1. Introduction
Given the growing problem of global warming and increasingly stringent emissions regulations, a number of measures must be taken to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) and emissions of pollutant substances. For thermal engine systems, these can be achieved by enhancing engine thermal efficiency and using renewable carbon-free fuels and carbon-neutral fuels. The use of renewable fuels also solves the gradual depletion of fossil fuel reserves and the rise in prices for oil and oil products. Under these conditions, using renewable fuels in transport, agriculture, and other sectors of the economy becomes necessary and economically justified [
1,
2,
3]. Renewable fuels are fuels obtained from renewable energy resources of plant origin, the raw material reserves of which are practically unlimited [
4,
5]. These fuels include synthetic biofuels obtained from plant mass [
6,
7], bioalcohol fuels [
8,
9], fuels produced from vegetable oils [
10,
11], and gaseous biofuels—biogas, syngas produced from the gasification of municipal solid waste, food and wood industry waste, agricultural waste, etc. [
12,
13].
The fuels produced from vegetable oils are considered promising biofuels for compression ignition (CI) engine applications [
10,
11,
14]. Attributed to the similarity of physical and chemical properties between vegetable-oil-based biofuels and petroleum diesel fuel (DF), vegetable-oil-based biofuels can be used to fuel CI engines without almost any engine modification [
15,
16]. There are mainly two approaches to use vegetable oils: their direct use (straight vegetable oil—SVO) and their transesterification to fatty acid methyl or ethyl esters—vegetable oil biodiesels (VOB). Compared with petroleum DF, SVO, and VOB have lower sulfur content, higher oxygen content, and density but higher viscosity and lower vaporability and heating value [
17,
18]. In comparison with SVO, the transesterification of vegetable oils can produce biodiesels with decreased viscosity, enhanced evaporation properties, and increased cetane number and heating value due to shortening molecular chains [
19,
20]. In addition, VOB was found to have more chemical reactivity than DF through porous sphere experiments [
21]. On the other hand, the high economic and environmental costs of vegetable oil transesterification weaken the competitiveness of VOB and hinder the replacement of petroleum DF [
22,
23]. Vegetable oils can be directly used in CI engines, particularly in the agricultural sector, where vegetable oils can be obtained easily, and even no additional transportation is required. Besides, the use of SVO can avoid energetic costs related to transesterification [
24]. Fuels based on rapeseed oil (RO) are considered one of the best substitutes for petroleum DF [
25,
26,
27]. Currently, more than 100 million tons of various vegetable oils are produced annually in the world. RO accounts for about a quarter of the total volume of produced vegetable oils [
28]. Moreover, for the production of motor fuels, technical, low-grade, expired, and wasted deep-frying vegetable oils can be used [
2].
However, SVO is very difficult to use as an individual fuel because of its high viscosity, bad evaporation, and low flammability [
16,
18]. High viscosity and bad evaporation of vegetable oils deteriorate the quality of fuel injection, atomization, and fuel-air mixture formation, resulting in reduced combustion efficiency [
29,
30]. Coke and deposition formation in fuel injector systems is intensified, and carbon deposition in the combustion chamber is observed due to the high viscosity and density of vegetable oils when they are used in diesel engines [
31,
32]. Despite the problems that arise during the operation of diesel engines fueled with vegetable oils, studies on vegetable-oil-based biofuels continue. Different methods are used to decrease the viscosity of vegetable-oil-based biofuels. The first is to blend vegetable oils with low viscosity fuels, mainly with petroleum DF [
15,
25,
27,
33,
34]. Qi D.H. et al. [
27] experimentally investigated the effect of rapeseed oil (RO) blended DF on combustion and emissions characteristics of a 2-cylinder agricultural diesel engine at an engine speed of 1500 rpm. The blended fuel with RO volume fraction less than 20% has a viscosity and density close to those of DF. Compared with DF, the blended fuel almost showed identical peak in-cylinder pressure and heat release rate at high engine loads but higher emissions of HC, CO, and soot. The emission of NOx for the blended fuel is lower than that for DF at low engine loads. Labecki L. et al. [
