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Paper Title

Fuel Injection Strategy for Utilization of Mineral Diesel-Methanol Blend in a Common Rail Direct Injection Engine

Authors

Avinash Kumar Agarwal
Avinash Kumar Agarwal
Akhilendra Pratap Singh
Akhilendra Pratap Singh
Vikram Kumar
Vikram Kumar
Nikhil Sharma
Nikhil Sharma
Dev Prakash Satsangi
Dev Prakash Satsangi

Keywords

  • Methanol Fueled Engine
  • Internal Combustion Engine
  • MD10 Blend
  • Methanol-Diesel Blends
  • Fuel Injection Strategy
  • Single Pilot Injection
  • Double Pilot Injection
  • Start of Main Injection
  • Crank Angle Timing
  • Fuel Injection Pressure
  • Brake Thermal Efficiency
  • Exhaust Gas Temperature
  • Oxides of Nitrogen
  • NOx Emissions
  • Particulate Reduction
  • Accumulation Mode Particles
  • Engine Combustion
  • Emission Control
  • Particulate Matter
  • Methanol as Fuel Additive
  • Engine Load
  • Engine Speed
  • Fossil Fuel Reduction
  • Environmental Pollution
  • Combustion Optimization

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 142 | Issue : 8 | Page No : 082305

Published On

February, 2020

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Abstract

Methanol fueled internal combustion (IC) engines have attracted significant attention due to their contributions in reducing environmental pollution and fossil fuel consumption. In this study, a single-cylinder research engine was operated on MD10 (10% (v/v) methanol blended with mineral diesel) and baseline mineral diesel to explore an optimized fuel injection strategy for efficient combustion and reduced emissions. The experiments were conducted at constant engine speed (1500 rpm) and load (3 kW) using two different fuel injection strategies, namely, single pilot injection (SPI) and double pilot injection (DPI) strategy. For each pilot fuel injection strategy, the start of main injection (SoMI) timing was varied from −3 to 6° crank angle (CA) before top dead center (bTDC). To examine the effect of fuel injection pressure (FIP), experiments were performed at three different FIPs (500, 750, and 1000 bars). Results showed that the MD10 fueled engine resulted in superior combustion compared with baseline mineral diesel, which was further improved by DPI at higher FIPs. The use of DPI strategy was found to be more effective at higher FIPs, resulting in higher brake thermal efficiency (BTE), lower exhaust gas temperature (EGT), and reduced oxides of nitrogen (NOx) emissions compared with SPI strategy. Detailed investigations showed that the addition of methanol in mineral diesel reduced particulates, especially the accumulation mode particles (AMP). Different statistical analysis and qualitative correlations between fuel injection parameters showed that higher FIP and advanced SoMI timings were suitable for particulate reduction from the MD10 fueled engine.

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