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NOx emissions from high swirl turbulent spray flames with highly oxygenated fuels

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors compared the NOx emissions from diesel and glycerol combustion at similar conditions in a high swirl turbulent spray flame, and found that the higher fuel bound oxygen mass fractions allow for combustion at low global equivalence ratios with comparable exhaust gas temperatures due to the significantly lower concentrations of diluting nitrogen.
Abstract
Combustion of fuels with fuel bound oxygen is of interest from both a practical and a fundamental viewpoint. While a great deal of work has been done studying the effect of oxygenated additives in diesel and gasoline engines, much less has been done examining combustion characteristics of fuels with extremely high mass fractions of fuel bound oxygen. This work presents an initial investigation into the very low NOx emissions resulting from the combustion of a model, high oxygen mass fraction fuel. Glycerol was chosen as a model fuel with a fuel bound oxygen mass fraction of 52%, and was compared with emissions measured from diesel combustion at similar conditions in a high swirl turbulent spray flame. This work has shown that high fuel bound oxygen mass fractions allow for combustion at low global equivalence ratios with comparable exhaust gas temperatures due to the significantly lower concentrations of diluting nitrogen. Despite similar exhaust gas temperatures, NOx emissions from glycerol combustion were up to an order of magnitude lower than those measured using diesel fuel. This is shown to be a result not of specific burner geometry, but rather is influenced by the presence of higher oxygen and lower nitrogen concentrations at the flame front inhibiting NOx production.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental and numerical analysis for high intensity swirl based ultra-low emission flameless combustor operating with liquid fuels

TL;DR: In this paper, a new strategy is proposed and adopted to scale up a burner operating in flameless combustion mode from a heat release density of 5.4-21 MW/m3 (thermal input 21.5-84.7kW) with kerosene fuel.
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Stability limits and exhaust NO performances of ammonia-methane-air swirl flames

TL;DR: In this paper, the stability limits of theoretically-premixed ammonia-methane-air mixtures are measured for a wide range of ammonia additions in a laboratory-scale swirl burner.
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Combustion of straight glycerol with/without methane using a fuel-flexible, low-emissions burner

TL;DR: In this article, a fuel-flexible dual-fuel combustor was presented to simultaneously burn methane and/or straight glycerol without preheating either gas or air by utilizing a flow-blurring (FB) liquid fuel injector.
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Microturbine combustion and emission characterisation of waste polymer-derived fuels

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of different waste-derived fuels on the combustion process in a microturbine was investigated. But the results revealed significantly higher CO (carbon monoxide) and THC (total hydrocarbons) emissions for LW due to its reduced atomisation ability and increased spray penetration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experiments and simulations of NOx formation in the combustion of hydroxylated fuels

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of molecular structure in hydroxylated fuels (i.e. fuels with one or more hydroxy groups), such as alcohols and polyols, on NO x formation was investigated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biofuels (alcohols and biodiesel) applications as fuels for internal combustion engines

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the production, characterization and current statuses of vegetable oil and biodiesel as well as the experimental research work carried out in various countries is presented.
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Combustion of fat and vegetable oil derived fuels in diesel engines

TL;DR: In this paper, the status of fat and oil derived diesel fuels with respect to fuel properties, engine performance, and emissions is reviewed, and it is concluded that the price of the feedstock fat or oil is the major factor determining biodiesel price.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of biodiesel fuels on diesel engine emissions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors collected and analyzed the body of work written mainly in scientific journals about diesel engine emissions when using biodiesel fuels as opposed to conventional diesel fuels, focusing on the most concerning emissions: nitric oxides and particulate matter.
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Sooting tendencies of oxygenated hydrocarbons in laboratory-scale flames.

TL;DR: The results provide a wide-ranging yet detailed quantitative picture of how fuel oxygen affects soot formation, which will be useful for optimizing the soot-reducing benefits of oxygenated renewable fuels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Glycerol combustion and emissions

TL;DR: In this paper, the results of experiments to develop a prototype high-swirl refractory burner designed for retrofit applications in commercial-scale fire-tube package boilers were reported.
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