25] investigated the effect of RO content in DF-RO blend on the performance of a 4-cylinder direct injection diesel engine at a constant load of 2.7 bar BMEP at an engine speed of 2000 rpm. Increasing the volume fraction of RO leads to a reduction in NOx emission but an increase in soot emission. The soot emission can be significantly reduced by optimizing the injection timing for the blended fuel and increasing the injection pressures. As a result, the blended fuel with 30% RO showed an additional reduction in NOx emission by 22% under a soot level equivalent to that of DF. Agarwal D. et al. [
33] blended different non-edible vegetable oils with DF in different proportions and tested them on a single-cylinder diesel engine at an engine speed of 1500 rpm. It is found that the performance and emission parameters of different blended fuels were very close to those of DF. In comparison with DF, all blended fuels with mahua oil and rice bran oil showed reduced smoke density at high engine loads. The smoke density of all the linseed-oil blended DF is lower than that of DF except for 50% linseed oil. Based on experimental data Dey P. and Ray S. [
15] adopted a response surface approach to optimize the fraction of waste vegetable oil in its blend with diesel fuel for fueling a diesel engine at an engine speed of 1500 rpm. It is found that under an engine torque of 14.72 N∙m, in comparison with DF, the CO emission and NOx emission for a blend of 50% waste vegetable oil and 50% DF decreased by 14.3% and 15.0%, respectively, but the HC emission increased by 8.3% and thermal efficiency decreased by 2.0%. In any case, SVO blended DF shows higher brake specific fuel consumption (BSFC) compared with DF under the same engine load due to the relatively low heating value of SVO. The performance and emissions of SVO blended DF fall between net SVO and neat DF.
The second method for decreasing the viscosity of vegetable oil-based biofuels is to preheat fuel before its injection into the combustion chamber [
35,
36,
37,
38]. Chauhan B. et al. [
37] studied the influence of fuel inlet temperature of Jatropha oil on the performance of a single-cylinder diesel engine at a constant engine speed. With increasing the temperature of Jatropha oil, the brake thermal efficiency (BTE) of the engine was increased, the emissions of CO, HC, and soot were reduced, but the emission of NOx was increased due to increased combustion temperature caused by improved fuel atomization and evaporation. Wu D. et al. [
38] investigated the impact of preheating on the performance and emission of a CI engine generator fueled with Croton megalocarpus oil (CMO). It is found that compared with no-heating CMO, preheating CMO up to 90 °C increased BTE at low engine loads and significantly reduced particle emission to a level equivalent to that of DF. The combination of these two methods has also been investigated [
39,
40,
41]. Senththur Prabu [
40] experimentally investigated a single-cylinder DI-diesel engine running on petroleum DF and preheated blends of DF and palm oil (PO) at a constant speed of 1500 rpm under different loads. The volume fraction of PO was 20%, 30%, and 40%. It has been shown that preheated blends of DF and PO showed better performance and emission characteristics compared with DF. An improvement in emission indicators—emissions of NOx, CO, and HC and exhaust smoke was noted. A mixture of 80% DF and 20% PO is most preferred. The lowest emission performance was further improved when 20% of n-butanol was added to this mixture. Linseed oil was blended with petroleum DF in the amount of 50% and 70% by volume and was tested in an air-cooled four-stroke single-cylinder diesel engine [
42]. These blended fuels were preheated to reduce their viscosity. In order to improve the flammability of the blended fuels, the parts of the combustion chamber were coated with a ceramic material with low thermal conductivity. Plasma spraying was used for the coating. It has been found that the preheating process lowers the viscosity of linseed oil, as well as reduces fuel consumption, and the coating process has a positive effect on toxic emissions—exhaust gas smoke, CO, and HC emissions. In order to implement fuel preheating, the engine must be modified. Besides, according to the results presented in [
35], it is needed to preheat rapeseed oil up to 95 °C to decrease the viscosity of rapeseed oil to 9 mm
2/s. The same viscosity value can be achieved by blending rapeseed oil with 80% of petroleum DF at 20 °C (see
Figure 1) without any engine modification necessary.
