning fuel and I hypothesize that once the engine is set up to run on natural gas, the emissions will be much less than when the engine was running on 93 Octane Gasoline.
Background
       Conventional piston engines fueled by gasoline produce exhaust containing unburned hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen oxides. Each of these gases is a pollutant, and has a negative impact on the environment. The adaptation of catalytic converters has reduced the emission of these gases, however researchers continue to look for ways to make automobiles greener in relation to the environment. While conventional piston engines use reciprocating pistons to generate power, the Wankel Rotary Engine uses less moving parts and a rotary design to typically produce higher output for similar displacement and physical size. The goal of this research is to combine rotary engine technology with natural gas as a fuel, to reduce automobile pollutant emissions, and minimize the effect on the environment