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Technical Paper

Particulate Emissions from a Direct-Injection Spark-Ignition Engine

2005-04-11
2005-01-0103
Particulate mass (PM) emission rate and size distribution measurements were performed in a direct-injection two-stroke engine under a wide range of conditions using a venturi-type mini-dilution tunnel. Air-assisted and nitrogen-assisted liquid fuel injection were both tested to investigate subtle changes in local equivalence ratio; gaseous propane injection using the same injection system was investigated to isolate the effects of liquid fuel impingement. Under overall lean operating conditions the PM emissions were found to decrease when the air-assisted injection was changed to N2-assisted injection with all other parameters equal. The suggested cause for this behavior was a reduction in the PM formation and oxidation rates due to lower local temperatures. A similar effect (lower particulate matter emissions with a locally richer air-fuel ratio) was observed for a light load condition where the local oxygen concentration was varied by changing the exhaust gas recirculation rate.
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