Influence of Moringa oleifera biodiesel–diesel–hexanol and biodiesel–diesel–ethanol blends on compression ignition engine performance, combustion and emission characteristics

In the current work, the influences of Moringa oleifera biodiesel–diesel–hexanol and Moringa oleifera biodiesel–diesel–ethanol blends on compression ignition engine characteristics were experimentally investigated. Experiments were conducted on a diesel engine at 0%, 25%, 50%, 75% and 100% load conditions run at a constant speed of 1500 rpm. The results revealed that B90-D5-H5 acquired the lowest BSFC and maximum BTE of 0.375 kg kW−1 h−1 and 28.8%, respectively, and B100 had the highest BSFC of 0.425 kg kW−1 h−1. B90-D5-H5 had the highest cylinder peak pressure of 74 bar at 4°CA aTDC. The maximum heat release rate (HRR) and longer ignition delay (ID) period of 44 J per °CA and 14.4°CA, respectively, were attained in the B90-D5-H5 blend. At 100% load condition, the lowest amount of carbon monoxide (CO) of 0.32% vol. was acquired in the B80-D5-E15 blend. The maximum nitric oxide (NO) emission of 1090 ppm was also acquired in the B80-D5-E15 blend. B100 had the lowest NO of 846 ppm; B80-D5-E15 had the lowest unburned hydrocarbon (UBHC) emission of 34 ppm at 100% load and the lowest smoke opacity of 34%. Biodiesel–diesel–alcohol blends improve engine performance and decrease emissions compared to the conventional diesel. The utilization of biodiesel–diesel–alcohol blends reduces the consumption of diesel. Hence, ethanol and hexanol are recommended as potential alternative additives in biodiesel–diesel blends to improve engine performance and reduce emissions.


Introduction
Compression ignition engines play a vital role in the transportation, agricultural and power sectors, but these engines emit harmful emissions like carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), and oxides of nitrogen (NO x ) when fueled by the conventional diesel. These emissions are the real contributors to global warming and environmental pollution and degradation. 1 Moreover, increases in the cost of and demand for petroleum diesel related to the production and consumption of fossil fuels associated with the diminution of fossil fuel resources have led to the search for new alternative sources of renewable energy for diesel engines. 2 Biodiesel is attaining a huge reputation as an environmentally friendly fuel and is one of the most predominant substitutes for conventional petroleum-diesel. Biodiesel is a long-chain fatty acid obtained from non-edible and edible sources, such as palm oil, sunower oil, rapeseed oil, soybean oil, coconut oil, and groundnut oil as well as non-edible neem, rubber, jatropha, cotton, jojoba, castor, mahua, animal fats, waste frying oil, and micro-algae. 3 In addition, the physico-chemical properties of methyl ester are almost similar to those of the conventional diesel.
The transesterication process is a general convenient and low-cost process to convert triglycerides into methyl ester, as noted by Mohammed Salaheldeen et al. 4 and Hassan et al. 5 In general, two types of catalysts are used, i.e., homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysts. A heterogeneous catalyst is a minimal effect concentration catalyst as it reacts only on the uncovered dynamic surface. A homogeneous catalyst mixes into the reaction blend and allows an extreme interface with the catalyst and reactant molecules. Various homogeneous catalysts have been used in biodiesel production, such as NaOH, CH 3 ONa, KOH, and CH 3 OK as well as acid catalysts such as H 2 SO 4 , HCL, and HNO 3 , as observed by Elsanusi et al., 2 Mohammed Salaheldeen et al. 4 and Tan et al. 6 Although biodiesel has many advantages, it also has some disadvantages, such as its higher density and viscosity resulting in some problems during injection when used for a long period. Also, NO x emission is another major problem when using biodiesel in diesel engines. Aer-treatment methods and recent technologies are used in reduction of NO x emissions, but are limited in the commercial sector. Therefore, additional fuels are required to blend with biodiesel to improve the overall engine characteristics. Incidentally, alcohol has been tried as a supplementary fuel, as it supplies more oxygen and raises the heat of evaporation of the fuel, thus decreasing NO x and particulate matter (PM) emissions. Several researchers have used two alcohols, like ethanol and methanol, in biodiesel syntheses. Ethanol can be derived from renewable resources and is mainly used in biodiesel production due to its lower cost and toxicity compared with other alcohols, as noted by Li D.-G. 7 N. Yilmaz et al. (2012) 8 used different additives like alcohols, metal additives, cetane improvers, and cold ow improvers to improve the fuel quality and combustion rate and decrease exhaust emissions.
