Effects of triglyceride gasoline blends on combustion and emissions in a common rail direct injection diesel engine

This study presents the combustion and emission results using a blend of unrefined triglycerides (straight vegetable oils) and regular unleaded gasoline in a compression ignition engine typically used in farming machinery. Most farm equipment is powered by diesel engines. A sizable cost of producing...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of engine research 2018-12, Vol.19 (10), p.1068-1078
Hauptverfasser: Lakshminarayanan, Arunachalam, Olsen, Daniel B, Cabot, Perry E
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container_title International journal of engine research
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creator Lakshminarayanan, Arunachalam
Olsen, Daniel B
Cabot, Perry E
description This study presents the combustion and emission results using a blend of unrefined triglycerides (straight vegetable oils) and regular unleaded gasoline in a compression ignition engine typically used in farming machinery. Most farm equipment is powered by diesel engines. A sizable cost of producing a crop on a farm can be attributed to fuel—diesel in such cases. Farmers and researchers have been interested in the use of alternative fuels, especially triglycerides, which could potentially bring down the fuel cost portion of the farm input costs. One of the major drawbacks of using unrefined triglycerides is poor cold flow properties due to high density and viscosity. To overcome this, the triglycerides can be blended with gasoline to lower the density and viscosity. This blend has been used in existing diesel engines without the need for any modification to the engine or its control system. The experiments were conducted on a 4.5-L Tier 3 engine. The fuel used was a blend of unrefined canola triglyceride and regular unleaded gasoline (10% by volume). Measurements include mass fraction burned combustion pressure, fuel consumption and pollutant emissions. The fuel consumption of TGB10 was lower than most straight vegetable oils found in the literature, but higher than diesel. The peak pressure of TGB10 was slightly higher than diesel and occurred earlier than diesel. The brake-specific NOx was lower than diesel at lower and no load points. Particulate matter emissions of TGB10 were higher than diesel at rated speed. Total hydrocarbon emissions were generally higher than diesel. CO emissions were lower than diesel except at low or no load points where they were significantly higher.
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identifier ISSN: 1468-0874
ispartof International journal of engine research, 2018-12, Vol.19 (10), p.1068-1078
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source SAGE Complete
subjects Agricultural equipment
Alternative fuels
Cold flow
Combustion
Common rail
Diesel engines
Emission analysis
Flow-density-speed relationships
Fuel consumption
Gasoline
Particulate emissions
Peak pressure
Price increases
Triglycerides
Vegetable oils
Viscosity
title Effects of triglyceride gasoline blends on combustion and emissions in a common rail direct injection diesel engine
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