The candidates that would have the best chance of doing well are, in this order:
US 852 and Tai-tri
possibly some sort of kumquat-trifoliate hybrid (but not citrangequat)
Citrumelo
Ichang papeda would be pretty borderline where you are. At the very least, I expect it would need a very optimal warm spot outside, protected from the winds, possibly up against a building. I am not sure if it could survive or do well there.
There's also a rare hybrid N1tri out there (supposedly a hybrid between trifoliate and ichang papeda, with fruit quality much closer to ichang papeda).
Some think it could actually be a hybrid between ichang papeda and citrumelo, because the fruit quality is unexpectedly good for such a direct hybrid. However, its level of hardiness is debatable, it might not be much hardier than ichang papeda.
Tai-tri (taiwanica x trifoliate) does not have very good fruit quality and is scarcely better than trifoliate (though the fruits are little bit bigger, and a tiny bit less seedy).
I cannot confirm this, but I've heard Taiwanica lemon is a real survivor as well. Its fruit quality is not good, but it seems to recover well from cold damage. There's a possibility that it might be able to survive if planted in the right spot where you are. (Though it may not be able to survive the every once in a decade cold winter) It might need at least some light covering protection and some bottles of water arranged at its base, to resist freezing.
I doubt Thomasville citrangequat would do well where you are. I've heard a report from zone 7b (although it might have been on the border of 8a/7b) South Carolina that a citrangequat did not do so well and had never fruited. (It did worse than a Taiwanica lemon that was planted next to it) Also a Thomasville citrangequat tree in Vancouver, WA, zone 8a suffered severe bark damage at the base one winter, and its leaves turn much more yellow over the winter than the leaves of a Yuzu that is planted right next to it.
I believe Stan grafts all his citrus onto Flying Dragon. I don't know if this helps, but I am pretty far north in the PNW, zone 8a, and I have two Ichang papedas, pretty small in size, growing on their own roots not grafted, and by the coloration of the leaves I can tell that they have not done really good this winter, not compared to other varieties that are less hardy that are grafted onto rootstock. I don't know if that is any indication.
From what I've seen here, I get the feeling they would not survive somewhere north like New York in zone 7b. But of course I don't know.
I have a Yuzu seedling growing on its own roots that has good looking green leaves this winter, but it was killed back to the ground last winter. Why the leaves on the Yuzu look much greener and healthier than the Ichang papeda this year, I don't know. (And this is me making the assumption that resistance to leaf turning yellow in coloration is an indication of level of hardiness, which may also not be completely right)
In climate zone 7b, and as far north as you are, you are most likely not going to be able to grow the "good" tasting hardy citrus.
It will mostly be for experimentation purposes and novelty, as well as being ornamental. Don't expect anything like an orange you buy at the supermarket.