Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of a VCR Engine Fueled with Sea Mango Biodiesel/Diesel Blends
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Setup and Methods
2.1. Fuel Preparation
2.2. Engine Test Rig
2.3. Uncertainties
3. Result and Discussion
3.1. Combustion Analysis
3.2. Performance Analysis
3.3. Emission Analysis
4. Conclusions
- At CR 18:1, the Cp climbed 13.83% and the HRR fell 11.13%. The CR raised the peak Cp. When CR rose, more secondary fuel was burnable. Peak pressure advancement was projected due to the immediate combustion of gaseous fuel in the cylinder at higher pressure. More oxygen and steady fuel flow may also have raised peak in-cylinder pressure at higher CRs. The HRR decreased with the increase in the CR. This was due to the increase in the maximum in-cylinder temperature, boosting the rate of heat transfer during combustion.
- BTHE rose 8.78% with CR 18:1, compared to the standard CR. Higher CRs in diesel engines led to greater air/fuel mixing, higher combustion chamber temperature, and fine fuel droplet production. As the CR rose, SFC fell. SFC was 11.18% below normal CR at 18:1. Greater CRs enabled higher in-cylinder temperatures, better air/fuel ratios, and full combustion, leading to reduced fuel consumption. At CR 18:1, EGT was also lowered by 2.52%, compared to the standard CR. Compressed air entering the suction stroke at a higher CR boosted the air temperature and improved the combustion, leading to reduced EGT.
- CR reduced CO, HC, and smoke emissions. CR 18:1 decreased CO, HC, and smoke emissions by 14.65%, 18.56%, and 11.56. Shorter delay time, better air–fuel mix, and a greater CR may have been responsible. NOx rose with CR. NOx values were lower at CR 16:1, while they increased by 6.77% on average at CR 18:1. This was mainly due to the higher in-cylinder temperature and better combustion process at CR 18:1.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Fatty Acid | Formula | Composition (wt.%) |
---|---|---|
Myristic acid | C14H28O2 | 0.39 |
Palmitic acid | C16H32O2 | 12.98 |
Stearic acid | C18H36O2 | 4.23 |
Oleic acid | C18H34O2 | 26.15 |
Linoleic acid | C18H32O2 | 45.69 |
Alpha-Linolenic acid | C18H30O2 | 1.99 |
Arachidonic acid | C20H32O2 | 0.490 |
Cis-8-11-14 Eicosatrienoic | C20H34O2 | 0.321 |
Cis-11 Eicosenoic acid | C20H38O2 | 0.561 |
Cis-13,16 Docosadienoic acid | C22H40O2 | 0.121 |
Behenic acid | C22H44O2 | 5.998 |
Tricosanoic acid | C23H46O2 | 0.860 |
Fuel Properties | Unit | DF | SME10 | SME20 | SME30 | SME40 | SME100 | ASTM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Density at 15 °C | g/cm3 | 0.830 | 0.834 | 0.839 | 0.845 | 0.849 | 0.875 | D1448 |
Viscosity at 40 °C | mm2/s | 2.7 | 2.82 | 2.96 | 3.07 | 3.16 | 4.2 | D6751 |
Calorific Value | MJ/kg | 42.5 | 42.27 | 42.08 | 41.79 | 41.52 | 38.62 | D445 |
Cetane No. | - | 49.22 | 49.46 | 49.77 | 49.94 | 50.29 | 51.71 | D93 |
Flash Point | °C | 64 | 74 | 86 | 95 | 103 | 142 | D93 |
Cloud Point | °C | −4.0 | −2.1 | 1.6 | 2.9 | 4.1 | 7.2 | D2500 |
Fire Point | °C | 71 | 83 | 92 | 106 | 114 | 156 | D613 |
Parameter | Specification |
---|---|
General details | 4-stroke, multifuel, VCR engine |
Number of cylinders | 1 |
Speed | 1500 rpm |
Ignition | Compression ignition |
Compression ratio | 12:1–18:1 |
Rated power | 3.5 kW |
Loading | Eddy current dynamometer |
Bore | 87.5 mm |
Stroke | 110 mm |
Rotameter | Calorimeter 25–250 LPH |
Temperature sensor | Type K, PT100 thermocouple |
2Air flow transmitter | Pressure transmitter |
Cooling | Water-cooled |
Equipment | Measured Quantity | Measuring Range | Accuracy | Uncertainty |
---|---|---|---|---|
AVL digas 444N gas analyzer | CO | 0–10%vol | ±0.03%vol | ±0.15% |
O2 | 0–22%vol | ±5%vol | ±0.5% | |
CO2 | 0–20%vol | ±0.5%vol | ±0.3% | |
HC | 0–20,000 ppm | ±5 ppm | ±0.4% | |
NOx | 0–5000 ppm | ±10 ppm | ±1.2% | |
AVL 437 smoke meter | Smoke | 0–100% | ±2% | ±0.8% |
Thermocouple | Exhaust gas temperature | 0–1200 °C | ±2 °C | ±0.2% |
Tachometer | Engine speed | 1–10,000 rpm | ±5 rpm | ±0.2% |
AVL GH14D pressure transducer | Pressure | 0–250 bar | ±0.3 bar | ±0.25% |
AVL 365C angle encoder | Crank angle | 0–720 °CA | ±1 °CA | ±0.5% |
DP fuel flow transmitter | Fuel flow rate | 0–500 mmWC | ±2 mmWC | ±0.5% |
Parameters | Uncertainty % |
---|---|
BTHE | ±0.75 |
SFC | ±0.15 |
EGT | ±0.75 |
CO | ±0.28 |
HC | ±0.72 |
NOx | ±1.45 |
Smoke | ±0.82 |
Cylinder pressure | ±0.25 |
Heat release rate | ±0.55 |
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Renish, R.R.; Selvam, A.J.; Čep, R.; Elangovan, M. Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of a VCR Engine Fueled with Sea Mango Biodiesel/Diesel Blends. Processes 2022, 10, 1469. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10081469
Renish RR, Selvam AJ, Čep R, Elangovan M. Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of a VCR Engine Fueled with Sea Mango Biodiesel/Diesel Blends. Processes. 2022; 10(8):1469. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10081469
Chicago/Turabian StyleRenish, R. Rohith, Amala Justus Selvam, Robert Čep, and Muniyandy Elangovan. 2022. "Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of a VCR Engine Fueled with Sea Mango Biodiesel/Diesel Blends" Processes 10, no. 8: 1469. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10081469
APA StyleRenish, R. R., Selvam, A. J., Čep, R., & Elangovan, M. (2022). Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of a VCR Engine Fueled with Sea Mango Biodiesel/Diesel Blends. Processes, 10(8), 1469. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10081469