Abstract

A 2.0 L, 4-cylinder, turbocharged, common rail diesel engine was used for generating soot samples. Three fuels were tested: a “first fill” diesel fuel, a gas-to-liquid fuel (GTL) and a hydrotreated fuel derived from vegetable oils (HVO). A stationary low-load operating mode (1667 rpm and 78 Nm) was selected for testing, and some modifications in the injection process (strategy, timing and pressure) were evaluated experimentally to assess their influence in the soot reactivity. The collected soot samples were characterized using a thermogravimetric analyzer (TGA), a differential scanning calorimeter (DSC), a diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectrometer (DRIFTS) and a surface area analyzer. All techniques anticipated that HVO and GTL soot samples are more reactive (i.e. show higher potential to be oxidized at lower temperatures leading to more efficient regeneration processes in a Diesel Particle Filter – DPF) compared to diesel soot. Additionally, the four characterization techniques showed the same tendencies when analyzing the effect of the engine operating parameters. In view of the results, the paraffinic fuels – HVO and GTL – here tested confirm their promising perspective for future use in automotive diesel engines, while some guides are proposed to enhance the soot reactivity via calibration of engine operating parameters.

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