SAE Technical Paper Series 1998
DOI: 10.4271/982599
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Diesel Trap Performance: Particle Size Measurements and Trends

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Cited by 74 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…As several studies in the past have experimentally identified (e.g. Abdul-Khalek et al, 1998;Mathis et al, 2004b), the number and mass concentration of particles in the NM largely depend on the dilution ratio. It is therefore important to study whether these experimental results can be explained by modeling.…”
Section: Effect Of Aging Time On Particlesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As several studies in the past have experimentally identified (e.g. Abdul-Khalek et al, 1998;Mathis et al, 2004b), the number and mass concentration of particles in the NM largely depend on the dilution ratio. It is therefore important to study whether these experimental results can be explained by modeling.…”
Section: Effect Of Aging Time On Particlesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, Mathis et al (2004a) -Khalek et al, 1998;Mathis et al, 2004b;Ntziachristos et al, 2004b). Therefore, when NM particles are measured in the laboratory, one needs to distinguish between effects attributed to either the source (vehicle and fuel) or the sampling system and conditions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is an objective of the project described here to answer this question. Often more than 90% of the nanoparticles emitted by engines are formed from volatile particle precursors during exhaust dilution [25][26][27]. These precursors are presumably the lower vapor pressure compounds usually associated with Diesel particulate matter, like sulfuric acid and condensable hydrocarbons.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the influence of dilution conditions may be even greater when most of the solid carbon is removed from the exhaust. Changes up to nearly four orders of magnitude in nanoparticle concentration with changing dilution conditions were observed when the same engine as used in [26] was fitted with a wall-flow exhaust particle filter [25]. As engines become cleaner, it will become increasingly difficult to make representative measurements of exhaust size distributions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Maintaining atmospheric dilution conditions is vital to the achievement of representative sampling (Abdul-Khalek et al 1998;Lodge 1989). The effects of dilution conditions on particle formation and size distributions have been studied by many researchers including Harris andMaricq (2001), Ntziachristos et al (2004), and Liu et al (2007).…”
Section: Secondary Micro-dilutermentioning
confidence: 99%