Optical study on the spray and combustion of diesel cyclopentanol blend fuels on a constant volume chamber

被引:15
作者
He, Jingjing [1 ]
Chen, Hao [1 ]
Chen, Yisong [1 ]
Su, Xin [1 ]
Zhang, Peng [1 ]
Xu, Hongming [1 ,2 ]
Zhou, Chenglong [1 ]
机构
[1] Changan Univ, Sch Automobile, Xian 710064, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Birmingham, Birmingham, W Midlands, England
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
Cyclopentanol; Spray; Combustion; Constant volume chamber; Injection pressure; HCCI COMBUSTION; SOOT; TEMPERATURE; HYDROGENATION; BIODIESEL; IGNITION; CHEMILUMINESCENCE; VALIDATION; CHEMISTRY; CATALYSTS;
D O I
10.1016/j.fuel.2022.123171
中图分类号
TE [石油、天然气工业]; TK [能源与动力工程];
学科分类号
0807 ; 0820 ;
摘要
Among the biofuels produced from lignocelluloses, cyclopentanol is a promising candidate. In this study, a constant volume chamber (CVC) is employed to investigate the effects of adding cyclopentanol in diesel with different proportions (0%, 10%, and 20% in volume) on the spray and combustion characteristics. Tests are performed under three injection pressures (100, 120 and 140 MPa). The experimental results in the CVC show that the atomization characteristics of cyclopentanol-diesel blends are better in the early stage of spray and slightly worse in the later stage than those of diesel. As the injection pressure increases, the diesel cyclopentanol blend fuels improve the air fuel mixing. The addition of cyclopentanol has risen the temperature of the flames and cut the soot formation of diesel by 12.7-89.2% under all injection pressure conditions. The addition of cyclopentanol is found to reduce the natural flame luminosity and combustion duration significantly due to the effective combustion process acceleration and is helpful for improving the combustion, especially for CP10. Overall, blending cyclopentanol into diesel has a great soot reduction potential with a low cetane number and improved mixing, and CP10 can be seen as a future alternative fuel, especially under an injection pressure of 140 MPa.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 67 条
[21]  
Dec J.E., 1997, SAE Transactions, V106, P1319, DOI [10.4271/970873, DOI 10.4271/970873]
[22]   Development and validation of a theoretical model for diesel spray penetration [J].
Desantes, JM ;
Payri, R ;
Salvador, FJ ;
Gil, A .
FUEL, 2006, 85 (7-8) :910-917
[23]  
Gaydon A., 2012, SPECTROSCOPY FLAMES
[24]   Effects of alternative fuels on the combustion characteristics and emission products from diesel engines: A review [J].
Geng, Peng ;
Cao, Erming ;
Tan, Qinming ;
Wei, Lijiang .
RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS, 2017, 71 :523-534
[25]   Macroscopic and microscopic spray characteristics of fatty acid esters on a common rail injection system [J].
Han, Dong ;
Zhai, Jiaqi ;
Duan, Yaozong ;
Ju, Dehao ;
Lin, He ;
Huang, Zhen .
FUEL, 2017, 203 :370-379
[26]   Blending lignin-derived oxygenate in enhanced multi-component diesel fuel for improved emissions [J].
Herreros, J. M. ;
Jones, A. ;
Sukjit, E. ;
Tsolakis, A. .
APPLIED ENERGY, 2014, 116 :58-65
[27]  
HOTTEL H.C., 1932, Ind. Eng. Chem. Anal. Ed, V4, P166
[28]   Experimental study on spray, combustion and emission characteristics of pine oil/diesel blends in a multi-cylinder diesel engine [J].
Huang, Haozhong ;
Liu, Qingsheng ;
Shi, Cheng ;
Wang, Qingxin ;
Zhou, Chengzhong .
FUEL PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY, 2016, 153 :137-148
[29]   Implementation of two color method to investigate late cycle soot oxidation process in a CI engine under low load conditions [J].
Javier Lopez, J. ;
Martin, Jaime ;
Garcia, Antonio ;
Villalta, David ;
Warey, Alok .
APPLIED THERMAL ENGINEERING, 2017, 113 :878-890
[30]  
Jing W., 2014, SAE TECHNICAL PAPER