Oil-related Particle Emissions from Diesel Engines

In recent decades much effort has gone into reducing particle emissions in the exhaust gases of heavy-duty diesel engines. Engine development has now reached the stage where it is worth to put heavy focus on the contribution of lubricating oil to particulate emissions in order to further reduce thes...

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Main Author: Johansson, Petter
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: KTH, Maskinkonstruktion (Inst.) 2008
Subjects:
PM
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-9287
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-92872013-01-08T13:10:35ZOil-related Particle Emissions from Diesel EnginesengJohansson, PetterKTH, Maskinkonstruktion (Inst.)Stockholm : KTH2008Diesel engineParticle emissionsParticulate matterPMLubrication oilInter-ring pressureTECHNOLOGYTEKNIKVETENSKAPIn recent decades much effort has gone into reducing particle emissions in the exhaust gases of heavy-duty diesel engines. Engine development has now reached the stage where it is worth to put heavy focus on the contribution of lubricating oil to particulate emissions in order to further reduce these emissions. A literature study demonstrates that the cylinder system is usually the largest source of oil-related particles. Oil consumption in the cylinder can be divided into throw-off effects when inertia forces act on the piston, piston rings and oil; evaporation from hot surfaces; reverse blow-by when gas pressure drives the oil consumption; and top land scraping when oil is scraped off the cylinder liner. The pressure between the compression rings strongly affects the stability and position of the upper compression ring as well as the oil consumption caused by the reverse blow-by. A method to measure the inter-ring pressure was developed and evaluated. The measurements showed that cycle-to-cycle variations were small, but that the inter-ring pressure varied over time. Calculations with AVL Excite Piston and Rings confirmed that ring gap positions can have a major influence on the inter-ring pressure. The measured particle size and number distributions at motoring conditions show interesting and unexpected results. The high number of particles with a diameter of around 100 nm was greatly reduced when the temperature in the diluter was increased. The mean number particle diameter decreased until 10 nm and then became stable independent of further temperature increase. Other authors have found that the small particles (nucleation mode) are reduced and the larger particles (accumulation mode) are more or less unaffected when exhaust gases are heated up and diluted. QC 20101112Licentiate thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-9287Trita-MMK, 1400-1179 ; 2008:08application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Diesel engine
Particle emissions
Particulate matter
PM
Lubrication oil
Inter-ring pressure
TECHNOLOGY
TEKNIKVETENSKAP
spellingShingle Diesel engine
Particle emissions
Particulate matter
PM
Lubrication oil
Inter-ring pressure
TECHNOLOGY
TEKNIKVETENSKAP
Johansson, Petter
Oil-related Particle Emissions from Diesel Engines
description In recent decades much effort has gone into reducing particle emissions in the exhaust gases of heavy-duty diesel engines. Engine development has now reached the stage where it is worth to put heavy focus on the contribution of lubricating oil to particulate emissions in order to further reduce these emissions. A literature study demonstrates that the cylinder system is usually the largest source of oil-related particles. Oil consumption in the cylinder can be divided into throw-off effects when inertia forces act on the piston, piston rings and oil; evaporation from hot surfaces; reverse blow-by when gas pressure drives the oil consumption; and top land scraping when oil is scraped off the cylinder liner. The pressure between the compression rings strongly affects the stability and position of the upper compression ring as well as the oil consumption caused by the reverse blow-by. A method to measure the inter-ring pressure was developed and evaluated. The measurements showed that cycle-to-cycle variations were small, but that the inter-ring pressure varied over time. Calculations with AVL Excite Piston and Rings confirmed that ring gap positions can have a major influence on the inter-ring pressure. The measured particle size and number distributions at motoring conditions show interesting and unexpected results. The high number of particles with a diameter of around 100 nm was greatly reduced when the temperature in the diluter was increased. The mean number particle diameter decreased until 10 nm and then became stable independent of further temperature increase. Other authors have found that the small particles (nucleation mode) are reduced and the larger particles (accumulation mode) are more or less unaffected when exhaust gases are heated up and diluted. === QC 20101112
author Johansson, Petter
author_facet Johansson, Petter
author_sort Johansson, Petter
title Oil-related Particle Emissions from Diesel Engines
title_short Oil-related Particle Emissions from Diesel Engines
title_full Oil-related Particle Emissions from Diesel Engines
title_fullStr Oil-related Particle Emissions from Diesel Engines
title_full_unstemmed Oil-related Particle Emissions from Diesel Engines
title_sort oil-related particle emissions from diesel engines
publisher KTH, Maskinkonstruktion (Inst.)
publishDate 2008
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-9287
work_keys_str_mv AT johanssonpetter oilrelatedparticleemissionsfromdieselengines
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