Li et al. 7 examined the effect of ethanol-diesel fuel blends on the performance and emission characteristics of a singlecylinder water-cooled direct injection diesel engine. The fuel blends were D95-E5 (95% diesel, 5% ethanol), D90-E10, D85-E15 and D80-E20. The results revealed that BSFC increased when ethanol percentage was increased because of its lower heating value. BTE improved when ethanol percentage was increased due to its lower boiling point compared with conventional diesel, as noticed by Abdullah et al. 9 Huang et al. 11 studied the inuence of diesel-ethanol fuel blends on diesel combustion and emission characteristics. The experiment results exhibited lower CO and NO emissions for ethanol-diesel fuel blends compared to conventional diesel, but UBHC emission increased for biodiesel-ethanol fuel blends compared with neat diesel. Q. Fang et al. (2013) 10 investigated the impact of ethanol-biodiesel-diesel fuel blends on four-cylinder diesel engine characteristics. The results showed that UBHC and CO emissions were raised, whereas NO x emission decreased. The experimental results concluded that biodiesel with 20% ethanol decreased NO x and smoke emissions. Hwanam et al. 12 noticed that the addition of ethanol considerably enhances the combustion process, but its drawbacks are lower caloric value, cetane number, and ash and re points, phase separation at lower temperatures and poor miscibility with conventional diesel. So, replacing conventional diesel with a perfect blend suitable for utilization in diesel engines is a difficult task.
Yao et al. 13 noticed the disadvantages of lower alcohols, such as poor miscibility and blending solubility with diesel and phase separation at lower temperatures. Likewise, Moreau et al. 14 observed that higher alcohols can be used as a resource due to their important thermodynamic and physical properties. Sivalakshmi et al. 15 concluded that the higher alcohols with more carbon have a high cetane number and better miscibility with conventional diesel. Yesilyurt et al. 19 investigated diesel engine characteristics fueled with biodiesel-diesel-1-butanol and biodiesel-diesel-n-pentanol blends at different loads and speeds. The studies reported that increases in alcohol percentage increased the BSFC and reduced the BTE. Alcohol blends obtained lower EGT, CO 2 and NO emissions. 1-Butanol and n-pentanol can be used as alternative additives in biodiesel-diesel blends to improve performance and reduce emissions. Yesilyurt et al. 19 also studied the effect of injection pressure on diesel engine characteristics fuelled with waste frying oil biodiesel and diesel blends. The CO, UBHC, smoke, torque and brake power reduction in biodiesel blends were comparable to conventional diesel, whereas the EGT, NO and CO 2 increased for biodiesel. Nour et al. 20 carried out research on a diesel engine fuelled with biodiesel-higher alcohol blends. The study reported that biodiesel-higher alcohol blends had high stability with no phase separation. NO and smoke emissions were reduced, but CO and UBHC emissions increased for biodiesel-higher alcohol blends. Ashok et al. 21 investigated the effect of biodiesel-n-pentanol blends on diesel engine characteristics. Addition of n-pentanol to biodiesel improved thermal efficiency and reduced UBHC and CO emission by about 15-43% and 33-50%, respectively, compared to pure biodiesel. Addition of n-pentanol above 40% had a negative effect on diesel engine performance characteristics.
