Performance and Emission Characteristics of CI Engine Operated on Vegetable Oils as Alternate Fuels

Authors

  • K. Kalyani Radha
  • S. Naga Sarada
  • K. Rajagopal
  • E.L. Nagesh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15282/ijame.4.2011.4.0034

Keywords:

alternative fuels; injection pressure; performance; lubricants; vegetable oils.

Abstract

An experimental analysis was done using a four-stroke, single cylinder, constant speed, water-cooled diesel engine, which was  interfaced with Engine software. Performance and emission characteristics were evaluated for three non-edible vegetable oils, i.e. thumba, jojoba, neem oil, as well as jojoba methyl ester, to study the effect of injection pressure at 205, 220, 240 and 260 bar with a variation in injection timing at 23°bTDC and 28°bTDC. The performance of jojoba methyl ester improved with an increase in injection pressure. A maximum brake thermal efficiency of 29.72% was obtained with lower emissions compared to the other vegetable oils; this might be explained by low viscosity and better combustion. Further investigations were carried out with a new lubricant, SAE 5W-30, which improved the performance of the CI engine by 1.59%. All of the abovementioned investigations were fruitful and these results are expected to lead to substantial contributions in the development of a viable vegetable oil engine. 

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Published

2022-12-09

Issue

Section

Review

How to Cite

[1]
“Performance and Emission Characteristics of CI Engine Operated on Vegetable Oils as Alternate Fuels”, Int. J. Automot. Mech. Eng., vol. 4, pp. 414–427, Dec. 2022, doi: 10.15282/ijame.4.2011.4.0034.

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