Go Back Research Article July, 2019

Experimental investigations of noise and vibration characteristics of gasoline-methanol blend fuelled gasoline direct injection engine and their relationship with combustion characteristics

Abstract

Engine noise and vibrations are influenced by engine’s combustion characteristics in addition to contributions from moving components. Combustion characteristics in-turn depend on various parameters such as fuel type, engine load, engine speed, spark timing etc. Low-carbon intensity fuels such as methanol have emerged as an attractive alternative to gasoline because of potential of their production from renewable resources and their higher octane rating. This experimental study was carried out in a single cylinder gasoline direct injection (GDI) research engine to investigate engine’s noise, and vibration characteristics and correlate them with the combustion characteristics of the engine. In this study, 10% (v/v) and 20% (v/v) methanol was blended with gasoline (M10 and M20), and these test fuels were evaluated at varying engine loads and speeds vis-à-vis baseline gasoline (G100). It was found that methanol-gasoline blends evaluated in this study generated relatively higher in-cylinder pressure, higher HRR, higher rate of pressure rise (RoPR) and cumulative heat release (CHR) compared to G100, which influenced engine's noise and vibration characteristics significantly.

Keywords

ngine Noise Engine Vibration Combustion Characteristics Fuel Type Engine Load Engine Speed Spark Timing Methanol Gasoline Methanol-Gasoline Blends GDI Engine In-Cylinder Pressure Heat Release Rate Pressure Rise Rate Cumulative Heat Release Fuel Blending Renewable Fuels Octane Rating Combustion Optimization Noise and Vibration Correlation Engine Performance Alternative Fuels
Details
Volume 158
Pages 113754
ISSN 1873-5606
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