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Physicochemical Characterization of Particulate Emissions from a Compression Ignition Engine Employing Two Injection Technologies and Three Fuels

doi: 10.1021/es200388f
pmid: 21627159
Alternative fuels and injection technologies are a necessary component of particulate emission reduction strategies for compression ignition engines. Consequently, this study undertakes a physicochemical characterization of diesel particulate matter (DPM) for engines equipped with alternative injection technologies (direct injection and common rail) and alternative fuels (ultra low sulfur diesel, a 20% biodiesel blend, and a synthetic diesel). Particle physical properties were addressed by measuring particle number size distributions, and particle chemical properties were addressed by measuring polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and reactive oxygen species (ROS). Particle volatility was determined by passing the polydisperse size distribution through a thermodenuder set to 300 °C. The results from this study, conducted over a four point test cycle, showed that both fuel type and injection technology have an impact on particle emissions, but injection technology was the more important factor. Significant particle number emission (54%-84%) reductions were achieved at half load operation (1% increase-43% decrease at full load) with the common rail injection system; however, the particles had a significantly higher PAH fraction (by a factor of 2 to 4) and ROS concentrations (by a factor of 6 to 16) both expressed on a test-cycle averaged basis. The results of this study have significant implications for the health effects of DPM emissions from both direct injection and common rail engines utilizing various alternative fuels.
- University of Queensland Australia
- University of Queensland Australia
- Queensland University of Technology Australia
660, Temperature, General Chemistry, 1600 Chemistry, 2304 Environmental Chemistry, Environmental Chemistry, Particulate Matter, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons, Reactive Oxygen Species, Gasoline, Vehicle Emissions
660, Temperature, General Chemistry, 1600 Chemistry, 2304 Environmental Chemistry, Environmental Chemistry, Particulate Matter, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons, Reactive Oxygen Species, Gasoline, Vehicle Emissions
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