Time-resolved spray, flame, soot quantitative measurement fueling n-butanol and soybean biodiesel in a constant volume chamber under various ambient temperatures

Fuel ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 133 ◽  
pp. 317-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haifeng Liu ◽  
Ming Huo ◽  
Yu Liu ◽  
Xin Wang ◽  
Hu Wang ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Han Wu ◽  
Karthik Nithyanandan ◽  
Boqi Li ◽  
Timothy H. Lee ◽  
Chia-fon F. Lee ◽  
...  

Acetone-Butanol-Ethanol (ABE), an intermediate product in the ABE fermentation process for producing bio-butanol, is considered as a promising alternative fuel because it not only preserves the advantages of oxygenated fuel, which typically emit less pollutants compared to conventional diesel, but also lowers the cost of fuel recovery for each individual component during the fermentation. In this work, 20% ABE with component ratio of 3:6:1 and 80% ultra-sulfur diesel by volume, referred as ABE20, and pure diesel, referred as D100, were injected and combusted in a constant volume chamber with the ability to mimic high temperature and high pressure conditions of real diesel cylinder near the top dead center. By adjusting intake partial pressure and injection timing, the ambient oxygen concentration and temperature for fuel injection can be controlled. Ambient temperatures were set at 1100K, 900K and 700K to cover conventional temperature combustion and low temperature combustion, while the ambient oxygen concentrations were set at 21%, 16% and 11% to cover different EGR ratios separately. Spray and natural flame images were captured by a high speed camera coupled with a copper vapor laser as a light source. The results show that spray liquid penetration and soot lift-off length are shorter and much longer for ABE20 than those for D100 separately under all tested conditions, which form a much bigger gap from spray tip to the combustion area for ABE20. A big gap reduces the local equivalence ratio at the combustion area and then suppresses the soot formation due to the gap is the most effective area for air-fuel mixing processes. Indeed, the natural flame luminosity which represents the soot emission level of ABE20 is significantly lower than that of D100 at all tested conditions. At the same time, ABE20 performed a similar combustion phasing with D100 under high ambient temperature, but experienced an aggressive retardation under low ambient temperatures especially with low ambient oxygen concentrations. In addition, ABE20 did not show a stronger concentrated premixed combustion since its heat release rate peak is lower than that of D100, which was also confirmed by its longer combustion duration. Therefore, ABE20 expresses a high potential to reduce soot emissions but it also has to face combustion deterioration at low temperature combustion conditions.


Author(s):  
Zhichao Zhao ◽  
Chia-Fon Lee ◽  
Yawei Chi ◽  
Jingping Liu

The previous nine-step phenomenological soot model was revised by including the oxidation effect on soot number density. Using KIVA-3V Release 2 code coupled with this revised phenomenological soot model, multi-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations of diesel spray combustion in a constant volume chamber was conducted to investigate the combustion physics and soot emission characteristics. Meanwhile, experiments were conducted in an optical constant volume combustion chamber under different ambient temperatures (800, 900, 1000 K), from which the combustion characteristics and soot distributions were obtained for validation. The results indicate that ignition retards with the decrease of ambient temperature, which results in more air-fuel mixing controlled diffusion combustion at high ambient temperature, and more premixed combustion at low ambient temperature. The corresponding soot formation and distribution shows that the soot emission is strongly related to the local equivalence ratio, which leads to lower soot emission in the lower initial temperature case with more homogeneous mixture. Compared to previous nine-step model, the revised model predicted lower soot number and bigger soot particles size.


Author(s):  
Yilu Lin ◽  
Han Wu ◽  
Karthik Nithyanandan ◽  
Timothy H. Lee ◽  
Chia-fon F. Lee ◽  
...  

Bio-butanol, a promising alternative transportation fuel, has its industrial-scale production hindered significantly by high cost component purification process from acetone-butanol-ethanol (ABE) broth. The purpose of this study is to investigate the possibility of using ABE-Diesel blends with high ABE percentages as an alternative transportation fuel. An optical-accessible constant volume chamber capable of controlling ambient temperature, pressure and oxygen concentration was used to mimic the environmental conditions inside a real diesel engine cylinder. ABE fuel with typical volumetric ratios of 30% acetone, 60% butanol and 10% ethanol were blended with ultra-low sulfur diesel at 80% vol. and were tested in this study. The ambient temperature was set to be at 1100K and 900K, which represents normal combustion conditions and low temperature combustion conditions respectively. The ambient oxygen concentrations were set to be at 21%, 16% and 11%, representing different EGR ratios. The in-cylinder pressure was recorded by using a pressure transducer and the time-resolved Mie-scattering image and natural flame luminosity was captured using a high-speed camera coupled with a copper vapor laser. The results show that the liquid penetration is reduced by the high percentage of ABE in the blends. At the same time, the soot formation is reduced significantly by increasing oxygen content in the ABE fuel. Even more interesting, a soot-free combustion was achieved by combining the low temperature combustion with the higher percentage ABE case. In terms of soot emission, high ABE ratio blends are a very promising alternative fuel to be directly used in diesel engines especially under low-temperature combustion conditions.


Fuel ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 315 ◽  
pp. 123171
Author(s):  
Jingjing He ◽  
Hao Chen ◽  
Yisong Chen ◽  
Xin Su ◽  
Peng Zhang ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 443-444 ◽  
pp. 996-1006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Liu ◽  
Jun Li ◽  
Ying Gao ◽  
Xin Mei Yuan

Different blend ratio of ternary component fuel was tested inside a constant volume chamber to investigate fuel injection and combustion under similar real engine working conditions. Because liquid spray light scattering is the different reflective rate from the liquid droplets and its surrounding background, butanol-biodiesel-diesel liquid jet penetration length can be highlighted in the images taken by high speed camera. Various ambient temperatures from 800K to 1200K and fuel composition were investigated. Measured results showed that sudden but repeatable drop of liquid jet penetration length at constant ambient temperature conditions of 800K and 900K. With ambient temperature increasing, this phenomenon became weak and disappeared. So more works focus on non-combusting experiments in order to delete combustion reflect. With butanol and biodiesel content increasing, micro explosion becomes prone excited and more violent because of the enlarged differences in volatilities and boiling point among the components. It is concluded that micro explosion which will distinctly enhances premixed combustion process and heat release rate but it present under certain initial ambient temperature conditions only and the light fuel content shouldn’t be lower than 10%.


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