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The effect of triacetin as a fuel additive to waste cooking biodiesel on engine performance and exhaust emissions

journal contribution
posted on 2022-04-13, 04:26 authored by A Zare, Md Nurun NabiMd Nurun Nabi, TA Bodisco, FM Hossain, MM Rahman, ZD Ristovski, RJ Brown
This study investigates the effect of oxygenated fuels on engine performance and exhaust emission under a custom cycle using a fully instrumented 6-cylinder turbocharged diesel engine with a common rail injection system. A range of oxygenated fuels based on waste cooking biodiesel with triacetin as an oxygenated additive were studied. The oxygen ratio was used instead of the equivalence ratio, or air to fuel ratio, to better explain the phenomena observed during combustion. It was found that the increased oxygen ratio was associated with an increase in the friction mean effective pressure, brake specific fuel consumption, CO, HC and PN. On the other hand, mechanical efficiency, brake thermal efficiency, CO , NOx and PM decreased with oxygen ratio. Increasing the oxygen content of the fuel was associated with a decrease in indicated power, brake power, indicated mean effective pressure, brake mean effective pressure, friction power, blow-by, CO , CO (at higher loads), HC, PM and PN. On the other hand, the brake specific fuel consumption, brake thermal efficiency and NOx increased by using the oxygenated fuels. Also, by increasing the oxygen content, the accumulation mode count median diameter moved toward the smaller particle sizes. In addition to the oxygen content of fuel, the other physical and chemical properties of the fuels were used to interpret the behavior of the engine. 2 2

History

Volume

182

Start Page

640

End Page

649

Number of Pages

10

eISSN

1873-7153

ISSN

0016-2361

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2016-06-07

External Author Affiliations

Queensland University of Technology; Deakin University

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Fuel