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Marine gas engine marine gas engines application speaking of 6th Marpol Annex

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EN
Abstrakty
EN
The International Maritime Organization set up a global strategy for reducing emission of sulphur from marine fuels, from 4.5% to 0.5% by the end of the year 2020. In order to such strategy, ship-owners need to fulfil increasing demands according to reduce pollution. New regulations, force ship-owners to reduce production of pollution, but as the devices create to remove some part of pollution are very expensive in use, began to search for cheaper and more effective solutions. The main aim of this article is to present superiority of using gas fuel over liquid fuel on ships. The construction of marine engines, run by a gas fuel is in the scope of interest of scientist’s research during the last couple of years. This branch of technology develops very dynamic recently, according to savings that can be reach while using gas engines on ships. Apart of cost reduction, new types of marine engines are able to cope with more and more restrictive regulations that are published in international convention MARPOL. Such restriction became the reason for the biggest, international corporations, specialists in engines production, to carry on long-term researches on new ways to power ship engines. One of the world’s greatest engine producer is British Rolls-Royce that became pioneer and built the first gas engine. New power unit, Bergen B-gas B35:40V is the one of the most modern type of such engine in the world. The solid construction of this engine was based on engine B32. It became very efficiently because of many rationalizations in maintenance and exploitation. Two main priorities, while developing conception for this model, were minimization of fuel consumption and operating simplification. The authors of these article present advantages of using marine engines powered by gas, according to the international MARPOL regulations that became very restrictive in order to protect marine environment. As the examples were used products of Rolls-Royce Company.
Twórcy
autor
  • Rolls-Royce Poland Sp. z o.o. Kontenerowa Street 8, 81-155 Gdynia, Poland
  • Gdynia Maritime University, Faculty of Marine Engineering Students’ Scientific Association “Nautica” Morska Street 81-87, 81-225 Gdynia, Poland tel.: +48 58 6901669, +48503400527, fax: +48 58 6206701
autor
  • Gdynia Maritime University, Faculty of Marine Engineering Students’ Scientific Association “Nautica” Morska Street 81-87, 81-225 Gdynia, Poland tel.: +48 58 6901669, +48503400527, fax: +48 58 6206701
  • Gdynia Maritime University, Faculty of Marine Engineering Students’ Scientific Association “Nautica” Morska Street 81-87, 81-225 Gdynia, Poland tel.: +48 58 6901669, +48503400527, fax: +48 58 6206701
Bibliografia
  • [1] Bergen B-gas B35:40V Diesel & Gas Engins, Rolls-Royce, Norwegen 2012.
  • [2] Bergen B-gas B35:40V Marine engine and propulsion programme 2012, Rolls-Royce, Norwegian 2012.
  • [3] Bunker world, http://bunkerworld.com.
  • [4] Info Mine, http://infomine.com.
  • [5] NAUTICA, http://nautica.am.gdynia.pl.
  • [6] Rolls-Royce, http://www.rolls-royce.com/.
  • [7] Witkowski, K., Okrętowe silniki spalinowe, WWSM, Gdynia, Polska 1996.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-1c8a5f43-ad87-4c53-b868-e9d24e3fae75
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