| Literature DB >> 32327881 |
Raju R Kumal1, Jiawei Liu1, Akshay Gharpure1, Randy L Vander Wal1, John S Kinsey2, Bob Giannelli3, Jeffrey Stevens3, Cullen Leggett3, Robert Howard4, Mary Forde4, Alla Zelenyuk-Imre5, Kaitlyn Suski5, Greg Payne6, Julien Manin6, William Bachalo6, Richard Frazee7, Timothy B Onasch8, Andrew Freedman8, David B Kittelson9, Jacob J Swanson9.
Abstract
Presented here is an overview of non-volatile particulate matter (nvPM) emissions, i.e. "soot" as assessed by TEM analyses of samples collected after the exhaust of a J-85 turbojet fueled with Jet-A as well as with blends of Jet-A and Camelina biofuel. A unifying explanation is provided to illustrate the combustion dynamics of biofuel and Jet-A fuel. The variation of primary particle size, aggregate size and nanostructure are analyzed as a function of biofuel blend across a range of engine thrust levels. The postulate is based on where fuels start along the soot formation pathway. Increasing biofuel content lowers aromatic concentration while placing increasing dependence upon fuel pyrolysis reactions to form the requisite concentration of aromatics for particle inception and growth. The required "kinetic" time for pyrolysis reactions to produce benzene and multi-ring PAHs allows increased fuel-air mixing by turbulence, diluting the fuel-rich soot-forming regions, effectively lowering their equivalence ratio. With a lower precursor concentration, particle inception is slowed, the resulting concentration of primary particles is lowered and smaller aggregates were measured. The lower equivalence ratio also results in smaller primary particles because of the lower concentration of growth species.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32327881 PMCID: PMC7180060 DOI: 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.0c00094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Energy Fuels ISSN: 0887-0624 Impact factor: 3.605