scholarly journals Emission characteristics and fuel consumption of biodiesel obtained from fish canning industry waste in agriculture diesel engine

2021 ◽  
Vol 672 (1) ◽  
pp. 012102
Author(s):  
A R A Udin ◽  
A T Zain
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Naveen Rana ◽  
Harikrishna Nagwan ◽  
Kannan Manickam

Abstract Indeed, the development of alternative fuels for use in internal combustion engines has become an essential requirement to meet the energy demand and to deal with the different problems related to fuel. The research in this domain leads to the identification of adverse fuel properties and for their solution standard limits are being defined. This paper outlines an investigation of performance and combustion characteristics of a 4-stroke diesel engine using different cymbopogon (lemongrass) - diesel fuel blends. 10% to 40% cymbopogon is mixed with diesel fuel and tested for performance characteristics like brake specific fuel consumption and brake thermal efficiency. To obtain emission characteristics smoke density in the terms of HSU has been measured. In result, it has observed that there is an increase of 5% in brake thermal efficiency and 16.33% decrease in brake specific fuel consumption. Regarding emission characteristics, a 12.9% decrease in smoke emission has been found.


In present days industries are growing at a rapid rate and so as the usage of the diesel. The fossil fuels are limited in nature, the increased usage of diesel is resulting in the depletion of its reserves this gives rise to the need of alternative fuels. Due to low specific fuel consumption and supreme power efficiency it has vast applications compared to other fuels but NOX and smoke has seriously causing problem to environment. For this the Palmyra oil has same properties of diesel with varying compression ratios effects the performance and emission characteristics are evaluated. In this process step wise increase of CRs from 16 initially .Then increases EGRs of 0%,5% and 10% and studied performance and emission characteristics. There is improvement in engine efficiency during EGR increment and at low load .There is simultanesly decrease in NOX emissions . The single cylinder four stroke variable compression performance and emissions can be varied.. when fuel is pure diesel,b15and b35 of Palmyra oil is examined and bear with standard automobile usable diesel was conducted at compression ratio of 16:1 at the degrees of 19 and 23 degrees. The influence of Palmyra oil like compression ratio on fuel consumption ,brake thermal efficiency and exhaust gas emissions like NOx and hc has been investigated .the overall optimum is found to be b15 biodiesel –diesel blended for compression ratio of 16 at different exhaust gas recirculation such as 0, 5 and 10. The same experimentation is done for other blends B15 and B35 with palmyra oil. All the values are compared with each other. The configuration which achieved highest Break thermal efficiency is compared to the common diesel engine configuration used and the advantages and the disadvantages are listed out


Author(s):  
S. K. Aggarwal ◽  
D. E. Longman

There has been significant progress in reducing NOx and particulate emissions from diesel engines. However, many challenges remain particularly in view of the global energy issues and increasingly stringent emission regulations. Several recent efforts have focused on achieving low-temperature, premixed combustion for simultaneously reducing NOx and PM emissions, but without any detrimental effect on fuel consumption and energy density. Various strategies being explored include homogeneously charged compression ignition (HCCI), reducing flame temperature through excessive EGR, enhancing premixed combustion by controlling injection parameters, and promoting premixing by using early injection and low cetane number fuels. The present study is aimed at examining the effects of injection timing, initial gas temperature, and cylinder and piston wall temperatures on the spray processes, and thereby on the ignition, combustion and emission characteristics in a diesel engine. The reacting two-phase flow field in a 1.9L, 4-cylinder GM diesel engine is simulated using a CFD code ‘CONVERGE’, which employs an innovative cut-cell Cartesian method for grid generation, and a semi-detailed reaction mechanism for n-heptane combustion. A 51.430 sector with a single hole is considered to simulate the 7-hole common-rail injector. Results indicate that while the initial gas temperature does not affect the spray and combustion behavior qualitatively, it modifies combustion temperatures and thus NOx emissions noticeably. On the other hand, the piston and cylinder wall temperatures qualitatively influence the spray behavior and thereby the combustion and emission behavior. The injection timing has a strong influence on the spray and mixture formation processes, and thus on the combustion and emission characteristics. Delaying the start of injection (SOI) can lead to a significant reduction in NOx formation with only a moderate increase in soot formation. A detailed analysis of the spray and combustion processes indicated two main fuel consumption regions, one near the piston bowl wall and the other in the main spray near the injector. Fuel consumption in the first region mainly follows the conventional diesel combustion model involving rich premixed burning and diffusion burning, while that in the second region involves premixed combustion. As the SOI is delayed, the spray impingement on the piston bowl wall increases, causing more fuel consumption in the first region, which leads to reduction in NOx but increase in soot formation, indicating a tradeoff between NOx and soot emissions. However, with further delay in the SOI, the amount of fuel consumption in the first region increases significantly, while that in the main spray region involves lean premixed combustion. The net effect is a significant reduction in NOx with only a moderate increase in soot emission. Future studies will focus on the effects of modifying the level of premixing and the ignition delay on diesel engine combustion and emission.


