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Engine Performance Characteristics for Biodiesels of Different Degrees of Saturation and Carbon Chain Lengths
Author(s) -
Phuong X. Pham,
Timothy A. Bodisco,
Svetlana Stevanović,
Md. Mostafizur Rahman,
Hang Wang,
Zoran Ristovski,
Richard Brown,
Assaad R. Masri
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
sae international journal of fuels and lubricants
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.659
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1946-3960
pISSN - 1946-3952
DOI - 10.4271/2013-01-1680
Subject(s) - saturation (graph theory) , materials science , automotive engineering , environmental science , engineering , mathematics , combinatorics
This experimental study examines the effect on performance and emission outputs of a compression ignition engine operating on biodiesels of varying carbon chain length and the degree of unsaturation. A well-instrumented, heavy-duty, multi-cylinder, common-rail, turbo-charged diesel engine was used to ensure that the results contribute in a realistic way to the ongoing debate about the impact of biofuels. Comparative measurements are reported for engine performance as well as the emissions of NOx, particle number and size distribution, and the concentration of the reactive oxygen species (which provide a measure of the toxicity of emitted particles). \ud\udIt is shown that the biodiesels used in this study produce lower mean effective pressure, somewhat proportionally with their lower calorific values; however, the molecular structure has been shown to have little impact on the performance of the engine. The peak in-cylinder pressure is lower for the biodiesels that produce a smaller number of emitted particles, compared to fossil diesel, but the concentration of the reactive oxygen species is significantly higher because of oxygen in the fuels. \ud\udThe differences in the physicochemical properties amongst the biofuels and the fossil diesel significantly affect the engine combustion and emission characteristics. Saturated short chain length fatty acid methyl esters are found to enhance combustion efficiency, reduce NOx and particle number concentration, but results in high levels of fuel consumption

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