scholarly journals Performance and Environmental Impact Assessment of Diesel Engine Operating on High Viscous Punnai Oil - Diesel Blends

Author(s):  
Chidambaranathan Bibin ◽  
Ponnusamy Kumarasami Devan ◽  
Soundararajan Gopinath ◽  
Thulasiram Ramachandran

Abstract The increasing demand for energy consumption because of the growing population and environmental concerns has motivated the researchers to ponder about alternative fuel that could replace diesel fuel. A new fuel should be cheaply available, clean, efficient, and environmentally friendly. In this paper, the engine operated with neat punnai oil blends with diesel were investigated at various engine load conditions, keeping neat punnai oil and diesel as base fuels. The performance indicators such as Brake Specific Energy consumption (BSEC), Brake thermal efficiency (BTE) and Exhaust gas temperature (EGT); emission indicators such as Carbon monoxide (CO), Oxides of Nitrogen (NOx), smoke opacity; and combustion parameters like cylinder pressure and heat release rate were examined. The Brake thermal efficiency of diesel is 29.2% whereas, it was lower for neat punnai oil and its blends at peak load conditions. Concerning the environmental aspect, Oxides of Nitrogen emission showed a decreasing trend with higher smoke emissions for Punnai oil blends. Detailed combustion analysis showed that on smaller concentrations of punnai oil in the fuel blend, the duration of combustion has improved significantly. However, for efficiency and emissions, the P20 (20% Punnai oil and 80% Diesel) blend performs similar to that of diesel compared to all other blending combinations. When compared with diesel, the P20 blend shows an improvement in BSEC by 26.37%. It also performs closer in HC emission, a marginal increase in smoke opacity of 4% with reduced NOx and CO2 emission of 7.9% and 4.65% respectively. Power loss was noticed when neat punnai oil and higher blends were used due to the high density and low calorific value of punnai oil blends which leads to injecting more fuel for the same pump stroke.

2015 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sridhara Reddy ◽  
Maheswar Dutta ◽  
K.Vijaya Kumar Reddy

Compression ratios of the engine considerably affect the performance and emission behavior of an engine.The paper discusses about effect of compression ratios on the operating parameters such as brake specific fuelconsumption (BSFC), brake specific energy consumption (BSEC), brake thermal efficiency (BTE) and volumetricefficiency on a stationary diesel-CNG dual fuel engine by adding hydrogen fraction as a combustion booster. Theexhaust emission behavior of the engine is also presented. Addition of hydrogen in CNG has given better resultsthan diesel-CNG dual fuel operation of the engine. The volumetric efficiency and emissions like NOx are theparameters which needed attention towards this study. The paper presents experimental results and analyzes them.


Author(s):  
K Sudheesh ◽  
J M Mallikarjuna

This paper deals with experimental investigations carried out to develop an exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) strategy for an acetylene-fuelled homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) engine. This study involves an analysis of the external inlet charge heating, the use of a mix of hot EGR and cool EGR to extend the load range, and the performance of the engine in the acetylene HCCI mode. First, experiments are conducted on a single-cylinder engine in the acetylene HCCI mode with external electrical heating at different load conditions, and the best inlet charge temperatures at each load condition are obtained. Second, hot EGR or a mix of hot EGR and cool EGR (i.e. the EGR strategy) is used to reduce or eliminate external charge heating and to extend the upper load limit, or to improve the brake thermal efficiency. In both cases, the engine performance is compared with that of the conventional diesel compression ignition (CI) mode. It is found that with EGR, above 25 per cent of load, the upper load limit at different inlet charge temperatures increases by about 16 28 per cent without any external charge heating. Below 25 per cent of load, the electrical heating at different inlet charge conditions is reduced by about 67–87 per cent. The brake thermal efficiency increases by 5–24 per cent under all the load conditions and it is comparable with that in the conventional CI mode. In the HCCI mode, nitrogen oxide levels are less than 20ppm. Smoke levels are always lower than 0.1 Bosch smoke unit. Hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emissions are relatively higher than for the conventional CI mode.


2011 ◽  
Vol 142 ◽  
pp. 103-106
Author(s):  
Wen Ming Cheng ◽  
Hui Xie ◽  
Gang Li

This paper discusses the brake specific fuel consumption and brake thermal efficiency of a diesel engine using cottonseed biodiesel blended with diesel fuel. A series of experiments were conducted for the various blends under varying load conditions at a speed of 1500 rpm and 2500 rpm and the results were compared with the neat diesel. From the results, it is found that the brake specific fuel consumption of cottonseed biodiesel is slightly higher than that of diesel fuel at different engine loads and speeds, with this increase being higher the higher the percentage of the biodiesel in the blend. And the brake thermal efficiency of cottonseed biodiesel is nearly similar to that of diesel fuel at different engine loads and speeds. From the investigation, it is concluded that cottonseed biodiesl can be directly used in diesel engines without any modifications, at least in small blending ratios.


