Characteristics of Particulate Emissions Fueled with LPG and Gasoline in a Small SI Engine
2004-01-2901
10/25/2004
- Event
- Content
- This paper presents experimental studies of particulate emissions in a small SI engine fueled with LPG and gasoline fuels. A single cylinder, four-stroke, water-cooled, 125cc EFI engine with gasoline fuel is used as the baseline engine. Characteristics of the particulate emissions of the two fuels are compared. Test results show that: there are great quantities of particulate emissions for both fuels, but the total numbers of particulate emissions for the two fuels are generally in the same level. The distribution of the particulate sizes is in bimodal type for the gasoline, but for the LPG its first peak is not markedly in some conditions. The particulate sizes of the second peak for the two fuels appear at about the same size. At middle loads and 3000r/min, the particulate emissions for both of the two fuels are the greatest. At 60% load rate, the particulate emissions decrease with the increase of the engine speed for gasoline fuel, but for LPG fuel, the higher particulate emission is at middle engine speed and the lowest particulate emission is at the lower engine speed.
- Pages
- 9
- Citation
- Li, L., Wang, Z., Deng, B., Xiao, Z. et al., "Characteristics of Particulate Emissions Fueled with LPG and Gasoline in a Small SI Engine," SAE Technical Paper 2004-01-2901, 2004, https://doi.org/10.4271/2004-01-2901.