Review on the Effect of the Phenomenon of Cavitation in Combustion Efficiency and the Role of Biofuels as a Solution against Cavitation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Bioethanol: produced from sugar cane, cereals, and sugar beet. It is used in petrol engines.
- Biodiesel: derived from different sources of fatty acids, including soybean, rapeseed, palm oil, and other vegetable oils. It is used in diesel engines.
1.1. Definition of the Studied Field
1.1.1. Fluidic Studies
Flow Inside Nozzle
Spray Characteristics
Nozzle Cavitation Effect on Spray
1.1.2. Combustion Studies
Comparison between Fuel and Biofuel Combustion
Effect of Cavitation on Combustion of Fuel or Biofuel Spray and Mixture
1.2. Methodology
2. Presentation of the Work Resulting from the Bibliographic Research
2.1. Fluidic Studies
2.1.1. Cavitation and Nozzle
Effect of Injector Geometry
Effect of Flow Rate
Effect of Fuel Temperature
2.1.2. Cavitation and Spray
Effect of Injector Geometry
Effect of Fuel Temperature
Effect of Injection or Ambient Pressure
Effect of Viscosity
2.1.3. Cavitation, Nozzle, and Spray
Effect of Viscosity
Effect of Injector Geometry
Effect of Injection or Ambient Pressure
2.1.4. Summary
2.2. Combustion Studies
2.2.1. Combustion, Fuel, and Biofuel: Effect of Fuel Type
2.2.2. Combustion, Cavitation, and Fuels
Effect of Cavitation on Combustion Efficiency for Different Nozzle Geometry
Effect of the Cavitation on the Air/Fluel Mixture
2.2.3. Combustion, Cavitation, and Biofuels
2.2.4. Summary
3. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
BSFC | Brake-specific fuel consumption |
BTE | Brake thermal efficiency |
CDIC | Direct injection combustion |
CFD | Computational Fluid Dynamics |
CO | Oxide carbon |
CO2 | Dioxide carbon |
COVID | COrona Virus Disease |
Deff | Effective diameter |
DME | Dimethyl ether |
DPM | Discrete phase model |
HPC | Highly premixed combustion |
HRR | Heat release rate |
KH-RT | Kelvin-Helmholtz and Rayleigh-Taylor |
KH-ACT | Kelvin-Helmholtz Aerodynamics Cavitation Turbulence |
NOx | Nitrogen oxides |
PPC | Partially premixed combustion |
R | Radius of inlet curvature |
RANS | Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes |
RNG | Re-Normalization Group |
RME | Rapeseed Oil Methyl Ester |
RPM | Round per minute |
SMD | Sauter mean diameter |
SME | Soy Methyl Esther |
SO2 | Sulphur dioxide |
θ | Angle of inclination of the injector hole |
WPO | Waste plastic oil |
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Fluidic Studies | |||
---|---|---|---|
Experimental Studies | |||
Subject of Study | Principle Results | Equipment Used | Bibliographic Reference |
Influence of the L/D ratio on cavitation inside the nozzle hole. | Increasing the entry radius increases the discharge coefficient decreases the vapor volume fraction. | [52] | |
Visualisation of cavitation by shadowgraphy method. | Speed fluctuations have been observed. Increasing the flow velocity has the effect of increasing the amount of cavitation. | Nd:YAG pulsed laser (wavelength kYAG = 532 nm and pulse duration = 6 ns) Optical zoom system 10-bit CCD camera | [53] |
The influence of the L/D ratio of an injector hole on the cavitation flow using diesel and biodiesel. | Increasing the L/D ratio decrease cavitation. | A long distance microscope (QM-1, QUESTAR) High-speed digital camera (Motion ProTM10000) A high power LED light Flow rate meter (LC-E10/EL2) Transparent nozzle | [54] |
Development of cavitation in a transparent nozzle with double orifices. | Increasing the injection pressure has the effect of increasing the amount of cavitation. | Transparent nozzle in PPMA High speed camera Light source | [59] |
Viscosity and fuel density in cold conditions. | The increase in viscosity decreases the discharge coefficient. | Bosch CRI 3.1 3-hole piezoelectric injector Piezoelectric sensor and temperature sensor IAV@ Injection Rate system | [61] |
Different injection and back pressure pressures on the characteristics of the spraying. | The spray angle of the elliptical nozzles increased more than that of the circular nozzles when the back pressure increases. | Two CCD cameras Two light sources (LED lights) Nitrogen, MATLAB software | [63] |