The above literature studies noted the signicance of diesel engine emission reduction to protect the environment. Also, concerns about environmental pollution, global warming, ozone depletion, depletion of fossil fuel sources and stringent emissions standards have provoked research curiosity to search for new alternatives for diesel engines. In this present work, biodiesel was synthesized from Moringa oleifera oil. Huge amounts of unpicked Moringa oleifera seeds are available in the trees even aer harvesting. Therefore, collected waste seeds can be used as a potential feedstock for biodiesel production due to their availability and low cost. Without diesel engine modication, fueling with pure biodiesel creates more emissions due to its inferior properties, like higher viscosity and density, which affect atomization and evaporation, resulting in lower brake thermal efficiency. Higher alcohols blended with biodiesel and diesel have improved the fuel properties and enhanced combustion efficiency through proper combustion, as seen in the literature. However, minimal research work has been carried out to investigate the diesel engine performance and combustion characteristics when fueled with Moringa biodiesel-diesel-ethanol and Moringa biodiesel-diesel-hexanol blends without engine modication. The addition of a lower alcohol to biodiesel reduces the viscosity and density, cetane number, and caloric value and causes poor stability and phase separation at lower temperatures. The higher alcohol was able to overcome the drawbacks of lower alcohols with a higher cetane number and heating value, better miscibility with diesel, and stability and no phase separation at higher temperature. Hence, in the current study, an attempt has been made to evaluate the effects of biodiesel-diesel-ethanol and biodieseldiesel-hexanol blends on diesel engine performance and combustion characteristics.

Synthesis of biodiesel characterization
The biodiesel experiment was carried out using the design matrix given in Table 1. Initially, 100 g of raw oil was transferred into a glass round bottom ask and heated using an electrical heater. The methanol and sodium methoxide are preliminarily mixed by magnetic stirrer. The mixture was poured into a threenecked ask and stirred at certain reaction conditions. Aer the reaction, the solution was shied into a conical separating funnel for separation. The separated biodiesel was washed with heated distilled water and heated to 100 C to remove excess methanol, moisture content, non-reacted catalyst and glycerol. The excess methanol affects the biodiesel properties. Among all the trials, the highest yield of 96.71% was acquired with the following reaction conditions: molar ratio 6 : 1, reaction temperature 55 C, catalyst 1.8 wt%, reaction time 120 min and stirrer speed 600 rpm. The physicochemical properties of raw oil, biodiesel and diesel are depicted in Table 2.  presence of methyl ester. Methyl ester conversion rate or percentage will also be measured through 1 H NMR analysis. In contrast, the above peaks at 3.6 d ppm and 2.3 d ppm were not identied for either diesel or raw Moringa oleifera oil. Fig. 2 shows the GC-MS chromatogram (PerkinElmer Clarus 500; soware: TurboMass ver. 5.2.0) of the biodiesel used to conrm the composition of oil and ester. In the GC-MS chromatogram, a capillary column (Elite-5MS; 95% dimethyl polysiloxane, 5% phenyl) was used. The length of the column is 30 m with an inner diameter of 250 mm. The initial temperature was 60 C; it was increased to 150 C and 280 C with ow rates of 6 m 3 s À1 and 4 m 3 s À1 and holding times of 2 and 5 min, respectively. The  Paper RSC Advances injector temperature was 280 C and helium was used as the carrier gas at a ow rate of 1 ml min À1 with a split ratio of 1 : 10. Mass spectrometer conditions were as follows: mass range of 40-600 amu and electron ionization with 70 eV of electron energy. The overall running time was around 55 min. The CG/ MS test conrmed the proportion of unsaturated and saturated fatty acid components, as seen in Table 1. Increased presence of saturated fatty acids improved biodiesel properties such as cetane number, pour point, density, ash point, and oxidation stability.

