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Low-carbon alcohol fuels for decarbonizing the road transportation industry: a bibliometric analysis 2000-2021.

Chao JinJeffrey Dankwa AmpahSandylove AfraneZenghui YinXin LiuTianyun SunZhenlong GengMubasher IkramHaifeng Liu
Published in: Environmental science and pollution research international (2021)
The application of low-carbon alcohols (LCA fuels) in internal combustion engines has become one of the most important topics in road transport decarbonization. This paper aims to identify the trends and characteristics of LCA combustion research for the period 2000-2021 through bibliometric analysis. Citation analysis is used to evaluate the influence of most productive journals, countries/regions, authors, institutions, and relevant literature, while collaborative network between various authors, countries/regions, institutions, and the co-occurrences among different keywords are discussed. A dataset of 2250 publications was extracted from the Web of Science Core database and analyzed with CiteSpace and Biblioshiny. The extracted documents involve 429 journals of publications by 4782 authors from 1434 institutions across 83 countries/regions. The results reveal that the research output in this field has undergone three main stages of development, i.e., initial development (2000-2007), slow development (2008-2015), and rapid development (2016-2021). Currently, the research field is growing at an annual growth rate of 9.24%, with most of the contributions by authors and institutions originating from China. The analysis from relevant keywords and literature suggests that the core of this research field centers on the combustion, performance, and emission characteristics of LCA-fueled engines. The current study helps keep the scientific community informed of the latest paradigms in the LCA combustion research field.
Keyphrases
  • systematic review
  • particulate matter
  • public health
  • emergency department
  • gene expression
  • sewage sludge
  • quality improvement
  • single cell
  • heavy metals
  • air pollution