This study presents detailed characterization of the chemical and physical properties of PM emitted by a 2.0L BMW lean-burn turbocharged GDI engine operated under a number of combustion strategies that include lean homogeneous, lean stratified, stoichiometric, and fuel rich conditions. We characterized PM number concentrations, size distributions, and the size, mass, compositions, and effective density of fractal and compact individual exhaust particles. For the fractal particles, these measurements yielded fractal dimension, average diameter of primary spherules, and number of spherules, void fraction, and dynamic shape factors as function of particle size. Overall, the PM properties were shown to vary significantly with engine operation condition. Lean stratified operation yielded the most diesel-like size distribution and the largest PM number and mass concentrations, with nearly all particles being fractal agglomerates composed of elemental carbon with small amounts of ash and organics. In contrast, stoichiometric operation yielded a larger fraction of ash particles, especially at low speed and low load. Three distinct forms of ash particles were observed, with their fractions strongly dependent on engine operating conditions: sub-50 nm ash particles, abundant at low speed and low load, ash-containing fractal particles, and large compact ash particles that significantly contribute to PM mass loadings
Revised: September 13, 2017 |
Published: August 1, 2017
Citation
Zelenyuk A., J.M. Wilson, D.g. Imre, M.L. Stewart, G.G. Muntean, J. Storey, and V. Prikhodko, et al. 2017.Detailed Characterization of Particulate Matter Emitted by Lean-Burn Gasoline Direct Injection Engine.International Journal of Engine Research 18, no. 5-6:560-572.PNNL-SA-114753.doi:10.1177/1468087416675708