Experimental setup and methodology
The experiment was carried out on a single-cylinder air-cooled diesel engine with rated power of 4.4 kW. The standard injection pressure and injection time were 210 bar and 23 TDC, respectively. A standard burette, orice meter, and K type thermocouples were engaged to measure the fuel ow rate, airow rate, and different temperatures, respectively. For loading, an electrical dynamometer was used. It comprises a DC generator and a load bank. The electrical load was varied from 0 to 16 amps. The engine emissions, like UBHC, CO, NO, O 2 and CO 2 , were determined using a HORIBA MEXA-584L gas analyzer. The analyzer specications are shown in Table 3. The smoke emission was measured by an AVL smoke meter. The engine in-cylinder pressure was measured by a Kistler 7613C quartz transducer with a pressure range of 0 to 250 bar. The signals were received by a data acquisition system (PCIMIO 16-1 DAQ, National Instrument) and recorded as individual crank angle data from the crank angle encoder (Autonics rotary incremental ES50S8-360-3-T-1). The crank angle encoder specications are depicted in Table 4. The analog signal was converted to digital through an analog-to-digital converter (ADC). The encoder gives one pulse for each degree to get 360 pulses for each revolution for crank angle mapping. The LabView soware was programmed by National Instrument (NI) for real-time data analysis and recorded in-cylinder pressure data parallel to crank angles. The engine characteristics were recorded at 0%, 25%, 50%, 75% and 100% load conditions for biodiesel-diesel blends. The engine and dynamometer specications are shown in Table 5. The schematic depiction of the test engine is illustrated in Fig. 3. The experiments were carried out three times for repeatability and average values were used for the calculations.

Uncertainty analysis for diesel engine performance parameters
Uncertainty analysis is essential to check the accuracy of experiments. The accuracies of fuel measurement, speed, time, and brake power tests were AE1.1%, AE10 rpm, AE0.15 s and AE0.042 kW, respectively. The uncertainties of BSFC, BP, TFC, BSEC, and BTE were calculated by the root-sum-square measurement method. 18 The specied engine performance for total and percentage uncertainties limits is given in Table 6.

Performance characteristics
Engine performance is a signicant factor for calculating fuel economy; it is represented by BTE and BSFC. Fig. 4 represents brake specic fuel consumption (BSFC) relative to BP for biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends. It is noted that the B90-D5-H5 blend acquired the lowest BSFC of 0.375 kg kW À1 h À1 , which is 5% greater than conventional diesel, 12% less than the B100 and 10% less than the B80-D5-E15. B100 has the maximum BSFC compared with biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends and conventional diesel. This is because of its inferior fuel  properties, such as high viscosity and lower caloric value, compared with biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends. High viscosity causes poor atomization and vaporization of fuel, causing partial combustion resulting in higher BSFC and lower BTE. Further, biodiesel-diesel-hexanol blends have better performances compared with biodiesel-diesel-ethanol blends. This is due to their enhanced fuel properties, like high heating value and high cetane number. Also, the diesel engine consumed more biodiesel fuel to obtain similar engine power output to diesel due to poor combustion efficiency. A similar trend was observed by Babu and Anand. 16 Fig. 5 illustrates the difference of brake specic energy consumption (BSEC) versus BP for various biodiesel-dieselalcohol blends, such as diesel, B100, B90-D5-H5, B90-D5-E5, D85-D5-H10, B85-D5-E10, B80-D5-H15 and B80-D5-E15. The lowest BSEC of 12.89 MJ kW À1 h À1 was acquired from B90-D5-H5, which is 2% less than biodiesel and 2% greater than conventional diesel. This is due to the biodiesel-diesel-hexanol blend having higher heating value with proper fuel-air mixture caused by complete combustion resulting in lower BSEC with higher power output. The B80-D5-E15 blend obtained a maximum BSEC of 13.56 MJ kW À1 h À1 at 100% load, which is 4% better than neat diesel. A similar trend was noticed by El-Seesy et al. 17 Neat diesel has the lowest BSEC compared with biodiesel-diesel-alcohol fuel blends owing to its higher calo-ric value with lower viscosity, which leads to better