Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9460604 | Journal of Aerosol Science | 2005 | 37 Pages |
Abstract
Properties of particles emitted from diesel engines and the consequences of these properties for sampling and measuring the particles are reviewed. The influence of aftertreatment devices such as particle traps and catalytic converters on particle properties is demonstrated. Based on the particle properties and results from health effect studies, requirements to metrics, and measurement systems, for example, for type approval testing, are discussed. This discussion is limited to physical properties. Special attention is given to the volatile fraction. We show that care has to be taken when designing the sampling and dilution system, because this step decisively influences what happens with the volatile material, which may remain in the gas phase, condense on solid particles, or form new particles by nucleation. If nucleation occurs, particles formed in the sampling lines may dominate the particle number concentration. A selection of systems for dilution, conditioning and measuring is shown. Systems to determine number, mass, and surface concentrations, size distributions, and carbon concentration are discussed. The discussion is focused on systems developed or adapted recently for the physical characterization of diesel particles.
Keywords
Photoelectric aerosol sensorTEOMEADTapered element oscillating microbalanceSUVACPCUNECEOSFconstant volume samplerCVSPMPCPSAELPIDMAPAHSMPSMAAPEPAGrpEVDIEnvironmental Protection AgencyEuropean UnionDINTemDiffusion chargerDifferential Mobility AnalyzerParticulate massScanning mobility particle sizerBETCondensation Particle CounterElectrical low pressure impactorEDBSEMquartz crystal microbalanceQCMscanning electron microscopeTransmission electron microscopePAShydrocarbonPolyaromatic hydrocarbonaftertreatmentOrganic carbonBlack carbonelemental carbontotal carbonUnited Nations Economic Commission for Europe
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric Science
Authors
H. Burtscher,