Author(s):  
C. V. Sudhir ◽  
Vijay Desai ◽  
Y. Suresh Kumar ◽  
P. Mohanan

Reducing the emissions and fuel consumption for IC engines are no longer the future goals; instead they are the demands of today. People are concerned about rising fuel costs and effects of emissions on the environment. The major contributor for the increased levels of pollutants is the Diesel engines. Diesel engine finds application in almost in all fields, including transportation sector such as buses, trucks, railway engines, etc. and in industries as power generating units. In the present work an attempt is made for effective utilization of diesel engine aiming for reduction in fuel consumption and smoke density. This is achieved by some minor modifications in diesel engine, so as to run the existing diesel engine as a LPG-Diesel dual-fuel engine with LPG (Liquefied Petroleum Gas) induction at air intake. The important aspect of LPG-Diesel dual-fuel engine is that it shows significant reduction in smoke density and improved brake thermal efficiency with reduced energy consumption. An existing 4-S, single cylinder, naturally aspirated, water-cooled, direct injection, CI engine test rig was used for the experimental purpose. With proper instrumentation the tests were conducted under various LPG flow rates, loads, and injection timings. The influence of the diesel replacement by LPG on smoke density, brake specific energy consumption and brake thermal efficiency were studied. The optimal diesel replacement pertaining to the maximum allowable LPG gas flow limits could be assessed with these experiments. The influence of the injection timing variation on the engine performance and smoke density were analyzed form the experimental results. It was also observed that beyond half load operation of the dual-fuel engine, the brake thermal efficiency increases with diesel replacement, and at full load up to 4% improvement was observed compared to full diesel operation. At full load reduction in smoke density up to 25–36% was observed compared to full diesel operation. At advance injection timing of 30°btdc the performance was better with lower emissions compared to normal and retarded injection timings.


2014 ◽  
Vol 984-985 ◽  
pp. 950-956
Author(s):  
S. Arumugam ◽  
N. Vasudevan ◽  
P. Saravanan ◽  
K. Pitchandi

The experimental work investigates performance, combustion and emission analysis for various combustion chamber geometry such as combustion, brake thermal efficiency, specific fuel consumption, and emission characteristics. The various combustion chamber namely Spherical chamber (SC), Toroidal chamber (TC), Re-entrant chamber (RC) were fitted in a 4.4 kW single cylinder air cooled Compression ignition (CI) engine and tests were conducted with standard diesel. The investigated of the combustion chamber geometry characteristics on combustion, performance and emissions. This investigation shows brake thermal efficiency for Re-entrant chamber and Toroidal chamber is slightly higher than Spherical chamber. And lower specific fuel consumption of Toroidal chamber, Re-entrant chamber than that of Spherical chamber. The enhancement in reduction of carbon monoxide, hydrocarbon is recorded for Re-entrant chamber compared to the Toroidal chamber and Spherical chamber. Oxides of nitrogen are reduced for Re-entrant chamber and Toroidal chamber than that of Spherical chamber. Combustion characteristics improved for Re-entrant chamber compared to Spherical chamber. The cylinder pressure for Re-entrant chamber and Toroidal chamber is higher than that of Spherical chamber. Also obtained maximum heat release rate for Re-entrant chamber than Toroidal chamber and Spherical chamber.


Author(s):  
H. M. DHARMADHIKARI ◽  
PULI RAVI KUMAR ◽  
S. SRINIVASA RAO

In recent years, much research has been carried to find suitable alternative fuel to petroleum products. In the present investigation experimental work has been carried out to analyze the performance and emissions characteristics of a single cylinder compression ignition DI engine fuelled with the blends of mineral diesel and biodiesel at the different injection pressures. The optimal value of the injection pressure was observed as 200 bar in the range of 180 to 220 bar. The performance parameters evaluated were brake thermal efficiency, break specific fuel consumption and the emissions measured were carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO2), hydrocarbon (HC), and oxides of nitrogen (NOx). The results of experimental investigation with biodiesel blends with diesel are compared with that of diesel. The results indicated that the CO emissions are slightly less, HC emissions were also observed to be less for B10 and B20, and NOx emissions decreased by 39 % for B10 and 28 % for B20 compared with B100. The brake thermal efficiency of the engine decreased around 6% for all blends in comparison with diesel, and the break specific fuel consumption was slightly more for B10 and B20.


