Combinepdf
Combinepdf
UNIT - 01
1. With suitable comparison briefly discuss the performance and emission of various alternate
fuels in terms of percentage differene with respective to conventional fuels.
2. Justify the statement : “ The use of the alternate fuels has not increased as rapidly as predicted”.
3. List out the various factors that drive the market for the alternate fuel vehicles and explain.
4. Asses the statement - Alternate fuels are the fuels of the present and future with the help of a
case study.
5. Discuss the alternate power trains play an imporatant role in emission mitigation and stand for
eco friendly mobility.
6. Discuss the various categories of alternative fuels and drivetrains based on its source of
propulsion systems.
UNIT - 02
7. With the help of a neat sketch explain the production of the DME.
8. Diffentiate between the methanol and DME in refernce to its properties, performance,
combustion and emission charcteristics.
9. With the help a of a flowchart explain the dry milling process of ethanol production.
10. Discuss the the growth of ethanol as a fuel additive for gasoline engine over years across the
globe and in India.
Page 1
11. Justify: Methanol offers important emission benefits when comapared with gasoline.
12. Support the statement : DEE is considered to be low emission and high quality diesel engine
fuel.
13. With an example of the alcohol blend discuss the properties, performance and emssion
characteristics in comparison to gasoline fuel.
UNIT - 03
14. Discuss the production, transmission and storage of the compressed natural gas in the industry.
15. Briefly explain the types of the CNG vehicles based on the fuel supply and modifications
required to convert the CI engine to CNG engine.
16. List out the various optimizations required to obtain complete combustion, minimize the
emissions and maximize the power and fuel efficiency in an CNG engine. Explain.
17. With the help of a neat charcteristic curve explain the nature and trend of the performance
parametres of the CNG in a gasoline and CI engine.
18. Justify the statements - “ the combustion variability of LPG fueled engine is higher than the
gasoline engine” and “ LPG has a potential to be mainstream fuel”.
19. Draw a brief comparison between the vehicular emmisions of the autogas LPG, petrol amd
diesel.
20. List out the various methods of production of hydrogen and briefly explain catalytic steam
reforming of natural gas process of production.
21. Substantiate “ Hydrogen has a bright future as an automotive fuel for conventional IC engine
driven vehicles and as well as hybrid and fuel cell vehicles”.
22. With respective to the various hazards of hydrogen briefly explain the various safety systems
for hydrogen.
UNIT - 04
Page 2
28. List out the various processes of extraction of biofuels and explain biochemical process in brief.
29. Define the following: (i) straight vegetable oils (ii) esterification (iii) transesterification.
Explain the transesterification of vegetable oils with an example.
30. Compare and discuss the properties and combustion characteristics of vegetable oils with the
conventional petroleum fuel.
UNIT - 05
31. Distinguish between the Battery EVs, Hybrid EVs and Fuel cell EVs.
32. Explain the construction and working of an EV with a neat diagram.
33. Compare and explain the force speed characteristics curve of the ICE and EV.
34. Discuss the methodology adopted for the development of the hybrid electric vehivle.
35. Write short notes on: (i) series hybrid vehicles (ii) hybrid electric vehicels.
36. Explain the working principle, construction and working of a fuel cell with a neat diagram.
37. The development of fuel cells for EVs has taken on an accelerated pace in recent years. Justify
the statement.
38. With a neat sketch dicuss the various fuel cell hybrid electric vehicle configurations.
Page 3
2) Though alternative fuels have a potential for excellent fuel economy and run
on existing Justify the statement: “The use of alternate fuels has not increased
as rapidly as predicted”.
Supplies; their growth has not increased as rapidly as predicted.
Biodiesel, though it is a renewable and fairly available source that can be burnt
seamlessly, it has its cons which have hindered its widespread usage. Using
vegetable oil involves a costly conversion process and a lot of effort. Quality of
biodiesel varies widely and the existing diesel engines can only accommodate a
certain range of quality to obtain similar performance characteristics compared
to diesel. Also, biodiesel costs more than petroleum diesel.
E85 ethanol has 25% lower fuel economy than gasoline. Ethanol made from any
food crop can adversely affect food prices.
Hydrogen fuel cells provide a fuel economy equivalent to above twice that of
gasoline vehicles. Hydrogen is abundant and can be made from renewable
energy. Acceptable range of hydrogen requires extremely high pressure on-
board hydrogen storage and there are a very few places to refuel. Hydrogen is
very expensive to transport and there is no infrastructure in place yet. Currently,
hydrogen fuel is made from non-renewable natural gas in a process that creates
enormous CO2
Emissions.
Hybrid and electric vehicle usage too has not increased at the predicted rate.
One of the reasons is the cost of these vehicles being significantly more than that
of conventional vehicles. Some don’t live up to the mileage buyers may expect,
especially considering the extra purchase price. Inadequate infrastructure for
charging battery electric vehicles is also a deterrent for the growth of these
vehicles.
However, conventional oil prices are surging and still close to $130 per barrel
and fossil fuel resources are depleting. Therefore, competitive growth of alter6
fuels is inevitable.
3) List out the various factors that drive the market for the alternative fuel
vehicles and explain.
Each alternate fuel has its own distinct advantages and disadvantages associated
with cost, availability, environmental impact, vehicle/engine modification, safety
and customer acceptance and legislation.
Alternative fuels are receiving attention because of the following reasons:
I. Alternative fuels are mostly produced from domestic resources that reduce the
energy dependence.
- Use of locally available resources for fuel purposes can reduce crude oil
import bill. Most of the alternative fuels, for example, alcohols, biodiesel
can be produced from biomass resources and agricultural wastes and
electricity for battery operated vehicles can be produced from solar and
fuel cells. Hydrogen can be produced from biomass gasification or
electrolysis of water.
II. Alternative fuels generally reduce the vehicle exhaust emission and hence
improve the environmental air quality.
- Alternative fuels are capable of reducing the engine emissions as
compared to petroleum products.
- The molecular structure of alternative fuels (CH3OH, C2H5OH & CH4 etc) is
much simpler than gasoline/diesel.
- Moreover a low C:H ratio of alternative fuels generates less hydrocarbon
emissions on combustion.
- Hydrogen is a clean fuel and generates nil hydrocarbon emissions.
- Emissions released from centralized plant can be more easily controlled
than vehicular emissions.