The injection process of diesel and biodiesel blend. | The cold temperature has a negative influence on the spray by increasing the length of penetration and decreasing the angle of spraying. | Bosch CRI 3.1 piezoelectric micro-sac injector A pump and a pressure fuel tank High speed camera 15,000 frames per second A continuous 150 W halogen lamp A climatic chamber. | [67] |
The spray structure of two biofuels (ethanol and butanol) in a constant volume chamber. | An increase in fuel temperature leads to faster atomization and faster evaporation rate leading to lower spray penetration and a smaller average Sauter diameter. | Two CMOS cameras A cube beam splitter Two pulsed 532 nm Nd:YAG lasers A five-hole DISI injector (BOSCH) | [68] |
Spraying characteristics near the nozzle of soybean biodiesel, di-n-butyl/biodiesel ether blends (DBE30). | The high surface tension and viscosity of biodiesel result in low primary spray fragmentation and a smaller micro spray area compared to DBE30 and diesel. | A Nd: YAG laser A fluorescence diffusor A CCD camera A long distance microscope | [69] |
The effects of biodiesel on the transient movement of the needle and flow characteristics. | The high viscosity of biodiesel slows down the movement of the needle and decreases flow performance. | A CCD camera A scintillator crystal (LYSO:Ce) X-ray beam. | [70] |
Investigations near the nozzle outlet. | Observation in the early moments of spraying that the fluid had a mushroom-like structure that could be preceded by a micro jet. | 12 bit CCD cameras A Nd:YAG laser A light source An ultra-fast framing camera | [71] |
Spraying characteristics of biofuels in a pressurized gas flow. | The aerodynamic action of the two fluids allows the fuel to atomize by shearing by first forming ligaments that are then reduced to shorter ligaments up to fine droplets of fuel. | [72] | |
Spraying using high-pressure injection systems and biofuels such as 2-methylfuran (MF), ethanol (ETH), and Isooctane (ISO) in modern direct injection gasoline engines. | A unique spray nozzle structure with a bubble attached to a mushroom tip from 30 MPa for ethanol and 30–40 MPa for MF given a higher surface tension. | An ultra-high-speed camera A long-distance microscope QM100 A 500W Xenon lamp High-pressure liquid pump. | [73] |
The influence of different biofuels such as rapeseed biodiesel (RME), rapeseed oil (RSO), palm oil (PO), and animal fats (AF) on atomisation and spray development processes compared to diesel. | At low temperatures the atomization of pure vegetable oil is very poor due to its high viscosity. The length of penetration depends more on the injection pressure than on the temperature of the biofuel. | Constant volume combustion chamber A high speed CCD camera A Kistler 4067A2000 pressure sensor K-type thermocouple The Pump-Line- Nozzle (PLN) system | [74] |
The atomization process of biofuels in internal combustion engine applications and the effects of this type of fuel on the spray fragmentation process. | The diameter of biodiesel droplets is generally larger than common diesel. Biofuel generally have a higher viscosity, surface tension and latent heat of vaporization resulting in a different atomization and spray structure compared to fossil fuel. | A literature review. | [75] |
Investigated the influence of the addition of DME in biodiesel according to different BD100, BD70, and BD30 blend ratios. | The duration of the injection is greater with the decrease in the ratio of biodiesel. The average amount of volume injection increases with the increase in the percentage of DME compared to pure biodiesel. | Two Kistler 4067A2000 pressure sensors Two Kistler 4068 charge amplifiers A Tektronix A622 current probe and the Yokogawa DL750 data acquisition equipment. | [76] |
The spray characteristics of used cooking oil biodiesel (B100) and its blend with diesel. | The results showed that B100, by its higher viscosity compared with diesel, has a higher penetration and pulverization speed unlike the angle of the cone which was narrower. | A constant volume spray chamber, Nitrogen (N2), common rail system, high pressure fuel pump, Denso common rail injector, Photron Fastcam SA5 high speed camera, and a 400W Hydrargyrum medium-arc Iodide (HMI) lamp. | [80] |
