2010
DOI: 10.1115/1.4000132
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Gas Turbine Engine Emissions—Part II: Chemical Properties of Particulate Matter

Abstract: The characterization of volatile and nonvolatile particle materials present in gas turbine exhaust is critical for accurate estimation of the potential impacts of airport activities on local air quality, atmospheric processes, and climate change. Two field campaigns were performed to collect an extensive set of particle and gaseous emission data for on-wing gas turbine engines. The tests included CFM56, RB211-535E4-B, AE3007, PW4158, and CJ610 engines, providing the opportunity to compare emissions from a wide… Show more

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Cited by 108 publications
(185 citation statements)
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“…Partly because the knowledge base was limited and partly due to the potential impacts, particular emphasis has been placed on characterizing turbine engine PM emissions. Recent studies confirm that gas turbine PM is composed of nonvolatile soot particles and volatile materials, themselves consisting primarily of sulfate and organic components Timko et al 2010bTimko et al , 2013. Here, the term "volatile" refers to its vapor state at the elevated temperatures of the engine exit plane (>500 K).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Partly because the knowledge base was limited and partly due to the potential impacts, particular emphasis has been placed on characterizing turbine engine PM emissions. Recent studies confirm that gas turbine PM is composed of nonvolatile soot particles and volatile materials, themselves consisting primarily of sulfate and organic components Timko et al 2010bTimko et al , 2013. Here, the term "volatile" refers to its vapor state at the elevated temperatures of the engine exit plane (>500 K).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here, the term "volatile" refers to its vapor state at the elevated temperatures of the engine exit plane (>500 K). By mass, volatile PM can dominate PM emissions during low power operation, during operation at low ambient temperature (<275 K), and/or for combustion of high sulfur fuels (Timko et al 2010b(Timko et al , 2013. Depending on conditions and engine technology, the volatile PM can coat existing soot particles, enter a nucleation/growth mode, or exist as a separate size mode (Timko et al 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The OC consists of products of incomplete combustion of fuel and lubrication oil, while emissions of sulfate result from the conversion of fuel sulfur compounds (Timko et al 2010;Kinsey et al 2011). EI(BC) is generally an order of magnitude greater than the emission index of OC and sulfate for high engine thrust settings when exhaust is sampled at the engine exit plane.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This method is routinely used to estimate the public health impacts of aircraft LTO PM emissions in the United States (Ratliff et al 2009;CSSI Inc. 2010;Arunachalam et al 2011;Levy et al 2011;Woody et al 2011). While several studies have measured the mass of emitted BC per unit fuel burned, known as EI(BC), the majority of engines in service have not been measured and for these the SN remains the only measure of their PM emissions (Timko et al 2010). Research efforts to define a standard procedure to measure aircraft nonvolatile particle number and mass emissions are ongoing (SAE 2009) but no plans exist to measure engines currently in service.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%