III. Some alternative fuels have the potential to operate at a lower cost compared to
petroleum products.
- Currently the cost of most alternate fuels is a little bit higher than
conventional fuel.
- However, the cost of biodiesel and CNG are competitive with petroleum.
- For the development of alternative fuels government legislations and
incentives are required to a certain extent.
- The large scale production of alternative fuels could make them cost
competitive.
4) Assess the statement-Alternative fuels are the fuels of the present and future
with the case study?
Even though the alternate fuels have a number of advantages over the conventional
fuels, they still have a long way to go to be considered as economically viable alternative to the
conventional fuels presently used. A lot of research efforts are currently being directed towards
analyzing and improving the economic viability of these fuels.
Need of alternate fuels
1) Conventional fuels going to runout
2) Alternative fuels are derived from sources other than petroleum
3) Most are produced domestically, reducing our dependence on imported oil, and some are
derived from renewable sources
Global energy consumption patterns reveal that the world remains highly dependent on
fossil fuels. Over the last 50 years, while energy consumption grew substantially, the world
undertook a transition in its usage of fossil fuels, from solids (coal) to liquids (oil) to gases
(natural gas).t’s been clear all along that reducing dependency on fossil fuels is critical for the
sustainable future of the planet. We have to consider the alternative fuels as fuel for present
and future, some of the Alternative fuels which are alternative for fossil fuels are
Ethanol
Ethanol is a renewable, domestically produced alcohol fuel made from plant material, such as corn,
sugar cane, or grasses. Using ethanol can reduce oil dependence and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
Although CO is released during ethanol production and combustion, it is recaptured as a nutrient to the
2
crops that are used in its production, thus ethanol results in lower increases to the carbon cycle
Studies have also shown that ethanol blending shows no toxic effects in particulate matter (PM)
emissions.E10 and E15 are blends of ethanol and gasoline. The number after the "E" indicates the
percentage of ethanol by volume.
E85, also called flex fuel, is an ethanol-gasoline blend containing 51% to 83% ethanol,
depending on geography and season. Summer blends tend to have more ethanol while winter
blends have less. E85 can be used in FFVs, which are specially designed to run on gasoline, E85,
or any mixture of the two. FFVs are offered by several automakers. We provide a brief guide to
help you determine if your vehicle can run on flex fuel.
Due to ethanol's lower energy content, FFVs operating on E85 get roughly 15% to 27%
fewer miles per gallon than when operating on regular gasoline, depending on the ethanol
content. Regular gasoline typically contains about 10% ethanol.
Bio diesel
Domestically produced from renewable resources.
Common blends include B2 (2% biodiesel), B5, and B20.
10-percent decrease in fuel economy when using pure biodiesel when compared to regular
diesel
Natural Gas
A fossil fuel composed of mostly methane
It can be used in the form of compressed natural gas (CNG) or Liquified natural gas (LNG) to the
fuels for car and trucks.
Up to 10% less greenhouse gas emissions.
Electricity
Electricity is an alternative fuel that can be used to power all-electric and plug-in hybrid cars.
EVs convert over 77% of the electrical energy from the grid to power at the wheels.
Today's light-duty all-electric vehicles (or PHEVs in electric mode) can exceed 130 MPGe and
can drive 100 miles consuming only 25–40 kWh.
Typically more cost-efficient and prices more stable than gasoline
Hydrogen
Fuel cell vehicles (FCVs) turn hydrogen and oxygen from the air into electricity, powering an
electric motor.
FCVs produce no air pollutants or greenhouse gases, and burning hydrogen in ICEs produces
only nitrogen oxides (NOx).
6) Discuss the various categories of alternative fuels and drive trains based on its
source of propulsion systems?
Alternative fuels are derived by other than crude oil sources.
The various categories are
Alcohols: They are considered as a substitute or additive component for gasoline as they
possess a higher octane number.
The move towards unleaded fuels produced excessive exhaust valve wear in gasoline engines.
This problem was solved by incorporating hardened valve seats and satellite coating on valves.
They led to the increased use of alternative fuels particularly methanol/ ethanol blends because
of their higher octane number.
Ethers improve the combustion efficiency Dimethyl ether (DME) is the most commonly used
blending component in gasoline fuel.it has a high ceatane number (55-60) it contains a oxygen
but no C-C bonds and has the advantages of reducing carbon particulate matter emissions
formation.
Di-ethyl ether (DEE) can be used for cold start in the diesel engines 5% Dee blends have shown
important performance in diesel engines.
Vegetable oil and biodiesel
Dr.Rudalf diesel inventor of the diesel engine has demonstrated that the engine run on Peanut
Oil.
Vegetable oils and its derivatives have the potential to substitute for a fraction of the
petroleum distillates and petroleum based petrochemicals in the near future.
Biodiesel is methyl or ethyl esters of fatty acids derived from edible and non-edible type
vegetable oils and animal fats.
The major sources of biodiesel production are jatropa, karanji, palm, soya bean and sunflower.
Gaseous fuels
Natural gas essentially consists of methane (80-98%) depending on geographic origin
compressed natural gas (CNG) has excellent ant knocking properties which allows use of a
higher compression ratio for increased power output and fuel economy compared to petrol.
Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) is a mixture of propane and butane gas it has a higher octane
number for spark ignition engines, comparable to gasoline heating value which ensures a
similar output.
Hydrogen is one of the cleanest fuel in the world as it does not contain carbon .it is a clean and
efficient energy carrier with the potential to replace liquid and gaseous fuels.
Categories of gear trains
PHEVs: Plugin hybrid electric vehicles are electric vehicles whose battery can be recharged by
plugging it to an external source of electric power ,as by its on board engine and generator.
BEVs: Battery powered electric vehicles are electric vehicles that exclusively use chemical
energy stored in rechargeable battery packs, with no secondary source of propulsion.
FCEVs: Fuel cell electric vehicles are powered by hydrogen .they are more efficient than
conventional vehicles and produce no tailpipe emissions. They only emit water vapour and
warm air.
7. With the help of a neat sketch explain the production of the DME.
In industrial applications, the DME is produced from the syngas by means of two
different configurations
one-step process
two-steps process
In the one-step process (direct production process), DME is produced directly from
the syngas in one single reactor where a bifunctional catalyst supports both the
methanol formation and the methanol dehydration according to the following
reactions scheme.
distillation stage is needed. The following figure shows a diagram of the one-step
process.