combustion. Fig. 6 illustrates the variation of brake thermal efficiency (BTE) with BP for biodiesel-diesel-alcohol fuel blends. Fig. 6 reveals that BTE rose with a rise in engine load and decreased with increasing percentage of biodiesel-alcohol blends in neat diesel. This is due to the addition of more alcohol or more percentage of biodiesel content into diesel reducing the calo-ric value of the blends and causing more consumption of fuel with minimum BTE compared to neat diesel. Also notice that BTE increased with an increase in engine load from zero to full load, due to more fuel burning in the combustion releasing more heat, resulting in in-cylinder pressure with raised temperature. The B90-D5-H5 fuel blend acquired the highest BTE of 28.8%, which is 2.2% less than neat diesel, 4.2% greater than the B80-D5-E15 and 4.4% greater than pure biodiesel. At all operating conditions, B100 has the least BTE compared with other blends due to its higher density and viscosity, which damaged the fuel spray characteristics of the tested fuels, resulting in partial combustion and lower brake thermal efficiency. Fig. 7 depicts the variation of in-cylinder peak pressure (CPP) against crank angle for different biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends. From Fig. 7, it can be seen that CPP rises with a rise in engine load for biodiesel-diesel-alcohol fuel blends. However, Fig. 4 Variation of BSFC with brake power for diesel-biodieselalcohol blends.  CPP decreased with the increases in biodiesel percentage in diesel blends. This is because adding more alcohol to biodieseldiesel blends suppressed the in-cylinder pressure and temperature caused by the cooling effect, resulting in lower CPP. Moreover, at minimum load, the CPP was minimized due to lower in-cylinder pressure with temperature, which reduced the evaporation rate of the fuels and resulted in partial combustion and lower CPP. Furthermore, pure biodiesel achieved minimum CPP compared to other tested fuels due to its poor volatility and higher viscosity reducing the evaporation rate, resulting in a minimum amount of fuel burned in the premixed combustion compared to diesel and biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends, which leads to lower CPP. The B90-D5-H5 obtained the maximum CPP of 74 bar, 2 bar less than neat diesel, 4 bar greater than B80-D5-E15 and 9 bar higher than pure biodiesel. At all operating conditions, biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends showed lower CPP compared with diesel. This is due to the addition of more biodiesel-alcohol to neat biodiesel reducing the heating value of the blends; also, increases in alcohol percentage increased the specic heat of the blends, resulting in more heat absorbed during evaporation, which suppressed the in-cylinder temperature and pressure. The B80-D5-H15 and B80-D5-E15 blends showed minimum CPP compared with diesel.

Combustion characteristics
Variation of heat release rate (HRR) against crank angle for different biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends at full load condition is also illustrated in Fig. 7. The HRR is mainly affected by fuel properties like caloric value, burning velocity, in-cylinder temperature and pressure, volatility of fuel, latent heat of evaporation, and fuel injection pressure and timing. Additionally, it is inuenced by the amount of fuel burned in the premixed zone rather than controlled combustion and late combustion. B90-D5-H5 has the highest HRR of 44 MJ per CA compared to other tested fuels, which is 8 MJ per CA lower than conventional diesel, 9 MJ per CA higher than pure biodiesel and 7 MJ per CA higher than the B80-D5-E15 blend. B90-D5-H5 has maximum HRR because of its greater heating value with higher cetane number. The higher cetane number improves the evaporation rate of the tested fuels and results in higher HRR. The presence of excess oxygen and a proper fuel-air mixture cause complete combustion and result in higher HRR for biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends. Biodiesel-diesel-ethanol blends have lower HRR compared with biodiesel-diesel-hexanol blends because of their lower heating value, which reduces the HRR. Addition of more alcohol in biodiesel-diesel blends reduced the HRR of biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends by increasing the specic heat of the testing fuel, which leads to more heat absorbed during evaporation and results in reduced in-cylinder temperature and pressure.