Emulsified biofuels, emulsions of vegetable oils with water, alcohols, and other alternative fuels, are also being investigated [
43,
44,
45,
46,
47]. The emulsion fuel shows enhanced fuel spray atomization attributed to microexplosion induced by the high difference of boiling point between water/alcohol and base fuel [
48]. The high superheat of water/alcohol in the fuel droplet makes water/alcohol explode violently, resulting in the formation of fine children droplets. The enhanced atomization attributed to microexplosion improves the quality of fuel-air mixture formation and reduces emissions. Ling and Wang [
43] studied the performances of a transport diesel engine fueled with emulsified diesel fuels containing 10% and 15% water with 1% of monoethylene glycol as an auxiliary emulsifier. By using an emulsion containing 15% water, the emissions of NOx, CO, and soot decreased by 26.9%, 45.9%, and 18.8%, respectively. At the same time, the engine brake torque decreased by 15.72%. Neat honge oil, emulsified honge oil, and preheated honge oil (up to 90 °C) were simultaneously tested in a single-cylinder diesel engine under different engine loads [
44]. At the same engine load, both emulsification and preheating produced higher BTE and lower emissions of soot and HC, while the maximum BTE and lowest emissions of soot and HC were achieved for emulsified honge oil. The emissions of CO and NOx after emulsifying or preheating honge oil increased under all engine loads. The performance of waste vegetable oil and its emulsion was experimentally compared on a single-cylinder direct injection (DI) diesel engine [
45]. The emulsion was prepared with ethanol and surfactant—Span 80. Compared with neat waste vegetable oil, engine performance improvement and emission reduction by using emulsion were obtained only at high engine loads. Various multicomponent emulsions are considered as engine fuels [
49,
50,
51]. The performance and emission characteristics of palm oil-DF blend emulsified with butanol have been studied on a DI diesel engine at a constant speed of 1500 rpm [
49]. In fuel emulsions, the volume fraction of DF was 50%, and the volume fraction of palm oil was 35–45%. It is noted that attributed to the relatively low viscosity of DF and butanol and relatively high calorific value of DF, the emulsion fuel had a lower viscosity and higher calorific value compared with net palm oil, and the viscosity of fuel emulsion containing 15% butanol was close to that of DF. Engine tests show that the increase of butanol volume fraction led to an increase in BTE, a reduction in CO, NOx, and soot emissions, but an increase in HC emission. Besides, the emissions of NOx and soot for fuel emulsion are lower than those for DF at almost all of the engine loads. Contradictory results were achieved for ternary emulsified fuels containing 70% DF, 10% butanol, and 30% SVO on a four-cylinder turbocharged DI diesel engine at full load [
50]. As SVO, six different non-edible vegetable oils were considered. An increase in NOx emission was noted for all of the emulsified fuels in comparison with DF. Qi D.H. et al. [
51] investigated the performance of ethanol emulsified palm oil-DF blends with different component contents (30% palm oil + 10% ethanol, 40% palm oil + 10% ethanol, and 30% palm oil + 30% ethanol) in a common rail DI engine with a double injection strategy. Ternary emulsified fuels showed slightly higher NOx emissions than DF at all load range due to synthetic effect of the application of pilot injection and the better volatility of ethanol. The former provides a high-temperature environment, in which, due to the presence of ethanol, the ternary emulsified fuels are evaporated more quickly and mixed with air more homogeneously and promptly, resulting in more abrupt combustion and higher in-cylinder pressure and temperature. On the other hand, the use of these ternary emulsified fuels led to a significant reduction of particulate matter (PM) emissions as a consequence of the high oxygen content in fuel, promoting particle oxidation, and less multi-ring aromatic hydrocarbons in fuel, providing fewer precursors for particle nucleation. In emulsion drops, microexplosion does not always take place; partial atomization—puffing might occur under certain conditions [
52,
53]. The occurrence of microexplosion or puffing in a droplet of water-emulsified biofuel depends on temperature, size, and the position of water inside the droplet [
52]. The study performed by Shen S. et al. [
53] shows that the deactivation of surfactant is a prerequisite condition for occurring microexplosion in a droplet of water-in-oil emulsified fuel droplet accelerates the coalescence of water dispersed in the fuel droplet; otherwise, puffing occurs. Therefore, the effect of fuel emulsification on engine thermal performance and emission depends largely on engine load, injection timing, components of fuel emulsion, and preparation method of emulsion.
Based on the literature analysis presented above, a significant number of published works are devoted to the research of diesel engines operating on blended and emulsified fuels, and the use of biofuels obtained with the use of vegetable oils can significantly improve emission characteristics of diesel engines adapted to work on these fuels. However, at the same time, the issues of comparative analysis of exhaust emission characteristics of diesel engines operating on blended biofuels with vegetable oil and emulsified multicomponent biofuels are insufficiently studied.