In the two steps (indirect) process, the methanol formation from syngas and
the DME production from methanol are supported in two separated reactors,
where the specific catalysts (copper-based for the first, silica-alumina for the
second) are packed. The figure illustrates the block diagram of this architecture.
DME p r o d u c t i o n f romr e n e w a b l e energies
Properties of any fuel depend fully on its chemical compositions which determine
the performance and emission characteristics of the engine.Compared with other
alternatives, methanol and di-methyl ether (DME) are suitable alternative fuels for
spark ignition (SI) engines.
9.With the help of a flowchart explain the dry milling process of ethanol
production.
There are two main techniques used to produce ethanol in this manner first a dry
milling process and a wet milling process, with the main difference being the
method in which maize is first broken down.
In the wet milling process, the maize is broken by soaking for 30-50 hours in a
diluted sulphuric acid solution, which dissociates the maize and dissolves the
starch. After soaking, the solids are separated from the solution, and only the
dissolved starch is passed on to the fermentation process.
Thereafter, the processing of the starch to ethanol is identical to the process used
with dry milling technology.
According to Albers (2006) the basic steps in the ethanol manufacturing process
with the dry milling process are as follows:
1. The maize is processed with various enzymes added to separate fermentable
sugars.
-Enzymes are added to the mash to convert the starch to dextrone, a simple sugar.
The mash is cooled and transferred to fermenters where yeast is added and the
conversion of sugar to ethanol and CO₂ begins.
4. For fuel and industrial purposes, the ethanol is denatured with a small amount f
displeasing and noxious chemical to make it unfit for human consumption.
10.Discuss the the growth of ethanol as a fuel additive for gasoline engine over
years across the globe and in India.
Ethanol is an oxygenated fuel, Produced from fermentation of biological renewable
sources such as molasses, sugarcane or starch. Some countries are using ethanol as
substitute for gasoline or diesel.
It can be produced by fermentation of vegetable and plant material in india.
During combustion, ethanol reacts with oxygen, carbon dioxide, water and heat
C₂H5 OH + 3O2 — 2CO₂ + 3H₂O + heat
-Ethanol was deemed as the fuel of the future by Henry Ford and has continued to
be the most popular alcohol based fuel due to several reasons, including production
from renewable agricultural products and incomplete oxidation byproducts (acetic
acid & acetaldehyde) are less toxic compared to the incomplete oxidation
byproducts of other alcohols.
-The first ethanol blended with gasoline as an octane booster occurred in 1920s and
1930s and was in high demand during World War II because of fuel shortage.
- In the United States, a federal ethanol program was started during the 1970s. The
clean air act of 1970s allowed the energy crisis in the environmental protection
agency (EPA) to set standards for vehicular emissions. This led to a requirement of
oxygenated fuels to reduce vehicular emissions from gasoline engines. This
purpose was served thy using 7.5% ethanol or 15% MTBE blend in gasoline.
-The phase out of MTBE as a gasoline additive in California and other US states
has generated renewed interest in the use of ethanol as a gasoline oxygenate.
-The most significant use of ethanol in vehicles started in Brazil in the 1970s. In
that country, the National Alcohol Program was created to cope with the high oil
price in the 1970s and 1980s. Federal incentives, in combination with the
participation of the automobile industry and the strong environmental appeal, made
the program a success.
-The expected gasoline requirement for India is 68 billion liters for the year 2026
to meet the demand. This, along with the benefits offered by ethanol blends
provides a strong case for the use of ethanol.
-The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, India in January 2021 has preponed
the target of 20% ethanol blending with petrol by five years to 2025 as it look to
cut dependence on to costly oil imports.
-On March 8, 2021 India notified the use of E20, a blend of 20% ethanol and 80%
petrol by volume, as fuel for compatible vehicles.
-Methanol has a high blending octane value for smoother burning, less knocking
and it has high calorific value, lower boiling temperature for better fuel
vaporization in cold engines. It has lack of high volatile compounds.
-The unique blending properties allows oil refiners to Produce clean burning and
that reduces vehicle emission, it reduces particulate matter in atmosphere.
-Methanol is low cost availability as compared other gasoline and which can meet
supplies of growing gasoline demand and new environmental regulations, provides
greater thermal efficiency.
-By using diethyl ether as a fuel additive improves the engine Performance
significantly for the most of engine loaded condition.
-Hence the engine maximum thermal efficiency of break is increased by 7.2% and
the lowest specific fuel consumption decreased by 6.7%. Under the 15% of DEE is
blended fuel as compared to diesel fuel.
-Diethyl ether can be reduced by biomass methanol, and diesel fuels, most diethyl
ether is produced by byproduct of the vapor phase hydration of ethylene to make
ethanol.
CH3CH2OH + H3O - CH3CH2OH*+H2O
-Diethyl ether has a octane number of 85-96 and it is used as starting fluid. in
combination with Petroleum distillates for gasoline and low flash point.
-DEE is most commonly used in cold climate region, as it help with cold starting
an engine at sub-2000 temperature. Also it is extremely flammable and form
explosive vapour/air mixture.
13.With an example of alcohol blend discuss the properties, performance and
emission characteristics in comparison of gasoline fuel.
Properties:
1. Methanol is a future bio-fuel, whereas gasoline is not environmentally friendly.
2. Gasoline and methanol are both used as car fuels, and methanol is more
powerful than gasoline.
3. Methanol is expensive, and used as a substitute fuel, compared to gasoline.
4. Gasoline and methanol are both poisonous, and skin contact should be avoided,
especially in the case of methanol.
5. Methanol is less combustible than gasoline, but can corrode the metallic parts in
the engine.
Performance: Methanol versus gasoline is around 20% more powerful, and creates
an alternative to gasoline. Methanol is hard to get, and can easily become
contaminated simply from the moisture in the air. Gasoline engines produce 53,176
BTU’s of energy at 6500 rpm, whereas methanol engines produce 67,545 BTU’s
of energy at 6500 rpm.
Methanol is produced from natural gas, oil and coal, whereas gasoline is derived
from petroleum. Mixtures of carbon monoxide and hydrogen are converted into
methanol during a chemical process.
Methanol is used as a fuel in internal combustion engines, whereas gasoline is used
for tuning engine performance or reducing harmful exhaust emissions. Gasoline is
also used as a solvent for diluting paints.
