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Journal Article

Effects of B20 versus ULSD Fuel on Diesel Engine PM Emissions and Aftertreatment Performance

2010-04-12
2010-01-0790
A detailed study is undertaken to examine how 2010+ diesel engine exhaust emissions change when a soybean-derived B20 biodiesel fuel is used instead of a conventional ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel and to investigate how these changes impact the aftertreatment system. Particulate matter (PM) emissions for each fuel are characterized in terms of mass emissions, size distributions, organic versus soot fraction, metals content, and particle morphology. PM mass recorded by Dekati Mass Monitor, thermal analysis of quartz filters, and calculated from particle size distributions consistently shows a 2 - 3 fold decrease in engine-out soot emissions over a wide mid-load range when changing from ULSD to B20 fuel. This is partly due to a decrease in particle number and partly to a decrease in average size. HC and NO emissions, in contrast, exhibit little change with fuel type.
Technical Paper

Performance of a Catalyzed Diesel Particulate Filter System During Soot Accumulation and Regeneration

2003-03-03
2003-01-0047
The trapping and regeneration behaviors of a diesel particulate filter (DPF), including particle size, are examined via engine dynamometer testing. The exhaust system consists of two active lean NOx (ALN) catalysts in series followed by a catalyzed DPF. Forced regenerations are accomplished by injecting diesel fuel into the exhaust in front of the ALN catalysts to generate an exotherm sufficient to induce soot oxidation. Results are reported for two diesel fuels, one with 340 ppm sulfur, and the other with 4 ppm sulfur, and as a function of DPF regeneration temperature. The results show the DPF to be very effective at removing particulate matter, >99% efficiency. The <1% of particles that escape trapping exhibit a size distribution very similar to engine out soot. During regeneration, particle emissions remain well below engine out levels for the low sulfur fuel, but exhibit a temporary nucleation mode of about ten times the engine out level for the high sulfur fuel.
Technical Paper

Impact of Ester Structures on the Soot Characteristics and Soot Oxidative Reactivity of Biodiesel

2015-04-14
2015-01-1080
A study and analysis of the relation of biodiesel chemical structures to the resulting soot characteristics and soot oxidative reactivity is presented. Soot samples generated from combustion of various methyl esters, alkanes, biodiesel and diesel fuels in laminar co-flow diffusion flames are analyzed to evaluate the impact of fuel-bound oxygen in fatty acid esters on soot oxidation behavior. Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) of soot samples collected from diffusion flames show that chemical variations in biodiesel ester compounds have an impact on soot oxidative reactivity and soot characteristics in contrast to findings reported previously in the literature. Soot derived from methyl esters with shorter alkyl chains, such as methyl butyrate and methyl hexanoate, exhibit higher reactivity than those with longer carbon chain lengths, such as methyl oleate, which are more representative of biodiesel fuels.
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