Regulations governing pollution, declining fossil fuel
supply,
and technological breakthroughs in renewable fuels all have a profound
influence on the development of alternative fuels. This current research
focuses on the influence of nanoadditives with alcohol in an exhaust
gas recirculation-cooled engine. As nanoadditives have high thermal
conductivity and alcohol has high oxygen content, they work synergistically
to speed up the catalytic process and increase the combustion rate.
The areca nutshell-reduced graphene oxide with a mass fraction of
25 pmm was ultrasonically blended with two isopropanol–diesel
mixtures 10% isopropanol + 90% diesel (IDR10) and 20% isopropanol
+ 80% diesel (IDR20), respectively, and tested in a single-cylinder,
4-stroke internal-combustion engine at a typical injection timing
of 23° TDC with an EGR rate of 20%. The results of experiments
showed that IDR10 has better combustion and emission parameters than
other fuel blends. Compared to other biodiesel blends, the IDR10 blend
has 2.3% less BSFC and 2.45% more BTE. The IDR10 blend has lower HC
emissions by 42.85%, CO emissions by 33.34%, NO
x
emissions by 2.42%, and smoke emissions by 15.4%.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.