Performance and Emissions Characteristics of a Naturally Aspirated Diesel Engine with vegetable Oil Fuels

810262

02/01/1981

Event
SAE International Congress and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
The performance and emissions characteristics of a direct injected, naturally aspirated diesel engine operating on 100 percent sunflower oil, 100 percent peanut oil and 50 percent (by volume) mixtures of either sunflower oil or peanut oil with #2 diesel fuel were compared to baseline results using #2 diesel fuel.
Without recalibration of the rotary injection pump, the higher fuel densities and viscosities of peanut oil and sunflower oil caused fuel flow and energy delivery increases that yielded power and emissions increases. With the fuel flow adjusted to provide equal fuel energy input, engine power and thermal efficiency decreased slightly, while emissions increased slightly.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/810262
Pages
18
Citation
Barsic, N., and Humke, A., "Performance and Emissions Characteristics of a Naturally Aspirated Diesel Engine with vegetable Oil Fuels," SAE Technical Paper 810262, 1981, https://doi.org/10.4271/810262.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 1981
Product Code
810262
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English