Analysis of Exhaust PM Composition Emitted from Non-Sooting Volatile Alcohols
(2017) Nordic Society for Aerosol Research (NOSA) Aerosol Symposium 2017- Abstract
- The combustion engine, a well-known source of aerosols, has seen remarkable improvements regarding efficiency and emissions. A drawback of the conventional compression ignition (CI) engine is its requirement for a high cetane number fuel, i.e. diesel which contains long carbon chains forming particulate matter (PM) when combusted in the conventional diesel combustion (CDC) process. A previous study of PM from partially premixed combustion (PPC) and CDC utilizing ethanol and methanol in a Scania D13 engine without emission after treatment systems (EATS) showed that the particle sizes from the alcohol combustion never exceeded 30 nm in diameter. Until now, the characteristics (origin, formation and constituents) of these nano-sized... (More)
- The combustion engine, a well-known source of aerosols, has seen remarkable improvements regarding efficiency and emissions. A drawback of the conventional compression ignition (CI) engine is its requirement for a high cetane number fuel, i.e. diesel which contains long carbon chains forming particulate matter (PM) when combusted in the conventional diesel combustion (CDC) process. A previous study of PM from partially premixed combustion (PPC) and CDC utilizing ethanol and methanol in a Scania D13 engine without emission after treatment systems (EATS) showed that the particle sizes from the alcohol combustion never exceeded 30 nm in diameter. Until now, the characteristics (origin, formation and constituents) of these nano-sized particles formed in the PPC and CDC process were unknown. It has been hypothesized that they originate from lubrication oil and engine wear. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/14902f7e-f782-4f1c-b6d1-5f67509cb2ea
- author
- Novakovic, Maja LU ; Shamun, Sam LU ; Malmborg, Vilhelm LU ; Preger, Calle LU ; Shen, Mengqin LU ; Pagels, Joakim LU ; Messing, Maria LU ; Tunér, Martin LU and Tunestål, Per LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2017-03-21
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- methanol combustion, ethanol combustion, particulate matter
- pages
- 1 pages
- conference name
- Nordic Society for Aerosol Research (NOSA) Aerosol Symposium 2017
- conference location
- Lund, Sweden
- conference dates
- 2017-03-20 - 2017-03-22
- project
- Partially Premixed Combustion Heavy Duty
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 14902f7e-f782-4f1c-b6d1-5f67509cb2ea
- date added to LUP
- 2019-03-28 19:27:10
- date last changed
- 2022-04-04 19:49:48
@misc{14902f7e-f782-4f1c-b6d1-5f67509cb2ea, abstract = {{The combustion engine, a well-known source of aerosols, has seen remarkable improvements regarding efficiency and emissions. A drawback of the conventional compression ignition (CI) engine is its requirement for a high cetane number fuel, i.e. diesel which contains long carbon chains forming particulate matter (PM) when combusted in the conventional diesel combustion (CDC) process. A previous study of PM from partially premixed combustion (PPC) and CDC utilizing ethanol and methanol in a Scania D13 engine without emission after treatment systems (EATS) showed that the particle sizes from the alcohol combustion never exceeded 30 nm in diameter. Until now, the characteristics (origin, formation and constituents) of these nano-sized particles formed in the PPC and CDC process were unknown. It has been hypothesized that they originate from lubrication oil and engine wear.}}, author = {{Novakovic, Maja and Shamun, Sam and Malmborg, Vilhelm and Preger, Calle and Shen, Mengqin and Pagels, Joakim and Messing, Maria and Tunér, Martin and Tunestål, Per}}, keywords = {{methanol combustion; ethanol combustion; particulate matter}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{03}}, title = {{Analysis of Exhaust PM Composition Emitted from Non-Sooting Volatile Alcohols}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/62264167/NOSA_poster_3_.pdf}}, year = {{2017}}, }