4.8 Article

Clean combustion of n-butanol as a next generation biofuel for diesel engines

Journal

APPLIED ENERGY
Volume 198, Issue -, Pages 347-359

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2016.12.059

Keywords

n-Butanol; Next generation biofuel; Engine efficiency; CO2 reduction; Clean combustion; Full load capability

Funding

  1. BioFuelNet
  2. NSERC-CRD
  3. CFI
  4. OIT
  5. AUTO21
  6. NSERC-DG
  7. NSERC-RTI
  8. Canada Research Chair program
  9. University of Windsor
  10. automotive OEMs

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This work investigates the applicability of n-butanol as a next generation biofuel to replace diesel in compression ignition engines for efficient operation, pollutant mitigation, and CO2 reduction. A high compression ratio (18.2:1) diesel research engine is configured to run on neat n-butanol. Due to the fuel property departure from diesel, n-butanol combustion exhibits striking combustion characteristics. Alternative combustion strategies, including via partially premixed compression ignition and homogeneous charge compression ignition, are enabled efficiently owing to distinctive fuel properties of n-butanol. The compression ignition of the (partially) premixed n-butanol and air mixture is capable of producing diesel-like engine efficiency and significant nitrogen oxide and smoke reductions. As the engine load increases, however, such neat n-butanol combustion exhibits rapid burning and suffers abrupt pressure rise. Thereby the engine load is generally limited below 50% of the baseline capability. A split-combustion strategy, which employs multiple event fuel injections, is found to be effective to modulate the noise of n-butanol clean combustion, thereby enabling neat n-butanol application across the full engine load range. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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