TABE OF CONTENTS
3. BIOGAS
4. HYDROGEN
NATURAL GAS
INTRODUCTION
Butane C4H10
Oxygen O2 0-0.2%
Nitrogen N2 0-5%
1. To use it on a dual fuel engine. In this case, natural gas is the main
fuel and is ignited by pilot diesel fuel. Therefore, soot and NOx
emissions from conventional diesel engines can be minimized through the
replacement of diesel by natural gas.
The Chinese discovered a very long time ago that the energy in
natural gas could be harnessed, and used to heat water. In the early days
of the natural gas industry, the gas was mainly used to light streetlamps,
and the occasional house.
Millions of years ago, the remains of plants and animals decayed and
built up in thick layers. This decayed matter from plants and animals is
called organic material –a compound that capable of decay or sometime
refers as a compound consists mainly carbon. Over time, the mud and
soil changed to rock, covered the organic material and trapped it
beneath the rock.
Pressure and heat changed some of this organic material into coal,
some into oil (petroleum), and some into natural gas – tiny bubbles
of odorless gas.
The search for natural gas begins with geologists who locate the
types of rock that are known to contain gas and oil deposits.
Today their tools include seismic surveys that are used to find the right
places to drill wells. Seismic surveys use echoes from a vibration source
at the Earth's surface (usually a vibrating pad under a truck built for this
purpose) to collect information about the rocks beneath. They send
sound waves into the ground and measure how fast the waves bounce
back. This tells them how hard and how thick the different rock layers
are underground. The data is fed into a computer, which draws a picture
of the rock layers. This picture is called a seismogram.
The next task are taken by scientists and engineers who explore a
chosen area by studying rock samples from the earth and taking
measurements. If the site seems promising, drilling begins. Some of these
areas are on land but many are offshore, deep in the ocean. Once the gas
is found, it flows up through the well to the surface of the ground and
into large pipelines. Some of the gases that are produced along with
methane, such as butane and propane, are separated and the other sour
gases such as carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide are cleaned at a gas
processing plant (normally called as sweetening process).
Methane (CH4) gas was formed from the reaction of hydrogen gas
and carbon dioxide gas through methanation process by reduction
reaction as in Equation 1 below:-
CO2 (g) + 4H2 (g) → CH4 (g) + 2H2O (l) ------ (1)
importance.
CO2 (g) + H2 (g) → CO (g) + H2O (l) ------ (2) CO (g) + 3H2 (g) →
CH4 (g) + H2O (l) ------ (3)
Temperature of the reaction = 300 K
Catalysts used = manganeses, nickel oxide, noble meatls ( Ru, Pt, Rh )
Types of NGVs
From Table 2 the Cetane number of CNG is far less that the cetane
number of diesel, the higher the cetane number the, easier and faster the
auto ignition will occur. Hence, we are replacing the glow plug with spark
plug by making necessary modifications in the cylinder head.
BSFC of CNG fueled engines was 12% to 20% lower than that of
gasoline throughout the speed range due to Higher heating value of
the CNG (47.5 MJ/kg) as compared to that of gasoline (43.5 MJ/kg)
and lean and slow burning of CNG as compared to gasoline.
Initially with increasing brake power, the brake specific fuel
consumption of dual fuel and diesel are decreased and then increases
with increase in brake power. The brake specific fuel consumption
with dual fuel is less than that of diesel throughout the range of
brake power at all injection pressures. This is mainly due to the
combined effects of relative fuel density, viscosity and calorific value
of the dual fuel.
natural gas engines shows 5–12% higher brake thermal
efficiency (BTE) in contrast to gasoline engine
BTE of dual fuel mode is more than neat diesel mode by11%.
Initially with increase in brake power, the brake thermal
efficiency of the engine is increased with both dual fuel and
diesel. The brake thermal efficiency obtained with dual fuel is higher
than that of diesel at all injection pressures.
PROPERTIES VALUES
autoiginition temperature 57 C
Different types of fuel supply require different LPG system and the
conversion methodology subjected to space constraint availability.
After LPG kit installation, the vehicle would be able to switch between
two fuel system operation either petrol or LPG fuel.
iii. BSFC vs BP
iv. BTE vs BP
i. HC vs BP and BMEP
HC -85 %
COMPOSITION OF BIOGAS:
CONSTITUE PERCENTAGE
NT
50-60%
METHANE
CO2 30-45%
H2S 5-10%
N2 0.5-0.7%
H2O TRACE
Table 5: COMPOSITION OF BIOGAS
PROPERTIES VALUES
CV 4500-5000 Kcal/m3
OCATNE RATING 130
IGNITION 650 C
TEMPERATURE
AIR TO FUEL RATIO 10:1
2. Acidogenesis
3. Acetogenesis
4. Methanogenesis
Methanogenesis is a critical step in AD. It has a large impact on the
AD process because approximately 70% of methane used in AD is
generated from this stage . During this stage, carbon dioxide-reducing
and hydrogen oxidizing methanogens convert hydrogen and carbon
dioxide to obtain methane, while acetoclastic methanogens utilize acetate
to produce methane.
The brake power of the engine increases with the increase of load
at the rated speed. The brake power decreases when more biogas
mixture supplied to the engine. It tends to shows the lower energy
contents in the fuel mixture.
Figure : Variation of Brake power Vs Applied load
METHODS OF PRODUCTION
electrolysis of water
catalytic steam reforming of natural gas
partial oxidation of heavy oil
coal gasification
steam iron process
thermal cracking of natural gas
nuclear fission
thermochemical water decomposition
photochemical conversion
biological hydrogen generation by algae
decomposition of biomass
Electrolysis of water
The electrons flow through an external circuit and the hydrogen ions
selectively move across the PEM to the cathode.
Reducing the capital cost of the electrolyzer unit and the balance of
the system, and improving energy efficiency for converting electricity to
hydrogen.
PARTIAL OXIDATION
In partial oxidation, the methane and other hydrocarbons in natural
gas react with a limited amount of oxygen (typically from air) that is not
enough to completely oxidize the hydrocarbons to carbon dioxide and
water.
The high auto ignition temperature, finite ignition delay and the
high flame velocity of hydrogen show that knocking is less likely
for hydrogen relative to gasoline. The research octane number
(RON) for hydrogen is higher in comparison to gasoline.
