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An Experimental Study of Dilution Methods for Preventing Volatile Particle Generation during Measurement of Diesel Particle Number Concentration  

Yim, Tae-Ho (Department of Mechanical Engineering of Kyunghee University)
Kim, Hong-Suk (Korea Institute of Machinery Materials)
Cho, Hyoung-Mun (Korea Institute of Machinery Materials)
Lee, Jin-Wook (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Soongsil University)
Jeong, Young-Il (Korea Institute of Machinery Materials)
Jeon, Heung-Shin (Department of Mechanical Engineering of Kyunghee University)
Publication Information
Transactions of the Korean Society of Automotive Engineers / v.17, no.5, 2009 , pp. 67-73 More about this Journal
Abstract
Recently, Europe decided to start the regulation of diesel engine nanoparticles because of its well known adverse health effects. The diesel nanoparticles can be classified as solid carbon particles and volatile particles. The volatile particles generates during dilution process by condensation of gas phase volatile compounds such as hydrocarbon. The new nanoparticle regulation considers only solid particles because of difficulty of measurement of volatile particles. The aim of this study is to suggest a proper dilution method that prevent the volatile particle generation. As a result, it is found that the $1^{st}$ dilution air temperature should be above $120^{\circ}C$ in order to prevent volatile particle generation effectively. It is also found that the volatile particles can be removed effectively in the evaporation tube by the increase of evaporation tube temperature. But when exhaust gas is hot enough (>$190^{\circ}C$, in this study) and it is diluted in the first diluter with high temperature air (>$120^{\circ}C$), removal phenomenon of volatile particles by increasing of evaporation tube temperature can not be seen. It means that there are no volatile particles in the diluted exhaust gas. Additionally, dilution ratio is not an important factor for volatile particle generation compared with dilution air temperature or evaporation tube temperature.
Keywords
Diesel emissions; Nanoparticle; Particle number concentration; Volatile particle generation; Dilution temperature; Dilution ratio;
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Times Cited By KSCI : 2  (Citation Analysis)
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