exhaust heat recovery
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Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 248
Author(s):  
Victoria Kornienko ◽  
Roman Radchenko ◽  
Mykola Radchenko ◽  
Andrii Radchenko ◽  
Anatoliy Pavlenko ◽  
...  

The fuel efficiency of marine diesel engine as any combustion engine falls with raising the temperature of air at the suction of its turbocharger. Therefore, cooling the engine turbocharger intake air by recovering exhaust gas heat to refrigeration capacity is a very perspective trend in enhancing the fuel efficiency of marine diesel engines. The application of water-fuel emulsion (WFE) combustion enables the reduction of a low-temperature corrosion, and, as a result, provides deeper exhaust gas heat utilization in the exhaust gas boiler (EGB) to the much lower temperature of 90–110 °C during WFE instead of 150–170 °C when combusting conventional fuel oil. This leads to the increment of the heat extracted from exhaust gas that is converted to refrigeration capacity by exhaust heat recovery chiller for cooling engine turbocharger sucked air accordingly. We experimentally investigated the corrosion processes on the condensation surfaces of EGB during WFE combustion to approve their intensity suppression and the possibility of deeper exhaust gas heat utilization. The fuel efficiency of cooling intake air at the suction of engine turbocharger with WFE combustion by exhaust heat recovery chiller was estimated along the voyage line Mariupol–Amsterdam–Mariupol. The values of available refrigeration capacity of exhaust heat recovery chiller, engine turbocharger sacked air temperature drop, and corresponding reduction in specific fuel consumption of the main low-speed diesel engine at varying actual climatic conditions on the voyage line were evaluated.


Author(s):  
Mohammed Gad ◽  
Said Ibrahim ◽  
Kamal Abed ◽  
Hassan Mustafa

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 168781402110260
Author(s):  
Azmi Osman ◽  
Nurin Zulkifli ◽  
Mior A Said ◽  
Tengku NA Tuan Kamaruddin

Modern engines in general waste plenty of heat to the exhaust gas and coolant. Considering that daily driving consists of frequent cold start, idling, and part load driving within short driving distances, the potentials to recover heat from high enthalpy exhaust gas are limited. In recovering heat from low enthalpy exhaust gas, a low thermal inertia exhaust heat recovery unit (EHRU) with no heat transfer fins is proposed to be integrated to the simplified split cooling circuit used in the earlier studies. This lightweight, compact and simple EHRU concept made of machined steel plate is targeted for naturally aspirated engines that are still being widely used worldwide. Cooler coolant feed from the bottom of the cylinder block’s water jacket rear end provided large temperature difference between the coolant and exhaust gas. In evaluating its effectiveness in speeding up the recovered heat availability for reuse, a 1.3 l passenger car equipped with strategically placed multiple thermocouples and flow meters was tested using NEDC test. From the experiments and classical analysis, the recovered thermal energy was available in just 25 s after cold start. The study also provided a new direction on the design of EHRU and its integration into an engine.


Author(s):  
Thaddaeus Julius ◽  
Tanimu Kogi Ibrahim ◽  
Ezeaku Ikeokwu Innocent ◽  
Apostolos Pesyridis ◽  
Ahmed Mohammed ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evgeniy M. Puzyrev ◽  
Mikhail E. Puzyrev ◽  
Dmitry R. Taymasov

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