Faculty Publications

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    Bio-fuel variants for use in CI engine at design and off-design regimes: An experimental analysis
    (2008) Bekal, S.; Ashok Babu, T.P.A.
    In this work an attempt has been made to study the ester based fuel variants derived from edible and inedible oil sources for identifying the most appropriate fuel variant and operating mode for running a CI engine based on performance and emission parameters. The twenty four fuel variants tested included esters obtained from the edible sunflower oil, inedible pongamia oil, and their higher and lower proportional blends with diesel. Besides, several other fuel variants obtained from the emulsification of water-in-ester (W/E) with different water proportions have been tested. Basing upon three operational variables, namely, injection timing, injection pressure, and load, comparisons are made in aspects of smoke emissions, NOX emissions, BSEC, and exhaust gas temperatures at the best injection timing. 21.5°, 23°, 24.5° and 27.5° bTDC as the four injection timings and 190, 220 and 250 bar as three injection pressures are considered for the overall study. The 264 sets of experiments conducted with these combinations, focussing on the full and partial load characteristics of the engine, show that both sunflower and pongamia oil esters exhibited similar characteristics in their engine performance, and in both the cases the best BSEC occurred with 220 bar injection pressure for most of the fuel variants, and for straight fuels the ideal injection timing found to be slightly retarded (1.5° crank angle) compared to diesel. However, 24.5° bTDC, normal for the engine, was found to be the most appropriate for the lower blends like B2 (2% ester by volume), B5 and emulsion with 10% water proportion. © 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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    An analysis of cycle-by-cycle fluctuation in combustion parameter in CI engine operation for various bio-fuels
    (2011) Bekal, S.; Ashok Babu, T.P.A.
    The cycle-by-cycle fluctuations in peak pressure of combustion in a CI engine were studied for lower and higher blends of diesel and ester, and water-in-ester emulsions, at four injection timings and three injection pressures using coefficient of variation. The sunflower ester-diesel blends are found to have lower cycle-by-cycle fluctuations than pongemia ester-diesel blends. The fluctuations are found to be higher than that of diesel for higher blend proportions of ester. The water-in-ester emulsion show higher cycle-by-cycle fluctuations than that of ester-diesel blends. In most cases, the Brake specific energy consumption is also found to be higher where the coefficient of variation has higher values. Copyright © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.