Combustion Analysis of a Diesel Engine Running on Different Biodiesel Blends

Rape-seed biodiesel is an interesting option to address the problem of decreasing availability of conventional fossil fuels, as well as to reduce the CO2 emissions of internal combustion engines. The present paper describes an experimental campaign carried out on a current production 4-cylinder, 4-s...

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Main Authors: Enrico Mattarelli, Carlo Alberto Rinaldini, Tommaso Savioli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2015-04-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/8/4/3047
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spelling doaj-a3fe33b40ac6439286e27e999ec62b402020-11-24T23:04:37ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732015-04-01843047305710.3390/en8043047en8043047Combustion Analysis of a Diesel Engine Running on Different Biodiesel BlendsEnrico Mattarelli0Carlo Alberto Rinaldini1Tommaso Savioli2Department of Engineering "Enzo Ferrari", University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Via Vivarelli 10, 41125 Modena, ItalyDepartment of Engineering "Enzo Ferrari", University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Via Vivarelli 10, 41125 Modena, ItalyDepartment of Engineering "Enzo Ferrari", University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Via Vivarelli 10, 41125 Modena, ItalyRape-seed biodiesel is an interesting option to address the problem of decreasing availability of conventional fossil fuels, as well as to reduce the CO2 emissions of internal combustion engines. The present paper describes an experimental campaign carried out on a current production 4-cylinder, 4-stroke naturally aspirated diesel engine, running on standard diesel fuel and on three different blends of rape-seed biodiesel (20%-50%-100%). Performance, emissions and in-cylinder pressure traces were measured at full load. It was found that the influence of rape-seed biodiesel in the fuel blend is not constant at each operating condition. However, as the biodiesel content increases, full load performance tends to drop, in particular brake specific fuel consumption (maximum worsening: +18%), while soot emission goes down. The maximum improvement observed in terms of soot concentration is 37.5%, at 1200 rpm. The combustion analysis revealed that the main differences among the fuels occur in the first phase of combustion: the burn rate is slower for biodiesel blends at low speeds, and faster at high.http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/8/4/3047biodieseldiesel enginecombustionsootrapeseed
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Enrico Mattarelli
Carlo Alberto Rinaldini
Tommaso Savioli
spellingShingle Enrico Mattarelli
Carlo Alberto Rinaldini
Tommaso Savioli
Combustion Analysis of a Diesel Engine Running on Different Biodiesel Blends
Energies
biodiesel
diesel engine
combustion
soot
rapeseed
author_facet Enrico Mattarelli
Carlo Alberto Rinaldini
Tommaso Savioli
author_sort Enrico Mattarelli
title Combustion Analysis of a Diesel Engine Running on Different Biodiesel Blends
title_short Combustion Analysis of a Diesel Engine Running on Different Biodiesel Blends
title_full Combustion Analysis of a Diesel Engine Running on Different Biodiesel Blends
title_fullStr Combustion Analysis of a Diesel Engine Running on Different Biodiesel Blends
title_full_unstemmed Combustion Analysis of a Diesel Engine Running on Different Biodiesel Blends
title_sort combustion analysis of a diesel engine running on different biodiesel blends
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2015-04-01
description Rape-seed biodiesel is an interesting option to address the problem of decreasing availability of conventional fossil fuels, as well as to reduce the CO2 emissions of internal combustion engines. The present paper describes an experimental campaign carried out on a current production 4-cylinder, 4-stroke naturally aspirated diesel engine, running on standard diesel fuel and on three different blends of rape-seed biodiesel (20%-50%-100%). Performance, emissions and in-cylinder pressure traces were measured at full load. It was found that the influence of rape-seed biodiesel in the fuel blend is not constant at each operating condition. However, as the biodiesel content increases, full load performance tends to drop, in particular brake specific fuel consumption (maximum worsening: +18%), while soot emission goes down. The maximum improvement observed in terms of soot concentration is 37.5%, at 1200 rpm. The combustion analysis revealed that the main differences among the fuels occur in the first phase of combustion: the burn rate is slower for biodiesel blends at low speeds, and faster at high.
topic biodiesel
diesel engine
combustion
soot
rapeseed
url http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/8/4/3047
work_keys_str_mv AT enricomattarelli combustionanalysisofadieselenginerunningondifferentbiodieselblends
AT carloalbertorinaldini combustionanalysisofadieselenginerunningondifferentbiodieselblends
AT tommasosavioli combustionanalysisofadieselenginerunningondifferentbiodieselblends
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