Study of biomethanol as sustainable replacement of Autogas at variable ignition timing
| dc.contributor.author | Pandey, J.K. | |
| dc.contributor.author | Dinesh, M.H. | |
| dc.contributor.author | Kumar, G.N. | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2026-02-04T12:27:37Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2022 | |
| dc.description.abstract | Bio-methanol has recently interested researchers looking for a suitable alternative due to its low carbon/hydrogen (C/H) ratio. Adding methanol to Autogas could thereby improve combustion while lowering emissions. In the present investigation, testing is conducted at a compression ratio of 14:1 on various fuel ratios (55/45 to 75/25 with a 5% change) of methanol/Autogas with ignition timing ranging from 28°CA bTDC to 14°CA bTDC. The results indicate improvements due to the addition of 65% methanol. Improved brake thermal efficiency (BTE) by 6.27%, peak pressure (P<inf>max</inf>) by 0.36%, heat release rate (HRR<inf>max</inf>), peak temperature (T<inf>max</inf>) by 0.89%, and rise in exhaust gas temperature (EGT). Simultaneously, combustion duration, HC & CO emissions, and the coefficient of variations in indicated mean effective pressure (CoV<inf>IMEP</inf>) are reduced. With methanol, the volumetric efficiency (η<inf>vol</inf>) improves continuously. Optimal ignition timing is shown to advance with increasing methanol concentration. With ignition retard, the flame development phase (CA10) decreases by 1.7%/2°CA ignition retard, whereas the flame propagation phase (CA10–90) decreases to a minimum and then increases. Due to combustion instability, ignition retard increases the Cyclic variation and CoV<inf>IMEP</inf>, while P<inf>max</inf>, HRR<inf>max</inf>, T<inf>max</inf>, and BTE increase to a maximum and then drop. Ignition retard is an effective way of reducing NO<inf>x</inf> emissions, although CO and HC emissions increase significantly. Due to reduced carbon supply, carbon emissions are extremely low even at higher methanol concentrations than Autogas-rich fuel. NOx emissions are also extremely low (62.5 % of the ignition angle at 24°CA), revealing that a higher methanol ratio could be used with minimal risk of power loss. © 2022 The Authors | |
| dc.identifier.citation | Heliyon, 2022, 8, 10, pp. - | |
| dc.identifier.issn | 24058440 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e10865 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://idr.nitk.ac.in/handle/123456789/22380 | |
| dc.publisher | Elsevier Ltd | |
| dc.subject | Autogas/LPG | |
| dc.subject | Bio-methanol | |
| dc.subject | CO/CO2 emissions | |
| dc.subject | Combustion | |
| dc.subject | NOx emissions | |
| dc.subject | Variable ignition timing | |
| dc.title | Study of biomethanol as sustainable replacement of Autogas at variable ignition timing |