This study aims to conduct a comparative analysis of the effect of using DF-RO blends and multicomponent emulsified fuels with RO based on a turbocharged 4-stroke 4-cylinder diesel engine D-245 that is equipped with a combustion chamber that is conducive to the combustion of low volatile fuels. The novelty and practical significance of the present study are to comparatively evaluate the effect of the components of multicomponent emulsified fuels on engine performance, emission, and fuel injection characteristics. At the same time, different multicomponent emulsified fuels are considered—emulsions of DF, RO, water, and ethanol. To the author’s knowledge, there is no comparative analysis of the efficiency of using these multicomponent emulsified fuels. In the first research stage, the diesel engine D-245 was fueled and tested with petroleum DF and DF-RO blends with different RO content, and the impact of RO content on the thermal and emission performance of the engine was analyzed. In the second research stage, the engine performance for water-emulsified DF-RO blends was investigated. In the third research stage, a comparative analysis of the engine performance of DF-RO blends and water-emulsified DF-RO blends was performed. In addition, the influence of emulsified fuels on engine performance and emissions is usually analyzed from the point of view of fuel spray atomization and combustion. However, the quality of these processes is predetermined by the flow characteristics inside the injector nozzle, mainly by flow parameters at the nozzle outlet, on which fuel properties have a significant impact. Therefore, it is meaningful to study and analyze the flow behaviors of emulsified fuel inside the injector nozzle. To the author’s knowledge, the emulsification of RO with ethanol provides additional potentials to improve the performance of diesel engines in comparison with the use of an emulsion of RO and water. In addition, in comparison with RO and DF, ethanol and water both have high saturation pressure and low viscosity (ethanol and water have close viscosity). Based on these, in the fourth research stage, the flow behaviors of ethanol-emulsified RO inside the injector nozzle of the investigated diesel engine D-245 were studied and compared with DF by a CFD approach.
4. Conclusions
Comparative analysis of using DF-RO blends and different multicomponent emulsified biofuels with RO was performed. Engine performance and emission tests were carried out in a diesel engine D-245. Flow characteristics of DF, RO, and ethanol emulsified RO were numerically investigated in the injector nozzle of the investigated diesel engine. The following conclusions can be drawn.
In general, the performed experimental studies confirmed the possibility and efficiency of using water-emulsified DF-RO blends in transport diesel engines. Furthermore, fueling of the diesel engine D-245 with these emulsions made it possible to increase the BTE and improve the emission characteristics. Fuel emulsification not only provided better emission performance but also made the properties of biofuels more similar to those of petroleum DF. In particular, the addition of water to the DF-RO blend reduces the fuel viscosity, which, in turn, improves the quality of fuel injection, atomization, fuel-air mixture formation, and subsequent combustion processes.
The presence of water and RO can significantly improve the emission characteristics of the diesel engine. During the tests of the diesel engine, a decrease in emissions of the most significant toxic substances from exhaust gases—NOx and exhaust smoke—was noted. Moreover, in comparison with RO, the water contained in the emulsified DF-RO blends has a more significant effect on NOx emission reduction. The contents of RO and water have a comparable effect on exhaust smoke reduction.
The emulsification of RO with ethanol changes its properties and cavitation regime in the injector nozzle, which significantly impacts the flow parameters in the injector nozzle. Compared with RO, R70E30 has a higher injection velocity but lower FMR and CD. In comparison with DF, R70E30 has higher FMR but lower injection velocity and CD. At backpressure of 0.1 MPa, the TKE at the nozzle hole outlet for R70E30 is more than that for DF. At backpressure of 8.9 MPa, DF has the most TKE at the nozzle hole outlet attributed to the two turbulent cores formed in the nozzle hole.
It should also be noted that the adaptation of engines to work on multicomponent biofuels solves the problem of using local raw materials as a motor fuel. So, in agricultural complexes specializing in animal husbandry, an excess of vegetable oils is formed in the production of oil cake for animal feed. These excessed vegetable oils can be used as a component of motor fuel. This allows the complex use of agricultural products and simplifies the fueling of vehicles and agricultural machinery.