The spray characteristics of diesel (D) and sunflower biodiesel (SFB) near the injector nozzle as a function of angle (AU) between 2 nozzle holes. | The angle formed between the nozzle holes had an influence on the spray characteristics. | The XPCI, experiments commercial common rail injection system. A fuel tank A motor with high pressure pump and common rail. Apressure control unit and high pressure line. | [84] |
The parameters of injection pressure and ambient pressure on the spray characteristics of dimethyl ether (DME) and conventional diesel. | A higher injection pressure increases the vapor phase zone while it decreases when the chamber pressure conditions were higher. | ICCD camera with resolution of 1280(H)X1024(V), an Nd:YAG laser (SL2-10, Continuum, 532 nm and 150 mJ), and a signal synchronization system such as injector driver (TDA-3200H, TEMS), and digital delay generator (Model 555, Berkeley Nucleonics Corp.). | [86] |
The development of spraying in a spray chamber for a pressure of 4 MPa and 6 MPa using mineral diesel and biodiesel from rapeseed oil. | The results showed that diesel had a larger cone angle and a lower penetration length that would be due to the fact that diesel tends to cavitate more than biodiesel. | High pressure pump, injector pro- vided with single hole, A data acquisition system (DAQ system), LabVIEW software, a digital high speed camera, and LED lights. | [87] |
Injection characteristics with different ratios of mixing dimethyl ether (DME) with methyl ester derived from soy-bean oil (biodiesel). | The injection time increased with the amount of biodiesel in the blend compared to pure DME. | A piezo-type pressure sensor (Type 4045A50, Kistler), ICCD camera with resolution of 1280(H) × 1024(V), Nd:YAG laser, an injector driver, and digital delay generator (Model 555, Berkeley Nucleonics Corp.). | [88] |
The phenomenon of cavitation inside the injection nozzle. | The presence of a gas bubble at the outlet near the nozzle takes the form of mushroom at the beginning of injection. | A Bosch Common Rail A High rail pressures, Nd:YAG-laser A CCD camera. | [90] |
Cavitation bubbles formed in the volume of the nozzle bag. | The increase in the injection pressure contributes to the increase in the Reynolds number; thus, disturbances in the flow and consequently cavition disrupting the fuel flow. The morphology of the spray near the outlet of the injector a fungus-shaped structure appears unchanged visible from 180 to 350 μs after injection. | An optical transparent nozzle A common-rail direct injection system A high-pressure diesel pumps driven by electric motors, Nano Pulse Light (NPL) and Lamphouse (light source). A canon 700D camera with Electro-Optical System (EOS), and a microscope (QUESTAR QM-100) lens with large focal length. | [91] |
Numerical Studies | |||
Subject of Study | Principle Results | Software/Model Used | Bibliographic Reference |
Flow of diesel and biodiesel inside an injector. | Biodiesel cavitates less than diesel. | OpenFOAM/RNG k-ε | [55] |
Influence of fuel type on cavitation inside nozzle hole. | SME biodiesel cavitates less compared with diesel. | FLUENT CFD/k-ε | [56] |
Cavitation inside the nozzle holes of the injector. | Cavitation of ethereal fuels was much greater than diesel fuel. | KIVA4 CFD | [57] |
Evolution of cavitation in the nozzle. | Cavitation bubbles arise at the entrance of the nozzle in the lower position. | FLUENT CFD | [58] |
Increase in fuel temperature can have an influence on the cavitation. | The increase in fuel temperature can have an influence on the cavitation of the flow inside the injector. | FLUENT CFD/k-ε | [60] |
The effect of the input geometry of nozzles (pointed or rounded). | The nozzle with a rounded inlet has a higher discharge coefficient than the pointed inlet nozzles. | KIVA3V R2 | [62] |
Spray characteristics. | Fuel properties play a predominant role in spray characteristics. Viscosity, density, and surface tension influence the diameter of Sauter droplets. | FLUENT CFD/discrete phase model | [64] |
The effects of the nozzle hole L/D ratio and fuel temperature for different injection pressures and ambient pressure on biodiesel spray characteristics. | Injection pressure and fuel temperature have a greater impact on spray performance than the L/D ratio. | FLUENT CFD | [65] |
