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Paper Title

Effect of fuel injection pressure and injection timing of Karanja biodiesel blends on fuel spray, engine performance, emissions and combustion characteristics

Keywords

  • Karanja Biodiesel
  • Biodiesel Blends
  • Karanja Oil Methyl Ester
  • KOME
  • Injection Rate
  • Atomization
  • Engine Performance
  • Emissions
  • Combustion Characteristics
  • Common Rail Direct Injection
  • CRDI
  • Single Cylinder Research Engine
  • Fuel Injection Pressure
  • Start of Injection Timings
  • Sauter Mean Diameter
  • D32
  • Arithmetic Mean Diameter
  • D10
  • Fuel Droplets
  • Thermal Efficiency
  • Brake Specific Hydrocarbon
  • BSHC
  • Brake Specific Carbon Monoxide
  • BSCO
  • Combustion Duration
  • Brake Thermal Efficiency
  • BTE
  • Emission Reduction
  • ECU Recalibration
  • Hardware Changes
  • Fuel Density
  • Fuel Viscosity

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 91 | Page No : 302-314

Published On

February, 2015

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Abstract

In this investigation, effect of 10%, 20% and 50% Karanja biodiesel blends on injection rate, atomization, engine performance, emissions and combustion characteristics of common rail direct injection (CRDI) type fuel injection system were evaluated in a single cylinder research engine at 300, 500, 750 and 1000 bar fuel injection pressures at different start of injection timings and constant engine speed of 1500 rpm. The duration of fuel injection slightly decreased with increasing blend ratio of biodiesel (Karanja Oil Methyl Ester: KOME) and significantly decreased with increasing fuel injection pressure. The injection rate profile and Sauter mean diameter (D32) of the fuel droplets are influenced by the injection pressure. Increasing fuel injection pressure generally improves the thermal efficiency of the test fuels. Sauter mean diameter (D32) and arithmetic mean diameter (D10) decreased with decreasing Karanja biodiesel content in the blend and significantly increased for higher blends due to relatively higher fuel density and viscosity. Maximum thermal efficiency was observed at the same injection timing for biodiesel blends and mineral diesel. Lower Karanja biodiesel blends (up to 20%) showed lower brake specific hydrocarbon (BSHC) and carbon monoxide (BSCO) emissions in comparison to mineral diesel. For lower Karanja biodiesel blends, combustion duration was shorter than mineral diesel however at higher fuel injection pressures, combustion duration of 50% blend was longer than mineral diesel. Up to 10% Karanja biodiesel blends in a CRDI engines improves brake thermal efficiency and reduces emissions, without any requirement of hardware changes or ECU recalibration.

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