2021 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-65
Author(s):  
Anandavelu Kothandapany ◽  
Viswanath Krishnan

Performance, emission and combustion studies were carried out on the ceramic coated diesel engine (YSZ) fed with biodiesel obtained from the oil derived from the mango seeds (MSBD) and MSBD blended with turpentine oil (MSBTO). The performance study showed that the MSBD and MSBTO blends showed 3.6% and 7.1% more BSFC value compared to that of DF in ceramic coated engine due to higher density and viscosity. The maximum brake thermal efficiency was observed 28% for DF in coated engine compared to other fuels due to less fuel consumption of DF because of lower density. The emission characteristics displayed that the MSBTO fuel showed 12%, 15.2% and 29.1% reduction in the smoke density, NOx and CO respectively compared to that of DF in coated engine. However, the MSBD and MSBTO showed 17 and 21% more release of UBHC at full conditions compared to that of DF in ceramic coated engine due to lesser calorific values of MSBD and MSBTO compared to the calorific value of DF. Combustion study revealed that the MSBD and MSBTO displayed less cylinder pressure compared to that of DF in coated engine and the MSBTO fuel showed the 5.3% decrease in the cylinder pressure compared to that of DF in coated engine owing to less heat liberation and lower cetane value. HRR followed the similar trend of variation of cylinder pressure and the MSBTO displayed 7.4% lower HRR compared to that of DF in coated engine.


2011 ◽  
Vol 80-81 ◽  
pp. 1128-1132
Author(s):  
Zhong Gen Su ◽  
Jiang Qi Long

This paper designs an electronic control EGR system used in diesel engine and researches the influence of different EGR rate on engine economy and the emission characteristics of the 13- modes cycle. The results show that the specific fuel consumption of the test engine rises at different degrees after using electronically controlled EGR technology, especially in high load areas; NOx emissions have a more significant decline and particles increase to a certain extent; Overall, however, emissions of HC do not nearly change; CO emissions are closely related to EGR rate.


2015 ◽  
Vol 766-767 ◽  
pp. 557-561
Author(s):  
S. Arunprasad ◽  
Thangavel Balusamy ◽  
S. Sivalakshmi

In this present paper, an attempt has been made to examine the performance and emission characteristics of a single cylinder diesel engine fueled with blends of mixed biodiesel (Thevetia peruviana, Neem, Jatropha, Pongamia). Experiments were conducted with various blends of mixed biodiesel in CI engine for different loads. The results show that lower brake thermal efficiency and higher brake specific fuel consumption were obtained with mixed biodiesel blends when compared with diesel. Lower the value of CO and HC and higher the value of CO2 emissions were determined for mixed biodiesel blends compared to that of diesel. Also, higher in NOx and lower smoke opacity were found compared to diesel.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jilin Lei ◽  
Yuhua Bi ◽  
Lizhong Shen

In order to investigate the effects ethanol-diesel blends and altitude on the performance and emissions of diesel engine, the comparative experiments were carried out on the bench of turbo-charged diesel engine fueled with pure diesel (as prototype) and ethanol-diesel blends (E10, E15, E20 and E30) under different atmospheric pressures (81 kPa, 90 kPa and 100 kPa). The experimental results indicate that the equivalent brake-specific fuel consumption (BSFC) of ethanol-diesel blends are better than that of diesel under different atmospheric pressures and that the equivalent BSFC gets great improvement with the rise of atmospheric pressure when the atmospheric pressure is lower than 90 kPa. At 81 kPa, both HC and CO emissions rise greatly with the increasing engine speeds and loads and addition of ethanol, while at 90 kPa and 100 kPa their effects on HC and CO emissions are slightest. The changes of atmospheric pressure and mix proportion of ethanol have no obvious effect on NOxemissions. Smoke emissions decrease obviously with the increasing percentage of ethanol in blends, especially atmospheric pressure below 90 kPa.


2015 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 31-38
Author(s):  
Toan Danh Vo ◽  
Cong Thanh Huynh

In this paper, a simulation of DI diesel engine 1 cylinder, model RV165-2 is used to investigate the effect of intake manifold design on the volumetric efficiency and characteristics by using AVL BOOST software. The proposed plans are evaluated and compared with available models. Conditions of simulation is based on the structure of engine and parameters from experimental test. The parameters of performance, combustion and emission characteristics are selected as evaluation criteria. The results of optimizing intake manifold are increasing volumetric efficiency, ability to blend the mixture of fuel and air, better combustion and increasing engine power, reducing fuel consumption and emission.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 1984
Author(s):  
Yanhui Zhang ◽  
Yunhao Zhong ◽  
Jie Wang ◽  
Dongli Tan ◽  
Zhiqing Zhang ◽  
...  

In this paper, biodiesel was used as an alternative fuel to investigate the combustion and emission characteristics of a four-stroke diesel engine, in terms of cylinder pressure, heat release rate, cylinder temperature, brake thermal efficiency, brake specific fuel consumption, nitrogen oxide, soot, carbon monoxide, and hydrocarbon. Firstly, a diesel engine cylinder model was developed by AVL-Fire software coupled with CHEMKIN code to simulate the injection and combustion of biodiesel with a kinetic mechanism with 106 species and 263 reactions. Then, the simulation model was validated by experimental results under 100% and 50% load conditions and used to simulate the combustion process of a diesel engine fueled with pure diesel, biodiesel, and biodiesel–diesel blends with 10%, 20%, 30% biodiesel by volume, respectively. The results showed that the brake specific fuel consumption increased with the increase of mixed biodiesel ratio. The brake specific fuel consumptions of B10, B20 and B30 increased by 1.1%, 2.3% and 3.3%, respectively, compared with that of D100. The combustion and emission characteristics of the diesel engine are improved. Therefore, biodiesel can be used as an alternative fuel for the diesel engine. The diesel–biodiesel fuel can improve the combustion and emission characteristics of the diesel engine.


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