4.7 Article

Physicochemical properties and oxidation reactivity of exhaust soot from a modern diesel engine: Effect of oxyfuel type

Journal

COMBUSTION AND FLAME
Volume 238, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.combustflame.2021.111940

Keywords

Oxyfuel (methanol, DMC, DMM); Diesel soot particles; Physicochemical properties; Oxidation reactivity; Sensitivity analysis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51865002]
  2. State Key laboratory Open Foundation [K2021-03]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China [JZ2021HGTB0092]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M682232]

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This study investigated the physicochemical properties of diesel engine soot emitted from different fuel blends, revealing the impacts of fuel formulation on soot nanostructure, chemical composition, and oxidation reactivity. The results showed that variations in fuel formulation led to differences in soot nanostructure, chemical composition, and oxidation reactivity, with surface oxygenated functional groups and nanostructure having a greater influence on soot reactivity.
This paper investigates the physicochemical properties (i.e. nanostructure, degree of graphitization, surface functionalities and carbon chemical state) of soot emitted from a modern compression ignition (CI) engine fueled by diesel (D100) and its blends with 11.5 vol% methanol (M11.5), 8.3 vol% dimethyl carbonate (DMC8.3) and 13 vol% dimethoxymethane (DMM13) with the same oxygen level. Additionally, based on the sensitivity analysis results, the correlation between soot physicochemical properties and its oxidation reactivity is discussed. Results showed that the soot from M11.5 owned the most disordered nanostructure (i.e. shortest fringe length, widest distance and greatest tortuosity) with D100, DMM13, DMC8.3 soot following, while soot graphitization degree by Raman analysis exhibited inconsistent results with nanostructure parameters. On the side of chemical properties, the aliphatic C-H content reduced in the ranking of D100 > DMC8.3 > DMM13 > M11.5. As change of fuel formulation, it was found that the O/C ratio presented irregularity under the different engine loads. For the three blended fuels, DMM13 soot possessed the highest surface oxygenated functional groups (SOFGs, including C-O, C = O and COO) amount, followed by DMC8.3 and M11.5 soot. Moreover, the carbon hybridization ratio (sp(3)/sp(2)) presented a trend of M11.5 > D100 > DMM13 > DMC8.3, which verified the analysis results of the nanostructure. The soot oxidation reactivity decreased in the order of M11.5 > D100 > DMM13 > DMC8.3. As the engine load raised, the oxidation reactivity of D100 and DMM13 soot increased, while it reduced for M11.5 and DMC8.3 soot. According to the sensitivity analysis, soot reactivity primarily depended on particles nanostructure, sp(3)/sp(2) ratio and SOFGs, while the impact from aliphatic C-H functional groups and O/C ratio were weak. Furthermore, compared to SOFGs, soot reactivity was more sensitivity to particle nanostructure, especially the fringe tortuosity. (C) 2021 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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