HC emissions
CO emission
In this regard for the design of the hydrogen storage vessels, type IV
model is being used in practice where it is provided with a polymer liner
materials, instead of a metallic liner used in type III vessel model.
1) Thermal conduction
2) Thermal convection
3) Thermal radiation
Among these, the thermal conduction
(1) through pipes, cables and mountings to the inner storage ve
(2) from the environment to the cryogenic liquid are dominant.
Also with the conventional methods there also exists few other
methods which currently are being studied, they are: gas bound in
certain metal hydrides, activated carbon storage and in glass
microsphers.
Hydrogen Transportation
1) Renewable in nature.
2) cleanest fuel with low emissions of NOx.
3) Can be produced from various feed stocks.
4) Suitable for IC engines and fuel cells.
5) Requires less ignition energy.
6) excellent combustion characteristics.
Disadvantages of Hydrogen
1) High flamability.
2) Leak detection is difficult.
3) Problems of pre ignition.
4) probability of backfiring is high.
5) expensive production techniques.
6) lack of distrubution facilities
Hazards of Hydrogen
1) Leakage
2) Fire and explosion
3) Asphyxiation
4) Frostbite
where MOH indicates methanol, ME are the methyl esters, TG, DG and MG are tri-, di- and
mono glycerides, respectively, and G is the glycerin.
4. Separation of the Reaction Products
The separation of reaction products takes place by decantation: the mixture of fatty acids methyl
esters (FAME) separates from glycerin forming two phases, since they have different densities; the two
phases begin to form immediately after the stirring of the mixture is stopped. Due to their different
chemical affinities, most of the catalyst and excess alcohol will concentrate in the lower phase
(glycerin), while most of the mono-, di-, and triglycerides will concentrate in the upper phase (FAME).
Once the interphase is clearly and completely defined, the two phases may be physically separated.
5. Purification of the Reaction Products
The mixture of fatty acids methyl esters (FAME) obtained from the transesterificationreaction
must be purified in order to comply with established quality standards for biodiesel. Therefore, FAME
must be washed, neutralized and dried. Successive washing steps with water remove the remains of
methanol, catalystand glycerin, since these contaminants are water-soluble. Care must be taken to avoid
the formation of emulsions during the washing steps, since they would reduce the efficiency of the
process. The first washing step is carried out with acidified water, to neutralize the mixture of esters.
Then, two additional washingsteps are made with water only. Finally, the traces of water must be
eliminated by a drying step. After drying, the purified product is ready for characterization as biodiesel
according to international standards.
2. List out the various engine modifications for biodiesel combustion in CI engine and explain
any one briefly.
This section reviews the various methods of modifications done in the engine manifold of the
biodiesel engine.
1. Intake Manifold Modifications
a. Hydrogen Addition
b. Alcohol Fumigation Modes
c. Gasoline Fumigation
d. Incorporating Guide Vanes
e. Intake Manifold Water Injection (IMWI)
f. Thermal Barrier Coating
g. Preheating
2. Fuel Injection
a. Nozzle Geometry
b. Split Injection
c. Solenoid Injector
d. Piston Bowl
3. Exhaust Manifold Modifications
a. Exhaust Gas Recycle (EGR)
INTAKE MANIFOLD WATER INJECTION (IMWI):
The formation of NOx is the result of a high-temperature combustion process. It affects the
respiratory system. The high latent heat and specific heat of water that is being injected in the intake
manifold may reduce the in-cylinder temperature and hence may reduce the quantity of NOx being
formed in the diesel engine.
However, it was attributed that the dilution effect affected the engine performance and
emissions. Intake manifold water injection was claimed to be an effective way to contain the in-cylinder
combustion temperature and formation of NOx. The CFD simulation tests conducted on direct injection
diesel engine and turbocharged engine produced remarkably less amounts of both Nox as well as soot.
The same trend of reduction in NOx was observed when diesel engine was run with 100% biodiesel
prepared from rapeseed oil at two different engine loading conditions.
Water was injected at different mass flow rate of 0 kg/h, 1.8 kg/h, 3 kg/h. The formation of NOx
was found to decrease at various engine operating conditions with an increase in the speed of the engine.
Higher engine speed increases the volumetric effciency and gas flow motion, which leads to the rapid
mixing of air with fuel, resulting in shorter ignition delay. Therefore, the time available for the reaction
between the oxygen and free nitrogen is significantly reduced. Shorter ignition delay minimizes the
formation of Nox. Furthermore, by NOx was reduced with an increase in water flow rate
proportionately.
3. Compare & explain the properties, performance and combustion characteristics of the diesel,
B20 & B100.
Table: Properties of Diesel vs B20 vs B100
Property Unit B100 B20 Diesel
Flash point ℃ 183.5 87.80 68.50
Kinematic viscosity at 40℃ mm2/s 4.6 3.32 3.11
Relative density at 15℃ - 0.874 0.845 0.839
Higher heating values MJ/kg 38.10 44.62 46.18
Cloud point ℃ 18 - -
Pour point ℃ - -3 -
Cetane number - 66.9 54.5 52.4
Auto ignition temperature K 494 481 -
Molecular weight g/ml 295.31 206.74 191.8
The engine performances (power, torque, fuel consumption) and emissions (unburntHCs, carbon
dioxide, carbon monoxide and nitric oxide) of a diesel engine using two different biodiesels, type A [80%
tallow (beef, pork andsheep) and 20% canola oil methyl ester] and type B (70% chicken tallow and 30%
waste cooking oil methyl ester), were used for the experimentation.
Torque and Power
Fig.1. shows the torque as a function of diesel and biodiesel blends for both Biodiesels A and B.
Here, the tests were conducted at two modes of speeds 2600 rpm and 1560 rpm at 100% throttle.. It can be
seen from that the output torque decreases with increasing blend ratio for both biodiesels. The percentage
decrease for both biodiesels at these modes is in the range of 4–5%. A decrease in this magnitude is to be
expected, due to the lower energy content of biodiesel. The decrease in output torque at these two modes
also affects the power output of the engine, since torque and power are directly proportional when the
engine speed is fixed. As a result, the power output will also decrease by 4–5%. A decrease in both power
and torque is due to their lower energy content of biodiesel.
