The Influence of Peanut Fatty Acid Methyl Ester Blends on Combustion in an Indirect Injection Diesel Engine

Author(s):  
Valentin Soloiu ◽  
Jeffery Lewis ◽  
April Covington ◽  
Brian Vlcek ◽  
Norman Schmidt

The project investigates the effects of peanut FAME on diesel engine combustion and thermal efficiency. The cold flow properties and viscosity were tested and were found that the cloud point (CP) and pour point (PP) of peanut FAME were 17°C and 8°C respectively, and was able to achieve CP of 0°C when blended 20:80 (wt%) with diesel No. 2 (P20). The dynamic viscosity of peanut FAME was 4.2cP (P100) and 2.85cP at 54°C (P20), both fuels are within the ASTM standard for biodiesel. The lower heating value (LHV) of peanut FAME was 37.10MJ/kg (P100) and 41.3MJ/kg (P20) compared to 41.7MJ/kg for diesel No.2 (D100), which supports the usage of peanut FAME in compression ignition engines. At residence time of 5ms from start of injection, P50 has shown positive combustion characteristics with ignition delay of 1.072ms at 2600rpm, 4.78 bmep (100% load). The P50 heat release displayed similar development compared with diesel No. 2, where premixed phase combined with diffusion combustion and reaching a maximum of 20.0J/CAD, which was higher than 17.5J/CAD for D100. Convection flux for both D100 and P50 had values of 1.4MW/m2. The total heat flux, calculated by Annand model, produced maximum values of 2.1MW/m2 for D100 compared with 2.3MW/m2 for the P50. The mechanical efficiency was only a 4% loss when observing the transition from D100 to P50. These findings support peanut FAME as a viable option when blended and used with diesel engines in order to meet the standards set forth by the RSF-2 and EISA allowing the U.S. to decrease foreign energy dependency and benefiting society through a cleaner burning fuel than is currently in use.

2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 19
Author(s):  
A Ghurri ◽  
S K Keun

An experimental investigation was conducted to evaluate the performance of anindirect injection (IDI) diesel engine using diesel (D100) and diesel-biodieselblends (BD25, BD45, BD65) separately. The engine was run in various engineloads at constant engine speed ranging from 1000 to 2400 rpm with an interval200 rpm. The results showed that the biodiesel content decreased the enginetorque and power. This might be mainly affected by the lower LHV of thebiodiesel, and also the worse combustion due to higher density of the biodieselcompared to the diesel fuel. The loss of power due to lower heating value ofbiodiesel were not as high as the difference in their heating value that might bedown to the better lubricity of biodiesel as proved in the higher brake thermalefficiency and mechanical efficiency when using the biodiesel blends. The brakespecific fuel consumption is higher with the increase of biodiesel content but thediesel fuel delivered the highest energy to run the engine. The maximum pressureinside cylinder and the heat release rate of D100 is slightly higher than those ofbiodiesel blends.Keywords: diesel engine, biodiesel, engine performance, emission.


2005 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 231-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Hasse ◽  
N Peters

Multiple injections are an important aspect in modern direct-injection diesel engine development. The representative interactive flamelet (RIF) model, which was successfully used previously for simulations of diesel engine combustion, was recently extended to model multiple injections. In this paper this new RIF model is applied to model ignition and combustion with a pilot and a main injection with various dwell times, start of injection timings, and loads. Special emphasis is placed on the ignition of the main injection. It is shown that, for the investigated cases, the main injection does not auto-ignite but it is ignited by a strained premixed flame that propagates from the pilot injection to the mixture field of the main injection. The structure of that flame and the influence of the scalar dissipation rate on the propagation speed are investigated in detail. In addition to pressure curves, modelling results for NOx and soot emissions are compared with experimental data, showing good agreement.


Author(s):  
Valentin Soloiu ◽  
Jabeous Weaver ◽  
Marvin Duggan ◽  
Henry Ochieng ◽  
Brian Vlcek ◽  
...  

