A review on improving airflow characteristics inside the combustion chamber of CI engines to improve the performance with higher viscous biofuels

Performances of diesel engines run on biodiesel and vegetable-based fuels are not satisfactory mainly due to higher viscosity, and they are termed as higher viscous fuels (HVFs). Researchers have developed different techniques to improve the performance of diesel engines run on HVFs such as preheati...

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Published in:Fuel
Main Author: Bari S.; Hossain S.N.; Saad I.
Format: Review
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 2020
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85076263477&doi=10.1016%2fj.fuel.2019.116769&partnerID=40&md5=17b0e83c4af22e554c6b3975c82529e6
id 2-s2.0-85076263477
spelling 2-s2.0-85076263477
Bari S.; Hossain S.N.; Saad I.
A review on improving airflow characteristics inside the combustion chamber of CI engines to improve the performance with higher viscous biofuels
2020
Fuel
264

10.1016/j.fuel.2019.116769
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85076263477&doi=10.1016%2fj.fuel.2019.116769&partnerID=40&md5=17b0e83c4af22e554c6b3975c82529e6
Performances of diesel engines run on biodiesel and vegetable-based fuels are not satisfactory mainly due to higher viscosity, and they are termed as higher viscous fuels (HVFs). Researchers have developed different techniques to improve the performance of diesel engines run on HVFs such as preheating HVFs, blending with lighter fuels, and changing injection strategy. These techniques improved the performance with HVFs, but the performances are still lower than diesel. Another technique, improving the in-cylinder airflow characteristics can create more turbulence inside the combustion chamber to break up HVFs and mix better with the in-cylinder air to improve the performance of the engine. Most reviews show that the performances of diesel engines are improved with higher turbulence though with diesel, but few papers show that this technique can improve the performance of diesel engines with HVFs as well. Based on literatures, the in-cylinder turbulence can be increased using guide vanes and throttling the intake manifold and modifying the combustion chamber and intake manifold. It is found that about 1.3–2.8% efficiency improved by improving the in-cylinder turbulence by using guide vanes when the engines ran on HVFs. Some researchers have also reported around 12% improvement in brake specific fuel consumption (bsfc) by improving the swirl of the air inside the combustion chamber. This paper reviews different techniques to improve the in-cylinder airflow characteristics in IC engines and reviews a handful of papers with HVFs to show that increasing in-cylinder turbulence can improve the performance of the CI engines with HVFs. © 2019 Elsevier Ltd
Elsevier Ltd
162361
English
Review

author Bari S.; Hossain S.N.; Saad I.
spellingShingle Bari S.; Hossain S.N.; Saad I.
A review on improving airflow characteristics inside the combustion chamber of CI engines to improve the performance with higher viscous biofuels
author_facet Bari S.; Hossain S.N.; Saad I.
author_sort Bari S.; Hossain S.N.; Saad I.
title A review on improving airflow characteristics inside the combustion chamber of CI engines to improve the performance with higher viscous biofuels
title_short A review on improving airflow characteristics inside the combustion chamber of CI engines to improve the performance with higher viscous biofuels
title_full A review on improving airflow characteristics inside the combustion chamber of CI engines to improve the performance with higher viscous biofuels
title_fullStr A review on improving airflow characteristics inside the combustion chamber of CI engines to improve the performance with higher viscous biofuels
title_full_unstemmed A review on improving airflow characteristics inside the combustion chamber of CI engines to improve the performance with higher viscous biofuels
title_sort A review on improving airflow characteristics inside the combustion chamber of CI engines to improve the performance with higher viscous biofuels
publishDate 2020
container_title Fuel
container_volume 264
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.fuel.2019.116769
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85076263477&doi=10.1016%2fj.fuel.2019.116769&partnerID=40&md5=17b0e83c4af22e554c6b3975c82529e6
description Performances of diesel engines run on biodiesel and vegetable-based fuels are not satisfactory mainly due to higher viscosity, and they are termed as higher viscous fuels (HVFs). Researchers have developed different techniques to improve the performance of diesel engines run on HVFs such as preheating HVFs, blending with lighter fuels, and changing injection strategy. These techniques improved the performance with HVFs, but the performances are still lower than diesel. Another technique, improving the in-cylinder airflow characteristics can create more turbulence inside the combustion chamber to break up HVFs and mix better with the in-cylinder air to improve the performance of the engine. Most reviews show that the performances of diesel engines are improved with higher turbulence though with diesel, but few papers show that this technique can improve the performance of diesel engines with HVFs as well. Based on literatures, the in-cylinder turbulence can be increased using guide vanes and throttling the intake manifold and modifying the combustion chamber and intake manifold. It is found that about 1.3–2.8% efficiency improved by improving the in-cylinder turbulence by using guide vanes when the engines ran on HVFs. Some researchers have also reported around 12% improvement in brake specific fuel consumption (bsfc) by improving the swirl of the air inside the combustion chamber. This paper reviews different techniques to improve the in-cylinder airflow characteristics in IC engines and reviews a handful of papers with HVFs to show that increasing in-cylinder turbulence can improve the performance of the CI engines with HVFs. © 2019 Elsevier Ltd
publisher Elsevier Ltd
issn 162361
language English
format Review
accesstype
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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