Abstract

Recent advancements in metabolic engineering have demonstrated the cost-effective production of isopropanol-butanol-ethanol (IBE) from switchgrass biomass. As such, IBE is seen as a viable future fuel to transition the transportation sector towards renewable biofuels. In this study, an atmospheric co-flow diffusion flame burner was used to examine the sooting tendency of IBE when mixed with a diesel surrogate for blend ratios varying from 0% to 100% by volume. Experimental measurements of soot volume fraction were obtained by implementing a color-ratio pyrometry technique and reporting the variation of sooting tendency in terms of the Yield Sooting Index (YSI). Measurements demonstrated soot formation and hence YSI decreased nonlinearly with increasing IBE content. To gain further insight into the kinetics affecting soot formation, numerical modeling studies were carried out using laminarSMOKE++ and a comprehensive kinetic mechanism with soot chemistry. From a reaction path and rate of production analysis, IBE demonstrated that it can perturb OH and HO2 radical pools and enhance CO and CO2 reactive channels from IBE oxygenated intermediates to suppress the formation of soot precursors. Studies were also extended to examine the role of CO2 dilution on soot formation. It was shown that further soot reduction can be attained by lowering the rate of overall soot formation kinetics, perturbing reaction intermediates leading to soot formation by the depletion of H-atom radical pool, while enhancing the oxidation through enhanced OH-radical production.

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