<div>Improving thermal efficiency of an internal combustion engine is one of the most
cost-effective ways to reduce life cycle-based CO<sub>2</sub> emissions for
transportation. Lean burn technology has the potential to reach high thermal
efficiency if simultaneous low NOx, HC, and CO emissions can be achieved. Low
NOx can be realized by ultra-lean (λ ≥ 2) spark-ignited combustion; however, the
HC and CO emissions can increase due to slow flame propagation and high
combustion variability. In this work, we introduce a new combustion concept
called turbulent jet-controlled compression ignition, which utilizes multiple
turbulent jets to ignite the mixture and subsequently triggers end gas
autoignition. As a result, the ultra-lean combustion is further improved with
reduced late-cycle combustion duration and enhanced HC and CO oxidation. A
low-cost passive prechamber is innovatively fueled using a DI injector in the
main combustion chamber through spray-guided stratification. This concept has
been experimentally demonstrated as detailed in this article to achieve 47.7%
peak indicated efficiency and below 1 g/kWh engine-out NOx emission with initial
single-cylinder engine hardware. Further systematic combustion system
optimization is underway to demonstrate state-of-the-art efficiency and
emissions at a wider operating range.</div>