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Title Impact of renewable fuels on heavy-duty engine performance and emissions
ID_Doc 64973
Authors Yadav, J; Deppenkemper, K; Pischinger, S
Title Impact of renewable fuels on heavy-duty engine performance and emissions
Year 2023
Published
Abstract The transport sector faces two critical issues: a limited supply of fossil fuels and high greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Additionally, the demand for freight transport is steadily increasing, ultimately leading to higher GHG emissions. Since these emissions promote climate change, reducing the GHG emissions from the transport sector is necessary. Renewable drop-in fuels can play an essential role in this regard as those are CO2 neutral. Since these fuels come from so-called renewable sources, this represents a way to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from the current vehicle fleet to meet the EU's Green Deal goals to become climate neutral by 2050. The drop-in fuels from renewable sources and later the purely renewable fuels serve as a bridging technology in this context.With this in mind, experiments were conducted with a Heavy-Duty Single Cylinder Engine (HD-SCE). The effects of four different renewable fuels or fuel blends - 93% RF/7% UCOME, 60% B0-Diesel/40% RF blend, 70% Diesel/30% Octanol blend and 100% Octanol - on engine performance and raw emissions were studied in comparison to fossil Diesel fuel. The investigations were conducted at three different load points - Rated Power (RP), best Brake Thermal Efficiency (BTE) and Cruise Point, covering all the relevant load points for HD engines. For all load points, the use of renewable fuels resulted in lower carbon dioxide (CO2), hydrocarbon (HC), carbon monoxide (CO) and FSN compared to fossil Diesel due to the fuel-borne oxygen and the lower C/H ratio of these alternative fuels. The blend of 60% B0-Diesel-40% RF shows the highest efficiency due to the paraffinic fuel structure, the fuel-borne oxygen, the higher calorific value, and the high cetane number. 100% Octanol resulted in a reduction in FSN by a factor of 3. All renewable fuels show a GHG emission reduction potential of around 2.5% to 5.5% in the Tank-to-Wheel (TtW) analysis.(c) 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
PDF https://doi.org/10.1016/j.egyr.2023.01.016

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