The physicochemical properties seriously inuenced the ignition delay period of the testing fuels, especially viscosity, density, lower cetane number and lower in-cylinder properties. The delay period occurred between SOI and SOC. The variation of ID period versus BP for biodiesel-diesel-alcohol fuel blends is depicted in Fig. 8. From Fig. 8, it can be seen that at minimum load, the delay period was higher for all tested fuels, whereas when raising the engine load from 0% to 100%, the ID period decreased for all fuels. This is because rises in in-cylinder pressure and temperature, which enhanced the vaporization rate of testing fuels, resulted in a shorter delay period. The conventional diesel, B90-D5-H5, B90-D5-E5, B80-D5-H15, B80-D5-E15, and biodiesel have ID periods of 14.2 CA, 14.45 CA, 14.21 CA, 13.7 CA, 13.5 CA, and 13.2 CA, respectively. Biodiesel-diesel-alcohol fuel blends have the lowest ID periods because of their high cetane numbers, which reduce the ID period with a better evaporation rate.

Diesel engine emission characteristics
Variation of CO emission versus BP for biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends is depicted in Fig. 9, revealing that the CO rose with a rise in engine load from no load to 100% load for all fuels. At no load, CO emission was slightly higher because of lower in- Fig. 7 Variation of CPP and HRR with crank angle for diesel-biodiesel-alcohol blends. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020 RSC Adv., 2020, 10, 4274-4285 | 4281 cylinder pressure and temperature, which decreased the evaporation rate of the fuels and resulted in incomplete combustion with more CO formation. However, at full load, CO emission was maximum due to a deciency of oxygen, lower ignition delay period, and the higher quantity of fuels causing incomplete combustion with higher CO emission formation. B80-D5-E15 has a minimum CO emission of 0.32% vol., which is 0.25% vol. less than conventional diesel, 0.02% vol. lower than pure biodiesel and 0.20% vol. lower than the B90-D5-H5. The CO is lower for biodiesel-diesel-ethanol blends compared with biodiesel-diesel-hexanol and conventional diesel. This is because ethanol has lower viscosity and lower latent heat of evaporation compared to biodiesel-diesel-hexanol fuel blends. Also, lower viscosity enhanced the atomization process and evaporation rate, resulting in incomplete combustion. Further, the molecular structure of biodiesel and oxygen content in alcohol fuel causes complete combustion. Fig. 10 illustrates the variation of carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) against BP for different biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends. Fig. 10 reveals that CO 2 rose with a rise in engine load for all biodieseldiesel blends due to the occurrence of oxygen enclosure in alcohol fuel blends and higher in-cylinder temperature and pressure enhancing the combustion process. The CO 2 emission is higher for biodiesel-diesel-ethanol blends compared with biodiesel-diesel-hexanol blends and conventional diesel. This is because of the lower viscosity and presence of oxygen, which enhanced the vaporization rate of the tested fuels, resulting in incomplete combustion with higher carbon dioxide emission formation. B80-D5-E15 has a maximum CO 2 emission of 10.5% vol., which is 2.4% vol. greater than diesel, similar to pure biodiesel and 1.2% vol. higher than the B80-D5-E15. Higher alcohol blends have lower carbon dioxide emission because higher latent heat and higher viscosity reduce the evaporation rate by absorbing more heat during evaporation, resulting in reduced in-cylinder temperature and pressure that leads to partial combustion and lower CO 2 emission formation.
