Abstract

In order to adhere to strict emissions standards, it is necessary to reduce diesel particulate emissions under real driving conditions. This can be achieved by reducing the production of soot particles and optimising the combustion process within the combustion chamber. This investigation examines the impact of engine operating conditions (transient and steady-state) on the characterisation of the soot particles. Soot samples from a common rail direct injection (CRDI), turbocharged six-cylinder diesel engine without any aftertreatment devices were collected on TEM grids. This investigation utilised both pure diesel and diesel-dioctyl phthalate (DOP) blends (D90DOP10 and D80DOP20). To correlate the soot characterisation results, diesel particulate emissions were also measured using a fast particle analyser (DMS500). The results indicate that emissions from transient cycles are higher in comparison to steady-state engine operation. Smaller primary particle diameter with a compact structure were observed for transient cycles when compared to steady-state operating conditions. Parameters such as number of primary particles within a single aggregate, radius of gyration, and soot aggregate area were also studied. Nanostructure analysis reveals that the soot particles from transient cycles could have lower oxidation reactivity and longer fringes with less curvature and interplanar spacing.

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