Effect of fuel temperature and ambient temperature on soybean oil methyl ester atomization (SME). | The variation in fuel temperature (300–360K) did not have a great effect on the length of fuel penetration. | KIVA-3V | [66] |
The effects of adding ethanol to biodiesel on macroscopic and microscopic spray characteristics. | Biodiesel has a higher viscosity and surface tension than diesel, it is possible to decrease these physical parameters of biodiesel by adding ethanol BD70E30 fuel (70% biodiesel, 30% ethanol) has similar characteristics to conventional diesel. | FLUENT CFD | [77] |
The physical characteristics of the caburant in the cavitation inside the injector and in the spraying. | The cavitation of biodiesel was less important than diesel fuel and that the disturbances of the flow inside the injector are less important for biodiesel. | FLUENT v6.3 and CONVERGE, KH-ACT (primary breakup) KH-RT (secondary breakup) | [78] |
A new hybrid spraying model by coupling the cavitation-induced spray model. | The higher viscosity of methyl stearate tends to inhibit cavitation followed by methyl oleate and methyl linoleate due to their higher viscosity compared to diesel. | KIVA4 CFD/KHRT | [79] |
Simulation of the contours of the vapor fraction for different fuels such as diesel, bio-diesels (Karanja, Jatropha), and their mixtures (KB5, KB20, KB100, JB5, JB20, JB100). | Cavitation at the outlet of the nozzle reduces the mass flow of fuel. Karanja biodiesel appears to be a more promising biofuel than Jatropha biodiesel, when it comes to the air-fuel blend. | [81] | |
A new hybrid spray model by coupling the standard KHRT model with a cavitation submodel. | Ether fuels have been shown to cavity more than standard diesel, also have a lower spray penetration length due to their lower viscosity than standard diesel. | KIVA4 CFD/KHRT | [82] |
A comparison on the injection process between pure diesel and pure biodiesel (soybean oil methyl ester). | The shape of the nozzle hole affects diesel more than biodiesel regarding the angle of the cone and the length of penetration. | AVL-Fire | [83] |
The influence of nozzle flow on spray development and the primary breakup process. | The geometry of the injector strongly influences the flow of fuel and the onset of cavitation. | AVL-Fire | [85] |
The effects of turbulence inside an injector on the spray of a biodiesel. | The greater the turbulence in the injector, the more the shape of the ligaments at the exit of the injector tends towards a looped shape caused by tangential forces. | OpenFOAM/PISO algorithm | [92] |
Combustion Studies | |||
---|---|---|---|
Experimental Studies | |||
Subject of Study | Principle Results | Equipment Used | Bibliographic Reference |
Using cooking oil as a diesel substitute. | The engine performance values of used cooking oils have similar properties with diesel fuel. | Wager 6500 model smoke (opacity) Meter, Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) Energy Dispersive X-Ray analysis. | [93] |
Definition of macroscopic evaporation characteristics. | the brightness of the flame is essentially composed of two sources: a yellowish-red diffusion flame from incandescent soot particles and the greenish-blue premixed flame of excited gaseous species such as ch and C2 radicals. | High-speed shadowgraphic method. | [94] |
The effect of injection pressures on the ignition and combustion characteristics of two biodiesel fuels, one from palm oil (BDFp), and the other from cooking oil (BDFc) compared to common diesel. | BDFp has a longer penetration length with a lower spray angle, the ignition delay the BDFp was shorter. | A high-pressure gene- rator (High Pressure Equipment Co. model 37-5.75-60) Pressure transducer A xenon lamp two reflecting mirrors A high-speed video camera. | [95] |
The spray combustion of FPBO fast pyrolysis bio-oil. | It is recommended to heat it beforehand to 353 K or to mix it with alcohol to improve vaporization and ignition Small-model combustion chambers have shown excellent results for considering its use on an industrial scale. | [96] | |
