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  4. Effective density and volatility of particles sampled from a helicopter gas turbine engine
 
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Effective density and volatility of particles sampled from a helicopter gas turbine engine
File(s)
Effective Density and Volatility of Particles Sampled from a Helicopter Gas Turbine Engine.pdf (1.25 MB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Olfert, JS
Dickau, M
Momenimovahed, A
Saffaripour, M
Thompson, K
more
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
The effective density and size-resolved volatility of particles emitted from a Rolls-Royce Gnome helicopter turboshaft engine are measured at two engine speed settings (13,000 and 22,000 RPM). The effective density of denuded and undenuded particles were measured. The denuded effective densities are similar to the effective densities of particles from a gas turbine with a double annular combustor as well as a wide variety of internal combustion engines. The denuded effective density measurements were also used to estimate the size and number of primary particles in the soot aggregates. The primary particle size estimates show that the primary particle size was smaller at lower engine speed (in agreement with transmission electron microscopy analysis). As a demonstration, the size-resolved volatility of particles emitted from the engine are measured with a system consisting of a differential mobility analyzer, centrifugal particle mass analyzer, condensation particle counter, and catalytic stripper. This system determines the number distributions of particles that contain or do not contain non-volatile material, and the mass distributions of non-volatile material, volatile material condensed onto the surface of non-volatile particles, and volatile material forming independent particles (e.g. nucleated volatile material). It was found that the particulate at 13,000 RPM contained a measurable fraction of purely volatile material with diameters below ∼25 nm and had a higher mass fraction of volatile material condensed on the surface of the soot (6–12%) compared to the 22,000 RPM condition (1–5%). This study demonstrates the potential to quantify the distribution of volatile particulate matter and gives additional information to characterize sampling effects with regulatory measurement procedures.
Date Issued
2017-02-08
Date Acceptance
2017-02-08
Citation
Aerosol Science and Technology, 2017, 51 (6), pp.704-714
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/44401
DOI
https://www.dx.doi.org/10.1080/02786826.2017.1292346
ISSN
0278-6826
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Start Page
704
End Page
714
Journal / Book Title
Aerosol Science and Technology
Volume
51
Issue
6
Copyright Statement
© 2017 Taylor & Francis. This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Aerosol Science and Technology on Feb 2017, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/02786826.2017.1292346
Subjects
Science & Technology
Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Physical Sciences
Engineering, Chemical
Engineering, Mechanical
Environmental Sciences
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Engineering
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
DIRECT-INJECTION ENGINE
PARTICULATE MATTER
SOOT PARTICLES
DIESEL EXHAUST
MASS
EMISSIONS
MOBILITY
MORPHOLOGY
SIZE
03 Chemical Sciences
04 Earth Sciences
09 Engineering
Publication Status
Published
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