Adaptation of Methanol–Dodecanol–Diesel Blend in Diesel Genset Engine
Author(s) -
Avinash Kumar Ágarwal,
Nikhil Sharma,
Akhilendra Pratap Singh,
Vikram Kumar,
Dev Prakash Satsangi,
Chetankumar Patel
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of energy resources technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.615
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1528-8994
pISSN - 0195-0738
DOI - 10.1115/1.4043390
Subject(s) - diesel fuel , diesel engine , nox , common rail , particulates , combustion , diesel exhaust , methanol , waste management , diesel exhaust fluid , environmental science , biodiesel , thermal efficiency , diesel particulate filter , materials science , pulp and paper industry , chemistry , automotive engineering , engineering , organic chemistry , catalysis
Miscibility of methanol in mineral diesel and stability of methanol–diesel blends are the main obstacles faced in the utilization of methanol in compression ignition engines. In this experimental study, combustion, performance, emissions, and particulate characteristics of a single-cylinder engine fueled with MD10 (10% v/v methanol blended with 90% v/v mineral diesel) and MD15 (15% v/v methanol blended with 85% v/v mineral diesel) are compared with baseline mineral diesel using a fuel additive (1-dodecanol). The results indicated that methanol blending with mineral diesel resulted in superior combustion, performance, and emission characteristics compared with baseline mineral diesel. MD15 emitted lesser number of particulates and NOx emissions compared with MD10 and mineral diesel. This investigation demonstrated that methanol–diesel blends stabilized using suitable additives can resolve several issues of diesel engines, improve their thermal efficiency, and reduce NOx and particulate emissions simultaneously.
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