CO2 liquefied as an additive and n-tridecane representing diesel were used with the aim of simultaneously reducing soot and NOx emissions. | Reductions in soot and HC emissions and fuel consumption. | An optical engine A high-speed direct camera Argon ion laser A shadow photography method. | [97] |
Performance and emissions of diesel engines powered by a mixture of mineral diesel fuel with biodiesel. | A higher specific fuel consumption for fuel mixtures mainly due to their low energy content associated with the difference in physical and chemical properties. | Pulse/Delay Generator system A Stanford DG535 Delay Generator A digital image processing software (IMAGE PRO-PLUS) A CCD camera, 1376 × 1040 pixels, 12-bit resolution A macro lens A 25 mm lens | [98] |
The impact of mixing diesel with bioethanol on the thermal efficiency of an industrial boiler. | Mixing diesel with bioethanol can have a real advantage in terms of reducing pollutants without exceeding 50% bioethanol. | A vertical 100 kW experimental boiler An oil burner with different Danfoss nozzles with a 60° solid cone spray A chimney | [99] |
The effects of adding propanol in a WPO (waste plastic oil) and diesel mixture on the performance and emissions of a single-cylinder DI diesel engine. | The addition of propanol has reduced fume emissions compared to pure diesel and diesel mixed with WPO. | [100] | |
The emission and combustion performance characteristics of a 4-cylinder indica diesel engine powered by biodiesel (yellow oleander oil YOO) produced by hydrodynamic cavitation. | The s-values of engine performance: BSFC, EGT, were better for blends compared to diesel and that BTE increased by up to 20%. | Diesel engine AVL DIX emission diagnostic system. | [101] |
Performance and emissions on a single-cylinder direct-injection diesel engine powered by radish biodiesel. | The gaseous emissions for biodiesels B100, B75 were more favorable than diesel for CO, NOx, and HC. | 4 stroke, kirloskar, TV 1 direct injection diesel engine, AVL 444 digital di-gas analyzer. | [102] |
The use of used plastic oil (WPO) in a direct injection (DI) diesel engine. | The realization of the ternary mixture (D50-W40-H10, D50-W30-H20 and D50-W20-H30), allows to use a recycled and renewable fuel in diesel engines. | DI diesel engine Common rail direct injection. | [103] |
Performance, combustion and emissions on a computerized CI single-cylinder diesel engine powered with B20 (diesel mixture with 20% Mahua methyl ester). | The combination of the B20 with the smallest orifice showed appreciable results in terms of performance, combustion and emissions. But, the only downside was that NOx was increased. | A single cylinder diesel engine An AVL emission analyzer An AVL smoke meter. | [104] |
A comparison between diesel and WCO (waste cooking oil) biodiesel on combustion characteristics. | WCO biodiesel had a longer injection time than diesel due to a higher dynamic viscosity. A decrease in CO, HC and PM and an increase in NOx for WCO The analysis of the combustion flame, WCO biodiesel showed lower soot incandescence and shorter flame duration. | A single-cylinder direct-injection diesel engine A high-pressure common-rail injection system A piezoelectric pressure transducer (6052C; Kistler) An exhaust gas analyzer (MEXA 1500D; Horiba) A smoke meter (415S; AVL) | [105] |
The impact of cooling an injector jacket on the spraying and combustion developments of a mixture containing 60% gasoline and 40% hydrogenated catalytic biodiesel. | Cooling the injector contributes to a significant increase in the length of penetration of the spray and the amount of soot produced. | A pre-heated constant volume combustion chamber (CVCC) A common rail injector A single-hole cylindrical nozzle diameter of 120 μm A high-speed schlieren imaging | [106] |
The spraying, atomization and combustion, emission characteristics of gasoline direct injection (GDI) engines. | A lot of soot is produced when the engine is cold. | [107] | |
The coking effects of an injector of a Yanmar TF120M engine with diesel and biodiesel (Jatropha oil). | The accumulation of deposits in the injector has a significant influence on the length of penetration and decrease in the angle of the spray. | A diesel engine Yanmar TF120M Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) A high- speed camera Sony A9. | [108] |
