Performance and CO2 emission of a single cylinder compression ignition engine powered by Khaya senegalensis non-edible seeds fuel blends
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Heliyon
Abstract
This work aimed at investigating blends of Khaya senegalensis biodiesel in a compression ignition
engine, attempting to improve engine performance and reduce CO2 emission compared with
conventional diesel. Analysis of System (ANSYS) was used to predict in-cylinder behavior of the
fuel. ANSYS SpaceClaim generated the geometric model on which 5◦ sector and mesh refinement
was on ANSYS Internal Combustion Engine Modeler (ICEM). Computational domain of interest
lies within the compression and expansion strokes. Experimental validation followed: 5% biodiesel, 95% diesel (B5); 15% biodiesel, 85% diesel (B15); 25% biodiesel, 75% diesel (B25); pure
diesel (D100); pure biodiesel (B100) in volume proportions. B15 has the highest brake mean
effective pressure (BMEP) of 4 bar as load increases. An experimental and numerical comparison
reveals pressure declination against speed increment. Ignition temperature fluctuated between
799.76 and 806.256 K for D100 and 760.73–790.62 K for B100 within 1800–2800 rpm speed limit
prediction. Power and brake thermal efficiency (BTE) had parallel load increment with all blends.
CO2 emission on increasing load conditions were 47.01%, 8.07%, 21.72% and 6.06% for B5, B15,
B25, and B100 respectively lower than D100. Pressure and temperature contours gave proper
combustion predicted behaviors. All blends possess replaceable performance potential for D100
however, B5 offers better reliable potentials.
Description
Citation
Onojowho Elijah Eferoghene, Betiku Eriola and Asere Abraham Awolola (2024), Performance and CO2 emission of a single cylinder compression ignition engine powered by Khaya senegalensis non-edible seeds fuel blends. Heliyon Journal, Volume 10, doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e28380