Energy Conversion and Management: X (Sep 2021)

Comparative evaluation of the combustion process and emissions of a diesel engine operating on the cetane improver 2-Ethylhexyl nitrate doped rapeseed oil and aviation JP-8 fuel

  • Gvidonas Labeckas,
  • Stasys Slavinskas

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
p. 100106

Abstract

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Rapeseed oil (RO) and JP-8 fuel (JF) as alternatives could be used as diesel fuel supplements in many power sectors however, the low cetane number related drawbacks should be removed to overcome the difficulties in the ignition and to achieve efficient-clean combustion of the fuels. The purpose of the research is to make a comparative evaluation of the cetane enhancer-made effects on the combustion process, cyclic variability, thermal efficiency, smoke, and exhaust emissions. At first, a naturally aspirated engine operated with the undoped RO and JF to identify the baseline parameters for full (100%) loads corresponding to Indicated Mean Effective Pressures (IMEP) of 0.844 and 0.738 MPa at speeds of 1400 and 2200 rpm. Then, the engine operated with the 2-EHN doped fuels 0.10 (RO-10), 0.30 (RO-30) and 10 (JF-10), 24 vol% (JF-24) to get new results needed for comparative evaluation of the benefits and detriments in the combustion process, engine efficiency, smoke, and emissions. The ignition delay was 10.3% and 44.6% shorter, the Indicated Thermal Efficiency (ITE) was 6.1% higher and 1.2% lower, the NOx emissions were a little and 10.3% lower with the doped RO-30 and JF-24 at a speed of 2200 rpm. The coefficients of cyclic variations (COVs) of the IMEP were 9.7% higher and 11.8% lower, the in-cylinder maximum pressure was 22.5% and 29.0% lower, and the increment rate of maximum pressure was 13.5% and 14.9% lower, respectively. Also, RO-30, JF-24 fuels suggested smoke opacity and CO emissions 42.1%, 32.1% and 11.6%, 2.7% higher, THC emissions 1.9 times higher, and 28.6% lower for engine tested conditions.

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