The effects of the ultrasonic irradiation process of diesel and biodiesel on NOx emis-sions. | NOx emissions for biodiesel fuel have decreased by 8 to 18.2% depending on the engine load compared to untreated biodiesel. | Testo 330 XL exhaust gas analyzer A Weinlich M 8000 dynamometer in accordance with the methodology of the research in the field (Szybist et al. 2007; Kegl et al. 2008). | [109] |
A study on the effects of internal nozzle flow by modifying the geometry of the nozzle hole inlet on spray combustion. | The different discharge coefficients imply that the flows inside the nozzles have different levels of turbulence and cavitation. | A common rail injection system A CCD camera. | [110] |
The relationship between the internal flow, cavitation behaviour and spray combustion of a full-size diesel nozzle. | The inlet radius of the nozzle hole influences the formation of cavitation, the characteristics of spraying and combustion. | A high-speed camera (Photron FASTCAM SA1.1) A strobe light (Sugawara ESD-VF2M-U2) a high-speed camera (Shimadzu HPV-2A) for a micro-particle image velocimetry (PIV) method. | [113] |
Two Spray C (cavitation) and Spray D injectors with a hole diameter of the order of 200 μm in different combustion plants of three independent research laboratories. | Cavitation has an influence on Flame lift-off length and ignition delay. | [114] | |
Numerical Studies | |||
Subject of Study | Principle Results | Software/Model Used | Bibliographic Reference |
The effects of nozzle orifice geometry (i.e. conicity and hydrogriding) on the spraying and combustion processes. | The conicity of the nozzle hole and rounding the nozzle inlet by hydrogriding tends to reduce cavitation and disturbances inside the injector. | CONVERGE/(KH-ACT) | [111] |
the effects of primary breakup modelling on the spray and combustion characteristics under diesel engine conditions. | The inclusion of cavitation and turbulence improves primary breakup, resulting in smaller droplets, decreased liquid penetration, and increased radial dispersion of the spray. | KH-ACT | [112] |
The entire combustion process in an engine. | Gasoline has a higher cavitation, injection speed and turbulent energy compared to diesel, increasing the amount of diesel decreases the phenomenon of cavitation. | KIVA4/(KH-RT) | [115] |
The characteristics of internal nozzle flow, spraying, combustion and emission of different traditional diesel fuels, gasoline and two types of WDF. | The spray penetration of gasoline is the shortest and the spray rate the lowest, while the spray angle is the largest, which allows for better performance in the air-fuel mixture. | KIVA4 and CHEMKIN/(KH-RT) | [116] |
Petrodiesel replacement numerical study by a biologically-derived heavy alcohol called phytol (C20H40O). | The phytol has a lower flow rate in the injector; therefore, it has a tendency to cavitate less. | FLUENT | [117] |
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Lamoot, L.; Manescau, B.; Chetehouna, K.; Gascoin, N. Review on the Effect of the Phenomenon of Cavitation in Combustion Efficiency and the Role of Biofuels as a Solution against Cavitation. Energies 2021, 14, 7265. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14217265
Lamoot L, Manescau B, Chetehouna K, Gascoin N. Review on the Effect of the Phenomenon of Cavitation in Combustion Efficiency and the Role of Biofuels as a Solution against Cavitation. Energies. 2021; 14(21):7265. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14217265
Chicago/Turabian StyleLamoot, Ludovic, Brady Manescau, Khaled Chetehouna, and Nicolas Gascoin. 2021. "Review on the Effect of the Phenomenon of Cavitation in Combustion Efficiency and the Role of Biofuels as a Solution against Cavitation" Energies 14, no. 21: 7265. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14217265
APA StyleLamoot, L., Manescau, B., Chetehouna, K., & Gascoin, N. (2021). Review on the Effect of the Phenomenon of Cavitation in Combustion Efficiency and the Role of Biofuels as a Solution against Cavitation. Energies, 14(21), 7265. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14217265