Energies, Vol. 19, Pages 1542: Numerical Study on Combustion Dynamics and Emission Characteristics of Biodiesels Derived from Various Feedstocks Under Single and Pilot–Main Injection Strategies
Energies doi: 10.3390/en19061542
Authors:
Zhefeng Guo
Yang Han
Huangchang Ji
Timothy Haw-yu Lee
Biodiesel composition largely affects its combustion and emission performance in diesel engines, while the pilot–main injection strategy has the potential to simultaneously improve engine efficiency and alleviate the soot–NOx trade-off. Accordingly, soybean oil (SO), animal fat (AF), and waste cooking oil (WCO) biodiesels were numerically investigated under single injection and pilot–main double injection strategies with pilot energy ratios of 5.6%, 10%, and 15% over a range of main injection timings. The CFD framework was validated against the experimental in-cylinder pressure and AHRR, showing good agreement across the tested operating conditions. The results show that advancing the injection timing increases the AHRR peak and MPRR, whereas the pilot–main injection strategy reduces the AHRR peak and generally advances combustion phasing. A stable CA10 at injection timing ranges of 350–358 °CA persists across biodiesels and injection strategies. Emissions correlate with MICT, where NOx increases while soot decreases with the rise in MICT, suggesting an intermediate MICT window for a balance between efficiency and emissions. Furthermore, at the respective highest gross ITE of biodiesels, SO provides the most favorable combination of MPRR and efficiency, whereas WCO shows lower NOx but stronger indicators of incomplete combustion.