This study investigates the combustion characteristics of methyl oleate (oleic FAME) produced from oleic acid. This compound is the main fatty acid component of peanut FAME, a potential renewable biofuel. Methyl oleate has been suggested in our previous work as a reference fuel or surrogate for biodiesel for advanced research (simulation and experiments), or as an enrichment compound to improve biodiesel’s fuel properties. This investigation compares the combustion and emissions characteristics of methyl oleate to peanut FAME and ultra-low sulfur diesel No. 2 (ULSD), in a single-cylinder indirect injection diesel engine intended for use as an auxiliary power unit. The dynamic viscosity of peanut FAME (P100) and Methyl Oleate (O100) was found to be 5.2 cP and 4.3 cP, respectively, at 40°C. It was determined from the ASTM standards for biodiesel that up to 50% FAME could be run in the engine. The lower heating value of P100 and O100 was 36 MJ/kg and 37 MJ/kg respectively, compared to 42.7MJ/kg for ULSD. With a combustion time of 2ms, P50 and O50 have shown similar combustion characteristics with ignition delays of about 1 ms at 2200rpm, 6.2 imep (100% load). The P50, O50, and ULSD heat release, with premixed phase combining with diffusion combustion, produced maximum values of 20.3 J/CAD, 22.7 J/CAD, and 21.9 J/CAD respectively. The heat fluxes were calculated by the Annand model, and a 2% increase in maximum total heat flux was observed for O50 compared with a maximum value of 1.95 MW/m2 for ULSD and P50. The mechanical efficiency of 77% was similar for all tested FAME blends and ULSD. The NOx increased for P20 by 6% compared with ULSD while for P50 it was similar to the ULSD values. The NOx emissions of methyl oleate showed a similar trend with that of ULSD. The soot values were relatively constant for all of the methyl oleate blends and increased by 14% for P50 when comparing both fuels to ULSD. The findings support the use of methyl oleate as a reference or model fuel for combustion modeling, and as a compound for enriching biodiesel.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 63-70
Author(s):  
Nageswara Rao GANGOLU ◽  
Radha Krishna GOPIDESI ◽  
Immadi Mehar ANUDEEP

The rapid increase of diesel engines and diminishing of diesel fuel creates a challenge for researchers to find alternative fuel. The present experiment is performed on a 3.5 kW diesel engine. Here, diesel is replaced with pure lemongrass oil (LGO) of10%, 20%, and 30% by volume with diesel. The obtained data from the experimental work may exhibit the Brake Thermal Efficiency (BTE) of LG20 equivalent to pure diesel. The specific fuel consumption (SFC) of LGO blends shows an increase compared to diesel, due to the lower heating value for LGO blends. On the other hand, LGO blends show lower emissions of NOX, due to the lower peak flame temperature. When compared to the other samples, the LG30 gives a maximum reduction in NOX emissions; of 10.33%. When compared to biodiesel blends, diesel fuel shows a significant increase in the Net Heat Release rate (NHR).


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (15) ◽  
pp. 4608
Author(s):  
Jingjing He ◽  
Hao Chen ◽  
Xin Su ◽  
Bin Xie ◽  
Quanwei Li

Polyoxymethylene dimethyl ethers (PODE) are a newly appeared promising oxygenated alternative that can greatly reduce soot emissions of diesel engines. The combustion characteristics of the PODE and diesel blends (the blending ratios of PODE are 0%, 20%, 50% and 100% by volume, respectively) are investigated based on an optical engine under the injection timings of 6, 9, 12 and 15-degree crank angles before top dead center and injection pressures of 100 MPa, 120 MPa and 140 MPa in this study. The results show that both the ignition delay and combustion duration of the fuels decrease with the increasing of PODE ratio in the blends. However, in the case of the fuel supply of the optical engine being fixed, the heat release rate, cylinder pressure and temperature of the blend fuels decrease with the PODE addition due to the low lower heating value of PODE. The addition of PODE in diesel can significantly reduce the integrated natural flame luminosity and the soot formation under all injection conditions. When the proportion of the PODE addition is 50% and 100%, the chemical properties of the blends play a leading role in soot formation, while the change of the injection conditions have an inconspicuous effect on it. When the proportion of the PODE addition is 20%, the blend shows excellent characteristics in a comprehensive evaluation of combustion and soot reduction.


