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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Single-Cylinder Engine Study of Methanol Fuel-Emphasis on Organic Emissions

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TLDR
In this paper, a single-cylinder engine with methanol fuel was compared to those obtained either with gasoline or a methanoline-water blend, and the results indicated that the advantages of blending water with methenol are outweighed by the disadvantages.
Abstract
Exhaust emission and performance characteristics of a single-cylinder engine fueled with methanol are compared to those obtained either with gasoline or a methanol-water blend. Our measurements of engine efficiency and power, and CO and NO/sub x/ emissions agree with trends established in the literature. Consequently, the emphasis is placed on organic emissions (unburned fuel including hydrocarbons, and aldehydes), an area in which there is no consensus in the literature. In all cases with methanol fueling, the unburned fuel (UBF) emissions were virtually all methanol as opposed to hydrocarbon compounds. Without special measures to overcome methanol's large heat of vaporization, UBF emissions were four times greater with methanol than those with gasoline. Similarly, aldehyde emissions were an order of magnitude greater with methanol. These high levels of organic emissions with methanol were related to inadequate fuel-air mixture preparation, which was caused by methanol's large heat of vaporization. Modifying the single-cylinder engine intake system to improve vaporization reduced UBF emissions 80 to 90% with methanol and 30 to 50% with gasoline. Aldehyde emissions were also significantly reduced by improving mixture preparation, but remained three to four times greater for methanol than for gasoline. Blending 10% water with methanol resulted in: (1) reducedmore » engine efficiency and power, (2) increased UBF emissions, (3) no measurable effect on aldehyde and CO emissions, and (4) reduced NO/sub x/ emissions. Our tests indicate that the advantages of blending water with methanol are outweighed by the disadvantages.« less

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Journal ArticleDOI

The performance and emission characteristics of C1-C5 alcohol-gasoline blends with matched oxygen content in a single-cylinder spark ignition engine

Y Yacoub, +2 more
TL;DR: In this paper, alcohols with carbon numbers ranging from C1 to C5 were individually blended with unleaded test gasoline and all the alcohol-gasoline blends had the same oxygen mass content.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation on toxic reduction and fuel economy of a gasoline direct injection- (GDI-) powered passenger car fueled with methanol–gasoline blends with various substitution ratios

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined regulated, unregulated and particulate emissions from a 1.8-L GDI-powered passenger car running the New European Driving Cycle (NEDC).
Journal ArticleDOI

Aldehydes and Ketones in Engine Exhaust Emissions—a Review:

TL;DR: Aldehydes and ketones in engine exhaust gases are receiving increased attention and are beginning to be subject to special legislation due to their carcinogenic and ozone formation potential as discussed by the authors.

Combustion chemistry of chain hydrocarbons

TL;DR: The current understanding of the combustion chemistry of paraffin hydrocarbons is summarized in this paper, where the anomalies inherent in some of the existing models and approaches to improve both qualitative and quantitative predictive capabilities are discussed.
References
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Book

Emissions from Combustion Engines and Their Control

TL;DR: In this article, a standard text for the automotive industry explains in detail the fundamentals of emission formation and control for gasoline and diesel engines, which can be applied to other combustion systems, such as gas turbines and stationary power plants.

Basic Considerations in the Combustion of Hydrocarbon Fuels with Air

TL;DR: In this paper, basic combustion research is collected, collated, and interpreted as it applies to flight propulsion, including atomization and evaporation of liquid fuels, flow and mixing processes in combustion chambers, ignition and flammability of hydrocarbon fuels, laminar flame propagation, turbulent flames, flame stabilization, diffusion flames, oscillations in combustors, and smoke and coke formation in the combustion of hydrocar-air mixtures.