The utilization of
biodiesel as an alternative partial replacement
of diesel fuel was shown to improve exhaust emissions from diesel
engines. Waste cooking oil biodiesel (WCO) has also gained more attention
due to edible biofuel supply and the environment. In this study, a
nonthermal plasma (NTP) technique was applied to be equipped into
the after-treatment system of a four-cylinder diesel engine at medium-
and high-load conditions. The exhaust gases in the NTP state from
the combustion of WCO and diesel (D100) fuels were partially drawn
by spectrometers and nanoparticle-number-derived characteristics were
analyzed. The particle number, area, and mass concentrations were
in log-normal distribution over equivalent diameters, and they were
higher at high load. The concentration of the particulate matter (PM)
was lower but was larger in size when the NTP charger was activated
due to coagulation principally owing to WCO’s number and surface
area. The total particle masses were lower for WCO at the two load
conditions tested. During NTP charger activation, the mass mean diameters
were increased by maximum values of 24.0% for D100 and 5.5% for WCO.
The PM removal efficiencies were maximized by 10.8% for D100 and 16.7%
for WCO when the NTP charger was in use, and the WCO exhaust was dominantly
seen to simultaneously reduce NO
x
and
PM emissions.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.