Fig 1 Buildup of Carbon Deposits in Engine Fig.2. Impact of Temperature on the Viscosity
(ii) Esterification:
Esterification is the process of producing an ester from a carboxylic acid and an alcohol. An ester is
formed when the –OH group of the carboxylic acid is replaced by the alkoxy group of the alcohol. The
esterification process requires a catalyst for the progression. The catalyst is used to reduce the activation
energy barrier of the esterification process. The catalyst is typically an acid. And also, heat should be
provided as a source of energy. Otherwise, there will be no reaction taking place between carboxylic acid
and the alcohol.Water is produced as a byproduct during the esterification process. The –OH group
removed from the carboxylic acid and the –H group removed from the alcohol, together forms a water
molecule (H-OH). By changing the alcohol or the carboxylic acid, can obtain the esters with desired
numbers of carbon atoms.The esterification reaction is an equilibrium reaction between reactants and
products. Therefore, the use of high amounts of reactants gives a high yield of ester along with water.
dehydrating agents can be used to remove the water formed.
And also, advanced methods such as distillation can also be used for the removal of water.In the
esterification mechanism, first, the removal of –OH from carboxylic acid and removal of –H (proton) from
alcohol occurs. This forms a carboxylic cation and an alcoholic nucleophile. These two components can
react with each other forming the ester. The removed groups react with each other to form water.
Answer:
Battery powered electric vehicles are electric vehicles that inclusively use the chemical
energy stored in rechargeable battery packs with no secondary source of propulsion
Because, pure EVs typically run on battery power without an internal combustion engine’s
assistance they can run much farther on a single charge than hybrid vehicles
The battery electric vehicles have zero harmful emissions and their global harmful emissions
are still lesser than those of ICEVs and HEV’s
HEVs use the combination of engine of a conventional vehicle with an electric motor
powered by traction batteries and/ or fuel cell.
They typically combine the IC engine of a conventional vehicle with the battery and electric
motor of an EV. The combination offers low emissions with the power, range and convenient
fueling of conventional vehicles. HEVs generate their own electricity on board, so they do
not have to carry the extra weight of storage batteries. A hybrid’s electric motor is energized
by a battery which provides power through a chemical reaction. A generator is driven by the
ICE which continuously recharges the battery. Hybrids can have a parallel design, series
design or a combination of both.
The local and global harmful emissions of HEVs are lesser than that of conventional IC
engine vehicles.
Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles use an electric-only motor like a BEV, but stores energy quite a
bit differently. Instead of recharging a battery, FCEVs store hydrogen gas in a tank. The fuel
cell in FCEVs combines hydrogen with oxygen from the air to produce electricity. The
electricity from the fuel cell then powers an electric motor, which powers the vehicle just like
a BEV.
They are more efficient than conventional internal combustion engine vehicles and produce
no tailpipe emissions – they only emit water vapor and warm air.
They are not being extensively used due to drawbacks such as the requirement of high-
pressure, on-board hydrogen storage for acceptable limit. Also, the transport of hydrogen is
expensive and there is no infrastructure in place yet.
2. Explain the construction and working of an EV with a neat diagram.
Answer:
The EV consists of all the parts similar to conventional automobiles, however the IC engine
power trains is replaced by motor and battery. Typical configuration of modern EVs include
energy source, electric motor propulsion and control system.
1. Motor
2. Motor Controller
3. Battery
Motor – The main function of motor is to convert supplied electric energy current in to
mechanical energy. Brushless DC motor (BLDC) have been much focused for many motor
manufacturers. These are more effective in term of System cost, size, higher in efficiency,
excellent controllability and also power saving than other motor. It has only two basic main
parts Rotor and stator. The rotor is rotating part which carry permanent magnet and stator is
stationary part and containing stator winding. The structure of stator is similar to the
induction motor. It is made up of steel lamination with axially cut for winding.
Motor Controller – In most of the electric vehicle, Brushless DC motor is used which is better
than brushed DC motor, permanent magnet DC motor. Brushless DC motor does not have
brush and commutator, the electric vehicle which uses brushless DC motor has to use motor
controller which helps to control various properties of motor to take sufficient current and
voltage applied to motor. When accelerating pedal is press, this linked variable resistor type
controller gives signal to the motor controller to adjust speed as per our needs. The motor
controller has no power when vehicle is at rest position.
Battery – The main function of battery is to store electric energy. Most Hybrid and electric
vehicle used lithium-ion batteries. This storage system is usually essential for hybrid electric
vehicle, Plug in hybrid electric vehicle and all types of electric vehicles. Due to advancing
technologies, most of automobile manufacturer uses rechargeable batteries.
Construction and working principle of electric vehicle
Basically, electric vehicle is necessary for saving fossil fuel. The figure shows the simple
construction of electric vehicle. It consists of battery, motor controller, motor which is
connected to the transmission system. Here, battery is the energy source which is charged by
taking electric current from the grid (In Solar power electric vehicle, Battery is charged with
the use of solar pv panel which is attached on the roof of the vehicle). These batteries are
rechargeable. Most electric vehicle uses lead acid battery but in new type of electric cars, use
lithium-ion batteries because it can store more energy than lead acid battery in same physical
space. The efficiency and life span of battery is far better than other type of batteries, but it is
costlier than lead acid battery. After that controller control the flow of energy from energy
source to the motor. Motor transmits the power to the wheels of the vehicle by the use of
transmission system.
3. Compare and explain the force speed characteristics curve of the ICE and EV
Answer:
Torque in its most basic form is a turning force and is calculated by force (F) multiplied by
perpendicular distance.
In case of an IC engine, as the size of the explosion within the cylinder, the downward force
on the piston also increases, thus increasing the amount of torque produced by the engine.
The torque curve then descends after its peak value due to the difficulty in forcing air into the
engine
Maximum torque occurs at a point where the fuel, air and spark coincide the largest vertical
force. As the engine, speed increases, it becomes harder for the engine to draw required air
for the combustion using vacuum of the piston after the exhaust stroke.
As current flows through the electric motor, a related electric charge causes an armature to
rotate. These rotations inside a magnetic field causes a back EMF.
The net overall force applied to the wheels is, therefore, the difference between the supply
voltage and the back EMF. The back EMF is proportional to speed. Higher the speed, smaller
the net overall force is. This explains why the torque curve begins to diminish in the
characteristic plot.
The torque line is constant at the beginning, because the speed is very least at the start and
corresponds too little to no back EMF, meaning that the supply voltage is immediately
equated to a torque output.
