Journal
FUEL
Volume 278, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2020.118304
Keywords
Injection timing; EGR; HDPE; Waste to energy; Plastics
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In the present study, the effects of late injection timings and EGR rates on combustion, performance and emission characteristics were evaluated in a single cylinder diesel engine that utilizes oil extracted from waste HDPE which was blended with diesel at 30% by vol. (called as D70H30 blend). The experiments were conducted by delaying the injection timing viz., 23 degrees bTDC, 18 degrees bTDC, and 13 degrees bTDC at various bmep. Later the effects of increasing EGR rates viz., 0%, 10% and 20% were studied at late injection timings at peak load condition. The results reveal that the peak cylinder pressure decreases and combustion duration gets shorter with delayed injection timing. For the same SoI timing escalating the EGR rates reduced the mean gas temperature which is reflected in lower HRR peaks. The BTE of the engine deteriorated by 4.6% when the injection timing is retarded from 23 degrees bTDC to 13 degrees bTDC and 3.2% when the EGR rate was escalated from 0% to 20% at peak load. NOx emission significantly decreased by 80% with retarded injection timing and further decreased with the application of EGR. On the other hand, smoke emission aggravated by 22% with retarded injection timing and 24.5% with maximum EGR addition. The HC and CO emissions followed the same trend of smoke emission. It can be concluded that, utilizing 30% waste HDPE oil blend with minimal modification like retarding injection timing and low EGR rates was beneficial in effectively reducing NOx emission with a slight drop in performance.
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