2021 ◽  
pp. 146808742110170
Author(s):  
Eric Gingrich ◽  
Michael Tess ◽  
Vamshi Korivi ◽  
Jaal Ghandhi

High-output diesel engine heat transfer measurements are presented in this paper, which is the first of a two-part series of papers. Local piston heat transfer, based on fast-response piston surface temperature data, is compared to global engine heat transfer based on thermodynamic data. A single-cylinder research engine was operated at multiple conditions, including very high-output cases – 30 bar IMEPg and 250 bar in-cylinder pressure. A wireless telemetry system was used to acquire fast-response piston surface temperature data, from which heat flux was calculated. An interpolation and averaging procedure was developed and a method to recover the steady-state portion of the heat flux based on the in-cylinder thermodynamic state was applied. The local measurements were spatially integrated to find total heat transfer, which was found to agree well with the global thermodynamic measurements. A delayed onset of the rise of spatially averaged heat flux was observed for later start of injection timings. The dataset is internally consistent, for example, the local measurements match the global values, which makes it well suited for heat transfer correlation development; this development is pursued in the second part of this paper.


Author(s):  
Dimitrios T. Hountalas ◽  
Spiridon Raptotasios ◽  
Antonis Antonopoulos ◽  
Stavros Daniolos ◽  
Iosif Dolaptzis ◽  
...  

Currently the most promising solution for marine propulsion is the two-stroke low-speed diesel engine. Start of Injection (SOI) is of significant importance for these engines due to its effect on firing pressure and specific fuel consumption. Therefore these engines are usually equipped with Variable Injection Timing (VIT) systems for variation of SOI with load. Proper operation of these systems is essential for both safe engine operation and performance since they are also used to control peak firing pressure. However, it is rather difficult to evaluate the operation of VIT system and determine the required rack settings for a specific SOI angle without using experimental techniques, which are extremely expensive and time consuming. For this reason in the present work it is examined the use of on-board monitoring and diagnosis techniques to overcome this difficulty. The application is conducted on a commercial vessel equipped with a two-stroke engine from which cylinder pressure measurements were acquired. From the processing of measurements acquired at various operating conditions it is determined the relation between VIT rack position and start of injection angle. This is used to evaluate the VIT system condition and determine the required settings to achieve the desired SOI angle. After VIT system tuning, new measurements were acquired from the processing of which results were derived for various operating parameters, i.e. brake power, specific fuel consumption, heat release rate, start of combustion etc. From the comparative evaluation of results before and after VIT adjustment it is revealed an improvement of specific fuel consumption while firing pressure remains within limits. It is thus revealed that the proposed method has the potential to overcome the disadvantages of purely experimental trial and error methods and that its use can result to fuel saving with minimum effort and time. To evaluate the corresponding effect on NOx emissions, as required by Marpol Annex-VI regulation a theoretical investigation is conducted using a multi-zone combustion model. Shop-test and NOx-file data are used to evaluate its ability to predict engine performance and NOx emissions before conducting the investigation. Moreover, the results derived from the on-board cylinder pressure measurements, after VIT system tuning, are used to evaluate the model’s ability to predict the effect of SOI variation on engine performance. Then the simulation model is applied to estimate the impact of SOI advance on NOx emissions. As revealed NOx emissions remain within limits despite the SOI variation (increase).


1977 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 321-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Greeves ◽  
I.M. Khan ◽  
G. Onion

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