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    Startup and Steady State Performance of a New Renewable Hydroprocessed Depolymerized Cellulosic Diesel Fuel in Multiple Diesel Engines

    Source: Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2016:;volume( 138 ):;issue: 010::page 102807
    Author:
    Bermudez, Eric
    ,
    McDaniel, Andrew
    ,
    Dickerson, Terrence
    ,
    Luning Prak, Dianne
    ,
    Hamilton, Len
    ,
    Cowart, Jim
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4032992
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: A new hydroprocessed depolymerized cellulosic diesel (HDCD) fuel has been developed using a process which takes biomass feedstock (principally cellulosic wood) to produce a synthetic fuel that has nominally آ½ cycloparaffins and آ½ aromatic hydrocarbons in content. This HDCD fuel with a low cetane value (derived cetane number from the ignition quality tester, DCN = 27) was blended with naval distillate fuel (NATO symbol F76) in various quantities and tested in order to determine how much HDCD could be blended before diesel engine operation becomes problematic. Blends of 20% HDCD (DCN = 45), 30%, 40% (DCN = 41), and 60% HDCD (DCN = 37) by volume were tested with conventional naval distillate fuel (DCN = 49). Engine start performance was evaluated with a conventional mechanically direct injected (DI) Yanmar engine and a Waukesha mechanical indirect injected (IDI) Cooperative Fuels Research (CFR) diesel engine and showed that engine start times increased steadily with increasing HDCD content. Longer start times with increasing HDCD content were the result of some engine cycles with poor combustion leading to a slower rate of engine acceleration toward rated speed. A repeating sequence of alternating cycles which combust followed by a noncombustion cycle was common during engine runup. Additionally, steadystate engine testing was also performed using both engines. HDCD has a significantly higher bulk modulus than F76 due to its very high aromatic content, and the engines showed earlier start of injection (SOI) timing with increasing HDCD content for equivalent operating conditions. Additionally, due to the lower DCN, the higher HDCD blends showed moderately longer ignition delay (IGD) with moderately shorter overall burn durations. Thus, the midcombustion metric (CA50: 50% burn duration crank angle position) was only modestly affected with increasing HDCD content. Increasing HDCD content beyond 40% leads to significantly longer start times.
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      Startup and Steady State Performance of a New Renewable Hydroprocessed Depolymerized Cellulosic Diesel Fuel in Multiple Diesel Engines

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/161179
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    contributor authorBermudez, Eric
    contributor authorMcDaniel, Andrew
    contributor authorDickerson, Terrence
    contributor authorLuning Prak, Dianne
    contributor authorHamilton, Len
    contributor authorCowart, Jim
    date accessioned2017-05-09T01:28:48Z
    date available2017-05-09T01:28:48Z
    date issued2016
    identifier issn1528-8919
    identifier othergtp_138_10_102807.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/161179
    description abstractA new hydroprocessed depolymerized cellulosic diesel (HDCD) fuel has been developed using a process which takes biomass feedstock (principally cellulosic wood) to produce a synthetic fuel that has nominally آ½ cycloparaffins and آ½ aromatic hydrocarbons in content. This HDCD fuel with a low cetane value (derived cetane number from the ignition quality tester, DCN = 27) was blended with naval distillate fuel (NATO symbol F76) in various quantities and tested in order to determine how much HDCD could be blended before diesel engine operation becomes problematic. Blends of 20% HDCD (DCN = 45), 30%, 40% (DCN = 41), and 60% HDCD (DCN = 37) by volume were tested with conventional naval distillate fuel (DCN = 49). Engine start performance was evaluated with a conventional mechanically direct injected (DI) Yanmar engine and a Waukesha mechanical indirect injected (IDI) Cooperative Fuels Research (CFR) diesel engine and showed that engine start times increased steadily with increasing HDCD content. Longer start times with increasing HDCD content were the result of some engine cycles with poor combustion leading to a slower rate of engine acceleration toward rated speed. A repeating sequence of alternating cycles which combust followed by a noncombustion cycle was common during engine runup. Additionally, steadystate engine testing was also performed using both engines. HDCD has a significantly higher bulk modulus than F76 due to its very high aromatic content, and the engines showed earlier start of injection (SOI) timing with increasing HDCD content for equivalent operating conditions. Additionally, due to the lower DCN, the higher HDCD blends showed moderately longer ignition delay (IGD) with moderately shorter overall burn durations. Thus, the midcombustion metric (CA50: 50% burn duration crank angle position) was only modestly affected with increasing HDCD content. Increasing HDCD content beyond 40% leads to significantly longer start times.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleStartup and Steady State Performance of a New Renewable Hydroprocessed Depolymerized Cellulosic Diesel Fuel in Multiple Diesel Engines
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume138
    journal issue10
    journal titleJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4032992
    journal fristpage102807
    journal lastpage102807
    identifier eissn0742-4795
    treeJournal of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power:;2016:;volume( 138 ):;issue: 010
    contenttypeFulltext
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