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ASME 2010 Internal Combustion Engine Division Fall Technical Conference | 2010

Combustion and Emissions Characteristics of a Polypropylene Blended Diesel Fuel in a Direct Injection Compression Engine

Valentin Soloiu; Yoshinobu Yoshihara; Kazuie Nishiwaki; Yasufumi Nakanishi

The authors investigated the formulation, combustion and emissions of polypropylene (PP)–diesel fuel mixtures in a direct injection diesel engine. The fuel has been obtained by an original technology they developed, in which the low or high density polypropylene (LDPP, HDPP), have been mixed in a nitrogen atmosphere at 200 °C, 10–40% by wt. in diesel fuel. The kinematic viscosity of the polypropylene-diesel fuels was investigated between 25–250 °C and the results showed that viscosity of the plastic mixtures is much higher than that of diesel alone, ranging from 10 cSt to 500 cSt, and depending on the plastic structure, content, and temperature. The TGA and DTA analysis has been conducted to investigate the oxidation and combustion properties of pure PP and polymerdiesel fuels. The results showed that at about 125 °C, the LDPP melts, but does not decompose up 240 °C, when the oxidation starts, and has a peak of heat release at 340–350 °C, and the process is completed at 400 °C. The engine’s injection system used, was a piston-barrel type pump, capable of an injection pressure of 200 bars. The injector had 4 × 0.200 mm nozzles with a conical tip needle. The 25% PP-diesel mixture had a successful ignition in a direct injection 110 mm bore, omega combustion chamber engine. The ignition delay for polypropylene-diesel mixtures was longer by about 0.5 ms (at 1200 rpm), compared with diesel. The heat release showed a different development compared with the reference diesel fuel, the premixed phase being inhibited while a slow diffusion combustion phase fully developed. The maximum combustion pressure has been 83 bars for diesel and decreased by 2 bars for the blended fuel, while the bulk gas maximum temperature (calculated) reached about 2500 K for diesel vs 2600 K for polypropylene mixture. The heat flux calculated by the Annand model has shown lower values for diesel fuel with a maximum of about 2.7 MW/m2 compared with 3.0 MW/m2 for PP blended fuel with similar values for convection flux for both fuels at about 1.57 MW/m2 and a higher radiation flux of about 1.44 MW/m2 for PP fuel versus 1.27 MW/m2 for diesel. The heat lost during the cycle shows low values for the premixed combustion stage and increased values for the diffusion stage for both fuels. The exhaust temperatures have been practically identical for both fuels for all loads, with emissions of NOx, and CO reduced by 40% for the alternative fuel, while the CO2 exhibited almost the same values for both fuels. The smoke emissions decreased by 60–90% for the polypropylene blended fuel depending on the load, The engines’ overall efficiency was slightly lower for PP fuel at low loads compared with diesel combustion but at 100% load both reached 36%. The study showed that the new formulation process proposed by the authors is able to produce a new class of fuels from diesel blended with low density polypropylene, and resulted in hybrid fuels with very promising combustion prospects. The engine investigation proved that 25% PP fuels can be injected and burnt in a diesel engine at a residence time of about 5 ms from the start of injection, and the engine’s nominal power could be reached, with lower emissions than reference diesel fuel.Copyright


Jsae Review | 2000

Non-catalytic reduction of NO in diesel exhaust with the addition of methylamine

Yasufumi Nakanishi; Yoshinobu Yoshihara; Kazuie Nishiwaki


Archive | 2007

Fuel battery cell, fuel battery unit, heat/power cogeneration system and vehicle equipped with the system, and method of actuating fuel battery

Yoshinobu Yoshihara; Yasufumi Nakanishi


Archive | 2007

Purifying apparatus, purifying method, exhaust gas purifying system, and method for producing purifying structure

Yoshinobu Yoshihara; Yasufumi Nakanishi


SAE 2010 World Congress & Exhibition | 2010

Simultaneous Reduction of NOx and PM in Diesel Exhaust Based on Electrochemical Reaction

Yoshihara Yoshinobu; Yoichi Tsuda; Hiroyoshi Ueda; Yasufumi Nakanishi; JoonDugk Gong


The Proceedings of Conference of Kansai Branch | 2008

616 Simultaneous Reduction of Diesel Particulate Matter and NOx based on The ECR

Yoichi Tsuda; JoonDogk Gong; Yasufumi Nakanishi; Yoshihiro Iida; Hiroyoshi Ueda; Yoshinobu Yoshihara


Archive | 2007

Fuel Cell, Fuel Cell Apparatus, Vehicle and Co-Generation System Including the Same and Fuel Cell Operation Method

Yoshinobu Yoshihara; Yasufumi Nakanishi


The Proceedings of Conference of Kansai Branch | 2005

101 ディーゼル微粒子の革新的後処理システムの研究開発(FM-1 技術移転を目指す熱・燃焼工学最前線,研究発表講演)

Takuya Hirai; Toshiya Inui; Yasufumi Nakanishi; Yoshinobu Yoshihara


Jsme International Journal Series B-fluids and Thermal Engineering | 2003

Application of a New Selective Noncatalytic NO Reduction System to Diesel Exhaust

Yasufumi Nakanishi; Joon dugk Gong; Yoshinobu Yoshihara; Kazuie Nishiwaki


The Proceedings of the International symposium on diagnostics and modeling of combustion in internal combustion engines | 2001

(1-05) Application of a New Selective Non-Catalytic NO Reduction System to Diesel Exhaust((DE-2)Diesel Engine Combustion 2-Combustion and Emission Control)

Yasufumi Nakanishi; Joon dugk Gone; Yoshinobu Yoshihara; Kazuie Nishiwaki

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Valentin Soloiu

Georgia Southern University

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