4. Discuss the methodology adopted for the development of the hybrid electric vehicle.
Answer:
The key components in an HEV consist of an electric motor (EM), battery, convertor, ICE,
fuel tank and control board. These components can be categorized into three groups:
1) Drivetrains – physically integrate the ICE power source and electric drive.
HEVs must be considered as non-stationary complex energy systems, involving the most
appropriate control strategy to manage the powertrain components, in order to achieve the
best performances.
Many different approaches have been proposed: static optimization methods, intelligent
control techniques (rules/fuzzy/neural network), game theory, route control strategies. The
principal approaches drawback is related to the focusing on a particular issue of the HEVs,
that is to consider the drive train devices and the control strategies independently each other.
To fix a power train profile and to optimize the control strategy parameters or vice versa
leaves open the question of whether selection of better control law or different drive train
components could result in better performances.
Two areas of significant importance in automotive engineering are improvement in fuel
economy and reduction of emissions. HEV seems the only promising technology able to
satisfy the market requests, since they match good performances in terms of both
consumption and reliability.
2.Application and calibration of the control strategy parameters and adjustment of the whole
drivetrain, and in particular of the powertrain components characteristics
According to the Conference paper “Methodology Procedure for Hybrid Electric Vehicles
Design” by Laura Tribioli, the conclusions are as follows:
The presented work only takes into account the first step of the methodology, being the
optimization of the powertrain of a preliminary vehicle with a first sizing for the whole
drivetrain, last step is instead useful to calibrate and to adjust the characteristic parameters of
the control strategy with the aim to pursue the performances benchmark, and is matter of
future works. The whole procedure intends to be iterative both in the first and second part in
order to achieve the best configuration and to choose the best control strategy. Future works
will therefore take into account a deeper focus on the state of charge management and on the
optimization of the gear ratio, or the involvement of different types of transmission system.
This first step has the aim of reducing the searching region to a reachable states’ subset, by
verifying the respect of the imposed physical constraints, with the advantage of limiting the
computational costs. This step, performed with the Dijkstra's algorithm, borrowed from
Graph Theory, is strictly dependent on the vehicle performances benchmarks, which should
be previously defined. The results obtained in the proposed practical application, being
evaluated using a non-causal strategy (without imposing, step by step, any logic for the power
distribution between the engine and the motor, being rather a result of this first step),
represent just the available optimal limit, within the constraints imposed. A further analysis
of load and sharing factors and of the energy flows in general allows identifying the best
compromise for the vehicle layout and gives a valid support in the choice of the control
strategy. In particular, deeply different layouts have been found for the performed simulations
(i.e. conventional and parallel architectures).
5. Write a short note on (i). Series Hybrid (ii). Hybrid electric vehicles.
Answer:
6. Explain the working principle, construction and working of a fuel cell with a neat
diagram.
Answer:
A fuel cell is composed of an anode, cathode, and an electrolyte membrane. A typical fuel cell
works by passing hydrogen through the anode of a fuel cell and oxygen through the cathode.
At the anode site, a catalyst splits the hydrogen molecules into electrons and protons. The
protons pass through the porous electrolyte membrane, while the electrons are forced through
a circuit, generating an electric current and excess heat. At the cathode, the protons, electrons,
and oxygen combine to produce water molecules. As there are no moving parts, fuel cells
operate silently and with extremely high reliability.
A fuel cell is a lot like a battery. It has two electrodes where the reactions take place and an electrolyte
which carries the charged particles from one electrode to the other. In order for a fuel cell to work, it
needs hydrogen (H2) and oxygen (O2). The hydrogen enters the fuel cell at the anode. A chemical
reaction strips the hydrogen molecules of their electrons and the atoms become ionized to form H+.
The electrons travel through wires to provide a current to do work. The oxygen enters at the cathode,
usually from the air. The oxygen picks up the electrons that have completed their circuit. The oxygen
then combines with the ionized hydrogen atoms (H+), and water (H2O) is formed as the waste product
which exits the fuel cell. The electrolyte plays an essential role as well. It only allows the appropriate
ions to pass between the anode and cathode. If other ions were allowed to flow between the anode
and cathode, the chemical reactions within the cell would be disrupted.
The reaction in a single fuel cell typically produces only about 0.7 volts. Therefore, fuel cells are
usually stacked or connected in some way to form a fuel cell system that can be used in cars,
generators, or other products that require power.
The reactions involved in a fuel cell are as follows:
Anode side (an oxidation reaction): 2H2 => 4H+ + 4e --
Cathode side (a reduction reaction): O2 + 4H+ +4e -- => 2H2O
Net reaction (the "redox" reaction): 2H2+O2=>2H2O
7. The development of fuel cells for EVs has taken on an accelerated pace in recent years.
Justify the statement.
Answer:
2) Constant power, unlike batteries where power density varies with the state-of-charge
3) Fast refuelling
A recent advancement in fuel-cell technologies has been the development of direct methanol
fuel cells (DMFCs). Although DMFCs have made substantial advances in recent years, they
still require significantly higher amounts of precious metal catalyst than the direct-hydrogen
PEFCs. Another issue is to mitigate the problem of methanol crossover through the
membrane.
A fuel-cell running on hydrogen looks attractive as a long-term option for passenger cars as it
eliminates emissions on the tank-to-wheel path. Hydrogen can be produced from many
sources, and has attractive efficiencies. It is noteworthy that a fuel-cell reaches its highest
efficiency at part loads and there is little advantage against the ICE at full loads. Interestingly,
passenger vehicles are mostly operated at part loads, significantly below their rated power,
such that the efficiency gain offered by fuel cells could be maximum. It is noteworthy that at
low-power output even the fuel-cell system (FCS) efficiency drops as many of the balance of
plant units needed to be operated even at idle power. Accordingly, the system has to be
optimized for low-power consumption to capitalize on the part load efficiency advantage of
the fuel-cell. Performance at high-power density and efficiency in terms of high cell voltage
has been the mainstay of fuel-cell development. In recent years, these are complemented by
other factors, namely lower cost at high volume production with increased reliability and
durability. The targets are derived from competing conventional automotive propulsion
systems, which are designed for 5500 h of operational lifetime at a cost of U.S. $50/kW,
including fuel storage.
