Experimental Investigation on Combustion Characteristics of Refine Corn Oil with Areca Catechu Extract as Additive

Authors

  • Wardoyo Wardoyo State University of Jakarta
  • Agung S. Widodo Brawijaya University
  • Widya Wijayanti Brawijaya University
  • I. N. G. Wardana Brawijaya University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22219/jemmme.v5i1.11990

Keywords:

corn oil, epicatechin, London force, combustion, micro explosion

Abstract

The need for vegetable oils as alternative energy reserves increases with the depletion of fossil energy sources. Vegetable oil is the strongest candidate to replace the fossil energy. However, the use of vegetable oil directly as fuel is limited by high viscosity. Viscosity like this results in non-ideal atomization, challenging to evaporate, and cannot burn completely. Among the methods that have been studied by previous researchers and which have proven to be effective, cheaper, and can reduce the viscosity of vegetable oils better is the mixing method. In this study, corn oil was mixed with areca extract as an additive. Areca extract contains polyphenols which are polar types of epicatechin. Epicatechin has three aromatic rings and several hydroxyl groups. Delocalisation of electrons in aromatic rings can produce London forces on vegetable oil molecules, thereby increasing the reactivity of burning vegetable oil droplets. The burning characteristics of corn vegetable oil affected by areca extract have been studied experimentally at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. The results showed that the rate and temperature of combustion increased, as well as the presence of micro explosions. The London force that appears causes the bonds in the triglyceride molecules to weaken so that the combustion becomes reactive, the rate of heat transfer in the droplets gets better, facilitates the appearance of micro explosions and increases the combustion temperature. Vegetable oil from corn has been studied experimentally at atmospheric pressure and room temperature. The results show an increase in the rate of combustion, an increase in combustion temperature, and the presence of micro explosions. London force that appears causes the bonds in the triglyceride molecules to weaken so that combustion becomes more reactive, the rate of heat transfer in the droplet gets better, facilitates the appearance of micro explosions and raises the combustion temperature.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

M. Al Qubeissi, S. S. Sazhin, and A. E. Elwardany, “Modelling of blended Diesel and biodiesel fuel droplet heating and evaporation,” Fuel, vol. 187, pp. 349–355, 2017.

O. M. Ali, R. Mamat, N. R. Abdullah, and A. Adam, “Analysis of blended fuel properties and engine performance with palm biodiesel e diesel blended fuel,” Renew. Energy, vol. 86, pp. 59–67, 2016.

P. Verma and M. P. Sharma, “Comparative analysis of effect of methanol and ethanol on Karanja biodiesel production and its optimisation,” Fuel, vol. 180, pp. 164–174, 2016.

H. K. Imdadul et al., “Higher alcohol-biodiesel-diesel blends: An approach for improving the performance, emission, and combustion of a light-duty diesel engine,” Energy Convers. Manag., vol. 111, pp. 174–185, 2016.

S. Che, M. Y. Idroas, Y. H. Teoh, and M. F. Hamid, “Optimisation of viscosity and density of re fi ned palm Oil-Melaleuca Cajuputi oil binary blends using mixture design method,” vol. 133, 2019.

M. Zhang and H. Wu, “Effect of major impurities in crude glycerol on solubility and properties of glycerol / methanol / bio-oil blends,” vol. 159, pp. 118–127, 2015.

D. Y. C. Leung and Y. Guo, “Transesterification of neat and used frying oil : Optimization for biodiesel production,” vol. 87, pp. 883–890, 2006.

A. Atmanli, E. Ileri, B. Yuksel, and N. Yilmaz, “Extensive analyses of diesel – vegetable oil – n -butanol ternary blends in a diesel engine,” vol. 145, pp. 155–162, 2015.

O. M. I. Nwafor, “Emission characteristics of diesel engine running on vegetable oil with elevated fuel inlet temperature,” vol. 27, pp. 507–511, 2004.

D. H. Qi, C. Bae, Y. M. Feng, C. C. Jia, and Y. Z. Bian, “Combustion and emission characteristics of a direct injection compression ignition engine using rapeseed oil based micro-emulsions,” vol. 107, pp. 570– 577, 2013.

A. K. Agarwal and A. Dhar, “Experimental investigations of performance , emission and combustion characteristics of Karanja oil blends fuelled DICI engine,” vol. 52, pp. 283–291, 2013.

P. Singh, S. R. Chauhan, and N. Kumar, “A review on methodology for complete elimination of diesel from CI engines using mixed feedstock,” vol. 57, pp. 1110–1125, 2016.

S. Bhimani, J. L. Alvarado, K. Annamalai, and C. Marsh, “Emission characteristics of methanol-in-canola oil emulsions in a combustion chamber,” vol. 113, no. x, pp. 97–106, 2013.

T. Laza and Á. Bereczky, “Basic fuel properties of rapeseed oil-higher alcohols blends,” vol. 90, pp. 803–810, 2011.

I. N. G. Wardana, “Combustion characteristics of jatropha oil droplet at various oil temperatures,” Fuel, vol. 89, no. 3, pp. 659–664, 2010.

P. Le Clercq, B. Noll, and M. Aigner, “Modeling Evaporation and Microexplosion of Water-in-Alkane Emulsion Droplets,” AIChE Annu. Meet. Conf. Proc., 2006.

H. Y. Nanlohy, I. N. G. Wardana, N. Hamidi, L. Yuliati, and T. Ueda, “The e ff ect of Rh 3 + catalyst on the combustion characteristics of crude vegetable oil droplets,” Fuel, vol. 220, no. December 2017, pp. 220– 232, 2018.

Downloads

Published

2020-05-31

How to Cite

Wardoyo, W., Widodo, A. S., Wijayanti, W., & Wardana, I. N. G. (2020). Experimental Investigation on Combustion Characteristics of Refine Corn Oil with Areca Catechu Extract as Additive. Journal of Energy, Mechanical, Material, and Manufacturing Engineering, 5(1), 33–38. https://doi.org/10.22219/jemmme.v5i1.11990

Issue

Section

Articles