Author(s):  
Pravin Ashok Madane ◽  
Subrata Bhowmik ◽  
Rajsekhar Panua ◽  
P. Sandeep Varma ◽  
Abhishek Paul

Abstract The present investigation accentuates the impact of Undi biodiesel blended Diesel on combustion, performance, and exhaust fume profiles of a single-cylinder, four-stroke Diesel engine. Five Undi biodiesel-Diesel blends were prepared and tested at four variable loads over a constant speed of 1500 (±10) rpm. The Undi biodiesel incorporation to Diesel notably improves the in-cylinder pressure and heat release rate of the engine. The higher amount of Undi biodiesel addition enhances the brake thermal efficiency and brake specific energy consumption of the engine. In addition, the Undi biodiesel facilitates to reduce the major pollutants, such as brake specific unburned hydrocarbon, brake specific carbon monoxide, and brake specific particulate matter emissions with slightly higher brake specific oxides of nitrogen emissions of the engine. To this end, a trade-off study was introduced to locate the favorable Diesel engine operating conditions under Undi biodiesel-Diesel strategies. The optimal Diesel engine outputs were found to be 32.65% of brake thermal efficiency, 1.21 g/kWh of brake specific cumulated oxides of nitrogen and unburned hydrocarbon, 0.94 g/kWh of brake specific carbon monoxide, and 0.32 g/kWh of brake specific particulate matter for 50% (by volume) Undi biodiesel share blend at 5.6 bar brake mean effective pressure with a relative closeness value of 0.978, which brings up the pertinence of the trade-off study in Diesel engine platforms.


Transport ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 116-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gvidonas Labeckas ◽  
Stasys Slavinskas

The article deals with the testing results of a four stroke four cylinder, DI diesel engine operating on pure rapeseed oil (RO) and its 2.5vol%, 5vol% and 7.5vol% blends with ethanol (ERO) and petrol (PRO). The purpose of this study is to examine the effect of ethanol and petrol addition to RO on blend viscosity, percentage changes in brake mean effective pressure (bmep), brake specific fuel consumption (bsfc), the brake thermal efficiency (çe) of a diesel engine and its emission composition, including NO, NO2, NOX, CO, CO2, HC and the smoke opacity of exhausts. The addition of 2.5, 5 and 7.5vol% of ethanol and the same percentage of petrol into RO, at a temperature of 20 °C, diminish the viscosity of the blends by 9.2%, 21.3%, 28.3% and 14.1%, 24.8%, 31.7% respectively. Heating biofuels up to a temperature of 60 °C, diminishes the kinematic viscosity of RO, blends ERO2.5–7.5 and PRO2.5–7.5 4.2, 3.9–3.8 and 3.9–3.7 times accordingly. At a speed of 1400–1800 min‐1, bmep higher by 1.3% if compared with that of RO (0.772–0.770 MPa) ensures blend PRO2.5, whereas at a rated speed of 2200 min‐1 , bmep higher by 5.6–2.7% can be obtained when fuelling the loaded engine, ë = 1.6, with both PRO2.5–5 blends. The bsfc of the engine operating on blend PRO2.5 at maximum torque and rated power is respectively 3.0% and 5.5% lower. The highest brake thermal efficiency at maximum torque (0.400) and rated power (0.415) compared to that of RO (0.394) also suggests blend PRO2.5. The largest increase in NOXemissions making 1907 ppm (24.8%) and 1811 ppm (19.6%) compared to that of RO was measured from a more calorific blend PRO7.5 (9.99% oxygen) at low (1400 min‐1) and rated (2200 min‐1) speeds. The emission of carbon monoxide from blends ERO2.5–5 throughout the whole speed range runs lower from 6.1% to 32.9% and the smoke opacity of the fully loaded engine changes from 5.1% which is a higher to 46.4% which is a lower level if compared to the corresponding data obtained using pure RO. The CO2 emissions of carbon monoxide and the temperature of the exhausts generated by the engine running at a speed of 2200 min‐1 diminish from 7.8 vol% to 6.3vol% and from 500 °C to 465 °C due to the addition of 7.5vol% of ethanol to RO.


2021 ◽  
pp. 0958305X2110513
Author(s):  
Kaliappan Seeniappan ◽  
Balaji Venkatesan ◽  
Nithyanandan Navaneetha Krishnan ◽  
Thanigavelmurugan Kandhasamy ◽  
Shanmugam Arunachalam ◽  
...  

Utilisation of high carbon alcohols in diesel engines as fuel is gaining importance among researchers because of its better fuel properties that are compatible with mineral diesel. The present study utilises two such alcohols namely octanol and decanol along with diesel and biodiesel derived from lemongrass. Two ternary blends, 50% by volume of diesel – 30% by volume of biodiesel – 20% by volume of octanol, and 50% by volume of diesel – 30% by volume of biodiesel – 20% by volume of decanol, were prepared, and different engine characteristics were analysed and compared with both neat diesel and biodiesel operation. Results indicated that peak cylinder pressure lowered with the ternary blend. Peak heat release rate was higher for octanol blend. When compared with octanol blend, 2.5% higher brake thermal efficiency was observed for decanol blend. However, still, the brake thermal efficiency was 3.5% lower than the diesel operation. The oxides of nitrogen emission for decanol blend were 4% lower than octanol blend. In general, smoke emission was lower for higher alcohol blends in comparison with the binary blend operation. Among the higher alcohol blends, octanol portrayed a 15% lower smoke opacity. Both the hydrocarbon emission and the carbon monoxide emission increased with higher alcohol blends. The study revealed that 1-decanol could be a potential fuel candidate for diesel engines operating with biomass-derived lemongrass oil biodiesel.


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.


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