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. 

Downloads

Published

2022-12-09

How to Cite

[1]
K. Kalyani Radha, S. Naga Sarada, K. Rajagopal, and E.L. Nagesh, “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.

Issue

Section

Review