Impact of High Sulfur Military JP-8 Fuel on Heavy Duty Diesel Engine Emissions and EGR Cooler Condensate
Document Number: 2008-01-1081
Date Published: April 2008
Author(s):
Zoran S. Filipi - Univ. of Michigan
Abstract:
Low-sulfur "clean" diesel fuel has been mandated in the US and Europe. However, quality of diesel fuel, particularly the sulfur content, varies significantly in other parts of the world. Due to logistical issues in various theaters of operation, the Army is often forced to rely on local fuel supplies, which exposes vehicles to diesel fuel or jet fuel (JP-8) with elevated levels of sulfur. Modern engines typically use cooled Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR) to meet emissions regulations. Using high-sulfur fuels and cooled EGR elevates problems associated with cooler fouling and corrosion of engine components. Hence, an experimental study has been carried out in a heavy-duty diesel engine running on standard JP-8 fuel and fuel doped with 2870 ppm of sulfur. Gas was sampled from the EGR cooler and analyzed using a condensate collection device developed according to a modified ASTM 3226-73T standard. Engine-out emissions were analyzed in parallel. Analysis of results indicates significantly increased levels of sulfur-dioxide and particulate mass with high-sulfur fuel, but negligible amounts of condensed sulfuric acid under normal operating temperatures.
File Size: 310K
Product Status: In Stock
Included in:
V117-2008
See other papers presented at SAE World Congress & Exhibition, April 2008, Detroit, MI, USA, Session: Military Vehicle: Advanced Propulsion System Technology
Purchase more technical papers and save! With TechSelect,
you decide what SAE Technical Papers you need, when you need them, and how much you want to pay.
Learn more >
|
Members Receive 20% Discount at Checkout on Items Under $500
Information on:
Download
|
Mail/Post
|
Fax
|
DRM Security
Learn more about the Digital Rights Management Security available on all downloaded pdf documents.
|