Affiliation:
1. Istituto Motori - CNR, Via G. Marconi, Napoli, Italy
Abstract
Combustion process was studied from the injection until the late combustion
phase in an high swirl optically accessible combustion bowl connected to a
single cylinder 2-stroke high pressure common rail compression ignition
engine. Commercial diesel and blends of diesel and n-butanol (20%: BU20 and
40%: BU40) were used for the experiments. A pilot plus main injection
strategy was investigated fixing the injection pressure and fuel mass
injected per stroke. Two main injection timings and different pilot-main
dwell times were explored achieving for any strategy a mixing controlled
combustion. Advancing the main injection start, an increase in net engine
working cycle (>40%) together with a strong smoke number decrease (>80%) and
NOx concentration increase (@50%) were measured for all pilot injection
timings. Compared to diesel fuel, butanol induced a decrease in soot emission
and an increase in net engine working area when butanol ratio increased in
the blend. A noticeable increase in NOx was detected at the exhaust for BU40
with a slight effect of the dwell-time. Spectroscopic investigations
confirmed the delayed auto-ignition (~60 ms) of the pilot injection for BU40
compared to diesel. The spectral features for the different fuels were
comparable at the start of combustion process, but they evolved in different
ways. Broadband signal caused by soot emission, was lower for BU40 than
diesel. Different balance of the bands at 309 and 282 nm, due to different OH
transitions, were detected between the two fuels. The ratio of these
intensities was used to follow flame temperature evolution.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Cited by
1 articles.
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