期刊
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GREEN ENERGY
卷 8, 期 7, 页码 748-767出版社
TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15435075.2011.600374
关键词
Algae; Palm; Canola; Biofuels; Microemulsions; Combustion test; Phase behaviors; Emissions; Viscosity
资金
- Oklahoma Center for Advancement of Science and Technology (OCAST)
- Oklahoma Bioenergy Center
- Institute for Applied Surfactant Research at the University of Oklahoma
- Clorox
- Conoco/Phillips
- Church and Dwight
- Ecolab
- GlaxoSmithKline
- Halliburton
- Huntsman
- S.C. Johnson Son
- Oxiteno
- Procter Gamble
- Sasol North America
- Shell Chemical
- Dr. Sabatini's Sun Oil Company
- Dr. Harwell's Conoco/Dupont
- EPSCoR [0814361] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
Vegetable oils are being considered as a renewable energy alternative for diesel. The high viscosity of vegetable oils causes injector fouling and durability problems in compression-ignition engines. Microemulsification can be used to reduce vegetable oil viscosity without complex chemical transformation processes. The goal of our work is to formulate reverse micellar microemulsions of vegetable oils and No. 2 diesel fuel blended with ethanol using different combinations of surfactants and co-surfactants. Ethanol, also a renewable fuel, was used as a viscosity modifier. We studied three vegetable oils (canola, palm, and algae oils) to blend with diesel fuel. The microemulsion fuels were tested for temperature stability, viscosity, water tolerance, and their combustion performance in terms of flame radiation and pollutant (CO, NOx) emissions. With appropriate surfactant and co-surfactant systems, we successfully formulated canola and algae/diesel microemulsions with cloud points and points that satisfy the ASTM standards. Among all formulations, palm/diesel microemulsion fuels solidified at 6-6.5 degrees C due to high saturated triglyceride content. While the formulated microemulsion fuels had approximately 10% lower heating value than diesel fuel, their CO emission and flame radiation were superior to those of diesel fuel. NOx emissions were also lower with the blends containing no nitrate additives, but were higher than with diesel fuel in the presence of nitrate additives. Thus, these results show that microemulsification can produce biofuels with desirable viscosity, fuel properties can be adjusted via formulation variables, and microemulsions can replace chemical processes for producing biofuels.
作者
我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。
推荐
暂无数据