No fuel-cell is yet ready for commercialization. In 2007, the total number of light-duty FCVs
deployed worldwide was approximately 800, with an additional 3000 niche vehicles for
powering forklifts, motorcycles, and marine craft (Adamson, Butler, and Hugh 2008).
Schafer et al. predict that a market competitive, light-duty FCV would be available in
approximately 15 years but a major fleet penetration could take more than 50 years (Schafer,
Heywood, and Weiss 2006). During 2008, Daimler, Ford, GM, Honda, Hyundai, and Toyota
had announced plans to commercialize FCVs anywhere between 2012 and 2025 (Martin
2002). To get to this stage, however, breakthroughs in materials and fabrication methods will
be necessary.
The FCVs will get to the mass market only if they can be produced at an affordable cost of
about U.S. $50/kW. Projections suggest this to be a reasonable target, if FCVs are produced
in high volumes. The best cost projection can be made for components where the
construction materials are well established with proven manufacturing technologies.
Components like air compressors and hydrogen recycling pumps, based on traditional
manufacturing processes, need to be produced with existing equipment for the cost to become
comparable with the automotive target. For new technology elements where there is no
established production process, both production volume and manufacturing processes remain
uncertain. For materials, for example, polymer electrolyte membranes that are used in small
quantities, large production would be required.
As electric components have replaced many mechanical parts of the vehicle, hybridization
combined with regenerative braking will bring increased electrification of power trains. As
many elements of the drivetrain and the refuelling infrastructure are new, there are still major
improvements needed for the FCVs to become competitive with ICEVs. Today, cost, range,
and refuelling parameters for FCVs are inferior to gasoline power trains. However, these
figures are better than advanced BEVs, and projections show that FCVs can become cost
competitive to ICEVs. Until FCVs become competitive in cost and convenience to ICEVs
and until significant advancement is made in hydrogen production and storage, FCVs will
remain a niche technology (Edwards et al. 2008). To meet the challenges of lowering system
costs, R&D programs on fuel cells for automotive applications are desired to develop
components with low-cost materials, advanced manufacturing processes, and higher
operating efficiency. Ultimately, the major driver for FCVs would be their inherently high
efficiency on a well-to-wheel basis, especially when renewable energy sources will become
feasible for hydrogen production.
Both technologies (fuel cells and EVs) offer a cleaner alternative to internal combustion
engines, and both use electric motors powered by electrochemical devices. For one, electric
vehicles use energy stored in a battery, whereas fuel cell vehicles have stored fuel that reacts
to produce energy.
In recent decades, the application of fuel cells in vehicles has been the focus of increased
attention. In contrast to a chemical battery, the fuel cell generates electric energy rather than
storing it and continues to do so as long as a fuel supply is maintained.
Compared with the battery-powered electric vehicles (EVs), the fuel cell-powered vehicle has
the advantages of a longer driving range without a long battery charging time.
FCEVs share many of the same components as EVs, such as electric motors and power
controllers or inverters; however, the major difference is the main energy source. While EVs
use energy stored in the battery, FCEVs use fuel cells as they are superior to batteries in many
ways.
The major advantages are that fuel cells are lighter and smaller and can produce electricity as
long as the fuel is supplied.
while the EV is suitable for short range and small vehicles, the FCEV is suitable for medium–
large and long-range vehicles.
The by-product of a hydrogen fuel cell is water. Fuel cells have no moving parts or irregular
shapes, so they have the potential for high reliability and low manufacturing cost.
The fuel cell is clean, and is a device with a high efficiency rate of converting energy. To
endeavour to use it as a source of power, and utilize it in a Fuel Cell Vehicle (FCV), is an
advancement in technology.
8. With a neat sketch discuss the various fuel cell hybrid electric vehicle configurations.
Answer:
Fuel cell vehicles are electric vehicles powered by batteries and fuel cell. There are different
configurations for fuel cell hybrid electric vehicles (FCHEVs). In particular the configuration
depends on the desired hybridization level and on the fuel cell and batteries rules.
In conventional electric vehicles batteries provide power to the electric motor, in the
FCHEVs batteries and fuel cell are connected in a parallel system and together provide
power.
Figure shows a fuel cell stack connected with a DC/DC converter needed to provide a
regulated voltage at the output. Battery pack is connected with auxiliary devices and with fuel
cell. The DC/AC inverter converts the direct current (DC) in alternate current (AC) in order
Batter y
Regeneration,
Recharge Bat when needed
Assist fuel cell when needed Power
Auxiliary vehicle at
Devices high battery SOC
Fuel DC/DC
Inverter Motor
Cell Stack Converter
Cycle requirement
to fed electric motor. The motor is able to recover part of energy that would normally be lost
due to braking (regenerative braking). This recovered energy is used to recharge batteries.
The sizes of batteries and fuel cell define the hybridization level and the configuration.
A conventional electric vehicle (full battery) presents intrinsic limits like the range (that is
function of batteries capacity) and recharge time (about 6-8 hours), that can reduce their use.
FCHEVs allow to increase the range, in terms of working hours or distance, because it is a
function of the on board stored hydrogen and the hydrogen refuelling time isn’t comparable
to the batteries recharging time.
In the first configuration, called "total fuel cell" or "full power fuel cell", the electric drive
motor is totally fed by fuel cell and a small battery can be installed just for the vehicle start
up or for peak power. In this case the fuel cell power is close the electric motor power. A
similar architecture, having a big size of fuel cell, means a great quantity of stored hydrogen
(also depending on the required range) and high costs.
Another configuration consists of an architecture in which the fuel cell is used as APU
(auxiliary power unit) and provides the electrical power required by the auxiliary devices. In
this case the fuel cell size is very small and its function is essentially addressed to cover small
loads like air conditioning, electric windows, lights, etc.
Finally, the "range extender" configuration is characterized by a small size fuel cell used like
on board batteries recharge. This solution, depending on the on-board stored hydrogen,
allows to increase the range of traditional electric vehicles. Using this configuration, it is
possible to define a specific batteries recharge strategy; in particular the batteries can be
recharged when the electric motor doesn't require load, i.e., during the stops and at the
terminus. In some case the fuel cell can contribute to the electric traction providing energy
when the vehicle runs also. In this way the fuel cell works in optimal operation conditions at
a fixed power, avoiding the load following operation that could cause thermal and mechanical
stress of materials. Moreover, the lower fuel cell power means a reduction in terms of stack
size then a less cost of it as well as hydrogen storage amount.