Optimization of vane numbers through simulation and experiment, and investigation of the effect on the performance and emissions of a CI (compression ignition) engine run with biodiesel

Date

2014

Authors

Bari, S.
Saad, I.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Energy, 2014; 79(C):248-263

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

Generally, the CI (compression ignition) engine that runs with biodiesel experiences lower performance and certain higher emissions than the one that runs with petro-diesel. For that reason, this research investigated the effect of guide vanes installed in front of the intake manifold of a CI engine run with biodiesel to enhance the in-cylinder airflow to promote the evaporation, diffusion, and combustion processes to eventually reduce those problems. This research began with optimizing the design of the guide vanes through the simulation method. However, the optimization was limited only to the number of guide vanes while vane height, angle, and length were kept constant. After analyzing the simulation results of in-cylinder airflow characteristics of TKE (turbulence kinetic energy), velocity, vorticity, and swirling strength of 10 guide vanes models of different vane numbers that varied in between 3 and 12, the model with 4 vanes was found to be the optimum one. After that, five guide vanes models with the number of vanes ranging between 3 and 7 were fabricated and tested one by one on a CI engine run with biodiesel along with a standard CI engine run with biodiesel and petro-diesel having no vanes. Based on the simulations and experimental results, 4 vanes were found to be the optimum number with vane angles of 35° along with vane height and length of 0.2 and three times the radius of the intake runner, respectively.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2014 Elsevier

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record