Alternate Fuels: Ethanol
Alternate Fuels: Ethanol
Alternate Fuels: Ethanol
ABSTRACT
Necessity is the mother of invention. Energy crisis is
the cry of future.
The historical and the present-day civilization are
closely interwoven with energy and in future, our
existence will be more dependent upon energy. The
conventional sources of energy, the single most
important pre-requisite for power generation, are
depleting fast. The world is heading towards a global
energy crisis mostly due to running out of these energy
sources; decreasing the dependency on fossil fuels is
recommended.
ETHANOL-
Among the various options, Ethanol, an alcohol seems to be a most
promising option for countries like India because of its availability from
agriculture products. Alcohol can be used in diesel engines in following
ways.
One method is injection of ethanol with inlet air using carburetion or
electronic injection system and other is emulsion of diesel and ethanol.
And also enable a reduction in exhaust NOX, smoke and particulate
matter.
WHY TO ADOPT ETHANOL AS ALTERNATE FUEL-
Many alternate fuels are being considered for automotive vehicles
and ETHANOL of the best alternate fuels. Ethanol has been used as
automobile fuel for many years in various countries of the world.
Brazil is probably the leading user that is about 5 million vehicles
operated on fuel that were 93% ethanol .Ethanol is produced from
molasses, which is a by-product of sugarcane.
Ethanol can be produced in large quantities at low cost from these
molasses
Its high oxygen content improves the combustion characteristics
It also reduces the harmful emissions from IC engines such as
sulphur-di-oxide, oxides of nitrogen, particulate emissions.
BLEND FORMATION:
The easiest method by which ethanol could be used is in the form of
diesel ethanol blend. But ethanol has limited solubility in diesel;
hence ethanol/diesel solutions are restricted to small percentages
(typically 20%). This problem of limited solubility has been overcome
by emulsions, which have the capability of accommodation larger
displacement of diesel up to 40% by volume. But the major
drawbacks of emulsions are the cost of emulsifiers and poor low
temperatures physical properties.
DUAL INJECTION:
Dual injection is a method by which nearly 90%Displacement of
diesel by ethanol is possible. The drawback of this method includes
the complexity and expense of a second injection system and a
second fuel tank and system.
SPARK IGNITION:
Spark ignition of neat ethanol in diesel engines provides a way of
displacing 100% of diesel. A spark plug and the associated ignition
system components must be added to the engine. Space must be
available for spark plugs in the cylinder head and its also important
for sparkplugs in the cylinder head and its also important for proper
plug cooling.
IGNITION IMPROVERS:
Another method of using neat ethanol is to increase their cetane
numbers sufficiently with ignition improving additives to ensure that
compression ignition will occur. This method saves the expense and
complexity of engine components changes, but adds fuel costs.
SURFACE IGNITION:
This is another method of using ethanol 100% ethanol in diesel
engines. Surface ignition occurs when the temperature of the air-fuel
mixture adjacent to a hot surface exceeds its self-ignition limit.
FUMIGATION:
Fumigation is a method by which ethanol is introduced in to engine by
carbureting or vaporizing the ethanol into the intake stream. This
method requires addition of a carburetor or vaporizer along with a
separate fuel tank, lines and controls. But with the emergence of
electronic injection techniques the fumigation technique has been
made possible by using an injector in the intake manifold.
METHANOL-
Also known as wood alcohol, methanol is a convenient liquid fuel that
is made from a number of different feedstock resources - natural gas
and coal as well as renewable resources like forest thinning or
agricultural waste and even directly from CO2 captured from power
plant and factory emissions. Methanol is a basic building block for
hundreds of essential chemical commodities that touch our daily lives
including building materials, plastic packaging, paints and coatings,
even windshield washing fluid. Methanol is also a transportation fuel,
a hydrogen carrier for fuel cell technologies, and an efficient fuel for
electric power generation. With the chemical structure CH3OH,
methanol is the simplest alcohol, with the lowest carbon content and
highest hydrogen content of any liquid fuel.
METHANOL FUEL AND THE
ENVIRONMENT:-
Ten or more years ago, a typical methanol manufacturing plant
would emit about 0.9 - 1.0 metric tonnes of carbon dioxide for
every tone of methanol produced. In addition to the
environmental concerns, large CO2 emissions represent
operational inefficiencies in a methanol plant, since the carbon
emitted as CO2 is not available for making methanol molecules.
In fact, excess CO2 from other industrial facilities can also be
captured and consumed to increase methanol production.
Through the implementation of efficiency improvements and
through replacing of older facilities with newer plants that use
more efficient technologies, over the last decade methanol
plants have been able to significantly reduce CO2 emissions by
up to 40%. When burned as fuel, methanol cuts emissions of
nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds that form
ground-level ozone or smog. Methanol is much less reactive
than gasoline in the atmosphere, with the only toxic component
of the emissions being formaldehyde, as compared to dozens
of carcinogenic components of gasoline emissions, which also
contains formaldehyde. The use of heated catalytic converters
has shown that methanol-fueled auto emissions meet and
exceed Californias stringent Ultra Low Emission Vehicle
(ULEV) emission targets for formaldehyde. Methanol fuel also
does not contain the toxic BTEX additives found in gasoline
benzene, toluene, ethyl benzene, and xylems. These
compounds are highly carcinogenic, do not readily biodegrade
in the environment, and are capable of contaminating
groundwater supplies.
ADVANTAGE AND DISADVANTAGE OF ALCHOL
FUELS:-
Advantages
It can be obtained from a number of source, both natural and
manufactured.
It is a high octane fuel with anti-knock index number (octane
number) of over 100. Engines using high-octane fuel run more
efficiently by using higher compression ratios. Alcohols have
higher flame speed.
It produces less overall emissions compared to gasoline.
When alcohols are burned, it forms more moles of exhaust
gases, which give higher pressure and more power in the
expansion stroke.
Alcohol have low sulphur content in the fuel.
Disadvantages
Alcohol have low energy content or in other words the calorific
value of the fuel is almost half of the gasoline fuel
Alcohol have poor ignition characteristics in general
Alcohols have almost invisible flames, which is considered
dangerous when handling fuel.
Many people find strong order of alcohol very offensive.
There is a possibility of vapor lock in fuel delivery system.
Production:-
Biodiesel is commonly produced by the transesterification of the
vegetable oil or animal fat feedstock.
BIOGAS:-
Biogas is another alternate fuel tried in diesels. Biogas can be
produced by anaerobic digestion of organic matter. Potential raw
materials available on a large scale are cow dung, municipal wastes,
etc
The main advantages of biogas are that it can be produce in rural
areas from readily available material. Biogas consists mainly
methane and carbon dioxide. Its calorific value is low but its knock
resistance is more and ignition quality (cetane number) is low
BENZOL:-
Benzol is a coal tar distillate that consist of about 70% benzene (),
20% Toluene and 10%xylene and trace amounts of sulphur burning
compounds. It has high antiknock characteristic. It has a freezing
point of 6C. This eliminates it as a fuel in cold climates. Its specific
gravity is 0.88., specific heat 0.4
DIETHYL ETHER:-
It is a very volatile fuel. It is use with other fuels to increase the
volatility of the blend.
ACETONE:-
Acetone is more volatile than methanol. This may be used as fuel
without blending with other volatile fuels. Its antiknock quality is
higher than that of butanol. Hence, it is a desirable fuel to blend with
butanol.