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Development of a CNG-Diesel Dual Fuel Tractor with Mechanical Fuel Injection System Tafe Motors and Tractors, Limited

SAE Technical Papers (1906-current) Available online

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Format:
Book
Conference/Event
Author/Creator:
Choudhary, Vasu, author.
Contributor:
Sanjeev Kumar
Mukherjee, Nalini
Nene, Devendra
Tripathi, Ayush
Conference Name:
Symposium on International Automotive Technology (2026) (2026-01-28 : Pune, India)
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 online resource cm
Place of Publication:
Warrendale, PA SAE International 2026
Summary:
Identification of renewable and sustainable energy solutions remains a key focus area for the engine designers of the modern world. An avenue of research and development is being vastly dedicated to propelling engines using alternate fuels. The chemistry of these alternate fuels is in general much simpler than fossil fuels, like diesel and gasoline. One such promising and easily available alternate fuel is compressed natural gas (CNG). In this work, a 3-cylinder, 3-liter naturally aspirated air-cooled diesel engine from the off-highway tractor application is converted into a CNG Diesel Dual fuel (CNG-DDF) engine. Part throttle performance test shows the higher NMHC and CO emissions in CNG-DDF mode which have been controlled by an oxidation catalyst in C1 8-mode emission test. A comparative performance shows that the thermal efficiency is up to 2% lower with CNG-DDF with respect to diesel. However, it has shown the benefit of 44% in Particulate Matter, while retaining the same NOx + NMHC levels as the baseline diesel engine. The cycle average CO emission has been found to increase by 6%. Average exhaust gas temperature has been found to be lower by up-to 54°C with CNG-DDF. To control the particulate and HC levels of the baseline NA engine, the CNG injection has been confined from 20% to 85% engine loads, across all engine speeds. The peak firing pressure and in-cylinder temperature are lower by ~3% and ~7%, and the SoC got retarded by max 4°CA with CNG-DDF which is in-agreement with drop in thermal efficiency. The outcome from the engine dyno level testing has been successfully validated through the tractor testing
Notes:
Vendor supplied data
Publisher Number:
2026-26-0114
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license

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