Characterization of Particle Size, Number, and Mass Emissions From a Diesel Powered Generator

Author(s):  
Imad A. Khalek

Total (volatile plus solid) and solid particle size, number, and mass emitted from a 3.8 kW diesel powered generator were characterized using a Scanning Mobility Particle Sizer (SMPS) that measures the size distribution of particles, and a catalytic stripper that facilitates the measurement of solid particles. The engine was operated at a constant speed for six steady-state engine operations ranging from idle to rated power. The solid particle size distributions were mainly monomodal lognormal distributions in nature reflecting a typical soot agglomerate size distribution with a number mean diameter in the size range from 98 nm to 37 nm as the load decreases from high to low. At idle, M6, however, the solid particle distribution was bimodal in nature with a high number of solid nanoparticles in the sub-20 nm size range. It is likely that these solid particles nucleated later in the combustion process from metallic ash typically present in the lube oil. The total particle size distributions exhibited a bimodal structure only at light load, M5, engine operation, where a high number of volatile nanoparticles were observed. The rest of the operating conditions exhibited monomodal distributions although the nature of the particles was vastly different. For the medium load modes, M2, M3, and M4, the particles were mainly solid particles. For the rated power, M1, and idle, M6, modes of engine operation, significant number of volatile particles grew to a size nearing that of soot particles making the distribution monomodal, similar to that of a solid particle distribution. This shows that monomodal distributions are not necessarily solid particle but they can be strongly dominated with volatile particles if significant particle growth takes place like the case at M1, and M6. The total number and mass concentration were extremely high at engine rated power. The number concentration exceeded 1.2 billion particles per cubic centimeter and the mass exceeded 750 milligrams per cubic meter. The number concentration is more than five orders of magnitude higher than a typical ambient level concentration, and the mass concentration is more than four orders of magnitude higher. It is important to indicate, however, that if the engine power rating is lowered by 35 percent from its designated level, both particle mass and number emissions will be reduced by two orders of magnitude. By measuring total and solid particle size and number concentration of particles, one can calculate other metrics such as surface area and mass to provide detail information about particle emissions. Such information can serve as an important database where all metrics of particle emissions are captured.

1996 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 536-563
Author(s):  
Vladimír Kudrna ◽  
Pavel Hasal

To the description of changes of solid particle size in population, the application was proposed of stochastic differential equations and diffusion equations adequate to them making it possible to express the development of these populations in time. Particular relations were derived for some particle size distributions in flow and batch equipments. It was shown that it is expedient to complement the population balances often used for the description of granular systems by a "diffusion" term making it possible to express the effects of random influences in the growth process and/or particle diminution.


1981 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 882-891 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. D. Shuster ◽  
J. R. Schroeder ◽  
D. McIntyre

Abstract The two techniques examined in this work yield information about the particle size distribution of the latexes studied. The ease of measurement is improved over previous methods used on broadly distributed latexes. The TPC curves for both the natural and synthetic latexes correlate with the centrifuge curves. Both techniques show the Hevea to have larger particles than the guayule. The techniques also show SBR latex samples 1 and 2 to have larger particles than samples 3 and 4. The TPC is useful only for particles between 0.3 µm and 20 µm in size. The centrifuge can be used for any size range of particles by altering the rotor speed or eluant density. By employing the proper mathematics, these data could be easily converted from optical density distributions to particle size distributions.


Author(s):  
Abigail Legge ◽  
Andy Nichols ◽  
Henriette Jensen ◽  
Simon Tait ◽  
Richard Ashley

Abstract This study aims to assess the transportability of food waste disposer particles within a sewer system. A series of laboratory studies have examined the physical characteristics of solid particles derived from domestic food waste disposers. Particle size distributions and maximum settling velocity characteristics were measured for 18 common food types, and stored in a publicly accessible database. Particle size distributions are shown to fit well with a 2-parameter Gamma distribution. Settling velocity is generally higher for larger particles, except when particle density and sphericity changes. For most food types, particle specific gravity was close to unity. Egg shell particles had a significantly higher specific gravity. This information, combined with the particle size data has been used to show that there is a very low likelihood of food waste particle deposition in sewers during normal operational flows, other than temporary transient deposits of egg shell particles.


2011 ◽  
Vol 68 (6) ◽  
pp. 1162-1177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Zhao ◽  
Gerald G. Mace ◽  
Jennifer M. Comstock

Abstract Data collected in midlatitude cirrus clouds by instruments on jet aircraft typically show particle size distributions that have distinct distribution modes in both the 10–30-μm maximum dimension (D) size range and the 200–300-μm D size range or larger. A literal interpretation of the small D mode in these datasets suggests that total concentrations Nt in midlatitude cirrus are, on average, well in excess of 1 cm−3 whereas more conventional analyses of in situ data and cloud process model results suggest Nt values a factor of 10 less. Given this wide discrepancy, questions have been raised regarding the influence of data artifacts caused by the shattering of large crystals on aircraft and probe surfaces. This inconsistency and the general nature of the cirrus particle size distribution are examined using a ground-based remote sensing dataset. An algorithm using millimeter-wavelength radar Doppler moments and Raman lidar-derived extinction is developed to retrieve a bimodal particle size distribution and its uncertainty. This algorithm is applied to case studies as well as to 313 h of cirrus measurements collected at the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement site near Lamont, Oklahoma, in 2000. It is shown that particle size distributions in cirrus can often be described as bimodal, and that this bimodality is a function of temperature and location within cirrus layers. However, the existence of Nt > 1 cm−3 in cirrus is rare (<1% of the time) and the Nt implied by the remote sensing data tends to be on the order of 100 cm−3.


2006 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 5505-5542 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Engler ◽  
D. Rose ◽  
B. Wehner ◽  
A. Wiedensohler ◽  
E. Brüggemann ◽  
...  

Abstract. Atmospheric aerosol particle size distributions at a continental background site in Eastern Germany were examined for a one-year period. Particles were classified using a twin differential mobility particle sizer in a size range between 3 and 800 nm. As a novelty, every second measurement of this experiment involved the removal of volatile chemical compounds in a thermodenuder at 300°C. This concept allowed to quantify the number size distribution of non-volatile particle cores – primarily associated with elemental carbon, and to compare this to the original ambient size distribution. A general result was that practically every ambient particle in continental background air contained a non-volatile core. The volume fraction of non-volatile particulate matter (ambient Dp<800 nm) varied between 10 and 30% and was largely consistent with the experimentally determined mass fraction of elemental carbon. The average size of the non-volatile particle cores was estimated as a function of original ambient size using a summation method, which showed that larger particles (>200 nm) contained more non-volatile compounds than smaller particles (<50 nm), thus indicating a significantly different chemical composition. Two alternative air mass classification schemes based on either, synoptic chart analysis (Berliner Wetterkarte) or back trajectories showed, that the volume and number fractions of non-volatile cores were less dependent on air mass than the absolute concentrations in the particle size distributions. In all air masses, the non-volatile size distributions showed a more and a less volatile ("soot") mode, which is located in the size range of about 50 nm. During unstable conditions and in maritime air masses, smaller values were observed compared to continental or stable conditions. This reflects the significant emissions of non-volatile material over the continent and, depending on atmospheric stratification, increased concentrations at ground level.


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