Characteristics of Diesel Soot Suppression with Soluble Fuel Additives

871612

09/01/1987

Event
1987 SAE International Off-Highway and Powerplant Congress and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Experiments on a large number of soluble fuel additives were systematically conducted for diesel soot reduction. It was found that Ca and Ba were the most effective soot suppressors. The main determinants of soot reduction were: the metal mol-content of the fuel, the excess air factor, and the gas turbulence in the combustion chamber. The soot reduction ratio was expressed by an exponential function of the metal mol-content in the fuel, depending on the metal but independent of the metal compound. A rise in excess air factor or gas turbulence increased the value of a coefficient in the function, resulting in larger reductions in soot with the fuel additives.
High-speed soot sampling from the cylinder showed that with the metal additive, the soot concentration in the combustion chamber was substantially reduced during the whole period of combustion. It is thought that the additive acts as a catalyst not only to improve soot oxidation but also to suppress soot formation. Furthermore, the additives resulted in decreased ignition temperatures and enhanced oxidation of the additive-containing soot.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/871612
Pages
10
Citation
Miyamoto, N., Hou, Z., Harada, A., Ogawa, H. et al., "Characteristics of Diesel Soot Suppression with Soluble Fuel Additives," SAE Technical Paper 871612, 1987, https://doi.org/10.4271/871612.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Sep 1, 1987
Product Code
871612
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English