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Application of acoustic agglomeration technology to improve the removal of submicron particles from vehicle exhaust

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Date
2021
Author
Garbarienė, Inga
Dudoitis, Vadimas
Ulevičius, Vidmantas
Plauškaitė-Šukienė, Kristina
Kilikevičius, Artūras
Matijošius, Jonas
Rimkus, Alfredas
Kilikevičienė, Kristina
Vainorius, Darius
Maknickas, Algirdas
Borodinas, Sergejus
Byčenkienė, Steigvilė
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Abstract
The natural processes of interactions between aerosol particles in the ambient air through which they agglomerate is a vast area of chamber research and are inherent to many industries and are often inter-connected with transport engineering. Further improvement of symmetric methods for aerosol particle number and mass concentration reduction made it possible to create various synergic techniques. The study used a 1.9 TDI diesel internal combustion engine, which was supplied with diesel (D100) and second-generation biofuels (NExBTL100) with the EGR exhaust system on and off. Measurements were performed using a Bruel and Kjær “Type 9727” system for measurement of vibrations, a scanning mobility particle sizer (SMPS) and an original agglomeration chamber. The three modes of particle size distributions were observed in the size range from 10 to 470 nm for both D100 and NExBTL100 fuels with and without the use of the EGR system. The application of 21.3 kHz frequency sound with SPL 144.1 dB changed the NExBTL100 generated aerosol particle number concentration but did not sufficiently affect the concentration of D100 emitted particles. The greatest agglomeration effect (21.7 ± 10.0%) was observed in the range of extremely small NExBTL100 derived particles (10–70 nm) when used in combination with an EGR system.
Issue date (year)
2021
URI
https://etalpykla.vilniustech.lt/handle/123456789/111534
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  • Straipsniai Web of Science ir/ar Scopus referuojamuose leidiniuose / Articles in Web of Science and/or Scopus indexed sources [7946]

 

 

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