The comparison of unburned hydrocarbon (UBHC) emission against brake power for biodiesel-alcohol blends is shown in Fig. 11. The UBHC is evidence of the quality of combustion. From Fig. 11, it was found that UBHC emissions rose with a rise in engine load. However, UBHC emission decreased for biodiesel-alcohol fuel blends compared with neat diesel. At all operating conditions, all tested fuel blends also showed lower UBHC emission compared with neat diesel. This is because excess oxygen content in the biodiesel blends improved the combustion process providing by proper atomization and evaporation. At 100% load, UBHC values of 51 ppm, 42 ppm, 36 ppm, 34 ppm, and 44 ppm were attained for conventional diesel, B90D5H5, B80-D5-H15, B80-D5-E15, and pure biodiesel, respectively. B80-D5-E15 has the minimum UBHC emission of 34 ppm, which is 33% lower than conventional diesel, 19% lower than B90-D5-H5 and 5.5% lower than B80-D5-H15. The presence of oxygen, a longer ID period, lower viscosity, and   improved fuel-air mixture lead to proper combustion, resulting in lower UBHC emission for the biodiesel-alcohol fuel blends. Fig. 12 illustrates the variation of nitric oxide (NO) emission with BP for various biodiesel-alcohol fuel blends. The NO emission formation is mostly due to the presence of oxygen, occupancy time, and in-cylinder pressure and temperature. Also, NO formation mainly depends on the fuel amount burned at the premixed combustion zone compared to controlled and late combustion. Fig. 12 reveals that NO emission rose with a rise in engine load. However, the NO emission decreased when adding additional biodiesel in biodiesel-alcohol fuel blends. At all running conditions, biodiesel-diesel-hexanol blends showed lower NO emission compared with biodieselethanol fuel blends. This is because adding extra hexanol in biodiesel-alcohol fuel blends raises the viscosity of the blends and increases their specic and latent heats, lowering the in-cylinder temperature and pressure which cause lower HRR with minimum NO emission formation. From Fig. 13, it was found that NO emissions of 1153 ppm, 890 ppm, 1050 ppm, 1090 ppm, and 846 ppm were attained in conventional diesel, B90-D5-H5, B80-D5-H15, B80-D5-E15, and pure biodiesel, respectively, at 100% load condition. Biodiesel has the minimum NO emission of 846 ppm, which is 26% less than conventional diesel, 5% less than B90-D5-H5, 19% less than B80-D5-H15, and 22% less than B80-D5-E15. Fig. 13 illustrates the differences in smoke emissions against BP for biodiesel-diesel-alcohol blends. Smoke formation is mainly due to a rich air-fuel mixture, deciency of oxygen, and lower cylinder temperature and pressure, burning velocity and latent heat of vaporization. Fig. 13 shows the smoke emission was reduced for biodiesel-alcohol fuel blends compared with conventional diesel, because oxygen availability and proper airfuel mixture cause complete combustion resulting in lower smoke emission formation. B80-D5-E15 has the minimum smoke emission of 34%, which is 33% lower than pure biodiesel and 33% lower than B90-D5-H5. Biodiesel-diesel-ethanol blends have lower smoke emission compared with biodiesel-hexanol fuel blends. This is because of their lesser viscosity, lower latent heat of evaporation and faster combustion. At 100% load condition, the smoke opacity was higher for the tested fuels due to lower cylinder temperature and pressure and a higher quantity of fuels with a minimum ID period leading to incomplete combustion with maximum smoke opacity. Also, a rich fuel-air mixture is the reason for higher smoke at maximum load.

Conclusion
The inuences of biodiesel-diesel-hexanol and biodieseldiesel-ethanol blends on diesel engine performance, combustion and emission characteristics were experimentally examined. Also, this study examines biodiesel production from Moringa oleifera oil using sodium methoxide catalyst through a transesterication process. The main conclusions drawn from the research work are summarized below.
The maximum biodiesel yield of 96.71% was obtained at the following reaction conditions: a molar ratio of 6 : 1, reaction temperature of 55 C, catalyst of 1.8 wt%, reaction time of 120 min and a stirrer speed of 600 rpm.
The maximum BTE of 28.8% was obtained in the B90-D5-H5 blend, which is 2.2% lower than conventional diesel, 4.2% higher than B80-D5-E15 and 4.4% higher than pure biodiesel. The higher viscosity of pure biodiesel reduced the evaporation rate and the lower heating value leads to lower BTE for pure biodiesel. The addition of 5% diesel in biodiesel blends improved the fuel properties.
The higher and lower alcohols can be used as additives in biodiesel-diesel fuel. The engine was able to run up to 5% to 15% alcohol without any problem. From this research work, it is concluded that biodiesel-diesel and biodiesel-diesel-higher alcohol blends will be prominent alternative fuels for diesel engines.

Conflicts of interest
There are no conicts to declare.