Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of Safflower, Neem and Corn Biodiesels Fuelled in a CI Engine

Renewable fuels are desirable as alternate fuels with ignition quality equivalent to diesel and its combustion parameters, but unsuitable for direct operation in diesel engines as fuel because of their higher viscosity. Hence, fuel and engine-based modifications are being developed to improve the pe...

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Main Author: K. Balasubramanian and K. Purushothaman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Technoscience Publications 2019-12-01
Series:Nature Environment and Pollution Technology
Online Access:http://neptjournal.com/upload-images/NL-72-22-(20)B-3612.pdf
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spelling doaj-c312044653c043b187c5af108463cfd52020-11-25T03:33:04ZengTechnoscience PublicationsNature Environment and Pollution Technology0972-62682395-34542019-12-0118412651273Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of Safflower, Neem and Corn Biodiesels Fuelled in a CI EngineK. Balasubramanian and K. PurushothamanRenewable fuels are desirable as alternate fuels with ignition quality equivalent to diesel and its combustion parameters, but unsuitable for direct operation in diesel engines as fuel because of their higher viscosity. Hence, fuel and engine-based modifications are being developed to improve the performance, emission and combustion behaviour of the compression ignition engines. The higher viscosity of fuel oil does not let it vaporize even after it is being injected into the combustion chamber. Therefore, converting the higher viscosity of vegetable oil into biodiesel improves the atomization resulting in better combustion. Issues related to the use of biodiesel as working fuel are its oxidation stability and performance. In this study, safflower oil, neem oil and corn oil are used as fuel oils. The experimental results displayed a significant increase in the brake thermal efficiency of 28.25% for corn oil methyl ester (COME). HC and CO emissions are lower with corn oil methyl ester. At full load, the smoke emission reduces slightly with corn oil methyl ester about 58% opacity respectively, but it is still lower than diesel having 66.2% opacity.http://neptjournal.com/upload-images/NL-72-22-(20)B-3612.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K. Balasubramanian and K. Purushothaman
spellingShingle K. Balasubramanian and K. Purushothaman
Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of Safflower, Neem and Corn Biodiesels Fuelled in a CI Engine
Nature Environment and Pollution Technology
author_facet K. Balasubramanian and K. Purushothaman
author_sort K. Balasubramanian and K. Purushothaman
title Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of Safflower, Neem and Corn Biodiesels Fuelled in a CI Engine
title_short Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of Safflower, Neem and Corn Biodiesels Fuelled in a CI Engine
title_full Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of Safflower, Neem and Corn Biodiesels Fuelled in a CI Engine
title_fullStr Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of Safflower, Neem and Corn Biodiesels Fuelled in a CI Engine
title_full_unstemmed Performance, Emission and Combustion Characteristics of Safflower, Neem and Corn Biodiesels Fuelled in a CI Engine
title_sort performance, emission and combustion characteristics of safflower, neem and corn biodiesels fuelled in a ci engine
publisher Technoscience Publications
series Nature Environment and Pollution Technology
issn 0972-6268
2395-3454
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Renewable fuels are desirable as alternate fuels with ignition quality equivalent to diesel and its combustion parameters, but unsuitable for direct operation in diesel engines as fuel because of their higher viscosity. Hence, fuel and engine-based modifications are being developed to improve the performance, emission and combustion behaviour of the compression ignition engines. The higher viscosity of fuel oil does not let it vaporize even after it is being injected into the combustion chamber. Therefore, converting the higher viscosity of vegetable oil into biodiesel improves the atomization resulting in better combustion. Issues related to the use of biodiesel as working fuel are its oxidation stability and performance. In this study, safflower oil, neem oil and corn oil are used as fuel oils. The experimental results displayed a significant increase in the brake thermal efficiency of 28.25% for corn oil methyl ester (COME). HC and CO emissions are lower with corn oil methyl ester. At full load, the smoke emission reduces slightly with corn oil methyl ester about 58% opacity respectively, but it is still lower than diesel having 66.2% opacity.
url http://neptjournal.com/upload-images/NL-72-22-(20)B-3612.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT kbalasubramanianandkpurushothaman performanceemissionandcombustioncharacteristicsofsafflowerneemandcornbiodieselsfuelledinaciengine
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