Westport Fuel Systems Inc., a global leader in alternative fuel, low-emissions transportation technologies, recently revealed their H2 HPDI fuel system during a webinar. Westport’s HPDI fuel system technology enables heavy-duty trucks to operate on bio-methane (renewable natural gas) and natural gas with the same power, torque, efficiency, and performance as diesel engines, and with even better results running on hydrogen, all while meeting global emissions regulations, the company stated.
The H2 HPDI fuel system is integrated into a fully functional demo vehicle and is on display at the 2022 ACT Expo in Long Beach, California. The demo vehicle showcases the ease with which a commercially available production LNG HPDI system can operate on a zero-carbon fuel like green hydrogen. The H2 HPDI fuel system offers a cost-effective solution with a zero-carbon solution, that delivers, tank to tailpipe, up to 98% CO2 reduction over diesel, and allows manufacturers to leverage their investment in vehicle drivetrain design, supply chain and manufacturing by continuing to plan around low carbon hydrogen internal combustion engines, according to the company.
H2 HPDI engine specifications:
- Power and torque: 20% higher power and torque than the base diesel engine
- Efficiency: 5-10% better thermal efficiency than the base diesel engine
- Turbocharged 13L in-line six-cylinder engine
- Fuel: Hydrogen, with pilot ignition
- Four-cycle, compression ignition, direct injection
H2 HPDI
“We believe H2 HPDI is compelling, with near-zero greenhouse gas emissions at a lower cost than fuel cell vehicles or battery electric vehicles, particularly for heavy-duty, long-haul trucking,” said David Johnson, CEO, Westport Fuel Systems. “We have developed the engine to utilize the capability of HPDI to deliver what is needed today in the marketplace, using hydrogen in place of natural gas, with development work happening at Westport Fuel Systems facilities, and through previously announced programs with AVL/TUPY, and Scania. And we expect new H2 HPDI programs with other partners to come soon.”
The HPDI fuel system technology uses compression ignition combustion with the overwhelming majority of the energy derived from the combustion of, typically, a gaseous fuel. Combustion is initiated via late cycle direct injection of a small quantity of pilot fuel, followed by direct injection of the primary gaseous fuel; both fuels are injected via a proprietary dual concentric needle injector design. By utilizing Diesel-Cycle thermodynamics, the HPDI fuel system retains the thermal efficiency, power, torque, and engine braking of the base diesel internal combustion engine.