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Light-off Investigation of Oxymethylene Ether (OME) Considering the Presence of the Exhaust Components Heptane, Carbon, and Nitrogen Monoxide
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Synthetic fuels and fuel blends like OMEs can contribute to tank-to-wheel CO2 emission savings. At the same time, it is known that these fuels have a lower exhaust temperature compared to conventional diesel. This effect has major impact on the exhaust after-treatment system, particularly in cold start conditions. This paper investigates the light-off behavior of exhaust gases containing OMEs by temperature-programmed oxidation experiments using a state-of-the-art oxidation catalyst. The main side product of catalytic oxidation of OMEs between 100 °C and the oxidation temperature T50, which was around 160 °C, was shown to be formaldehyde. While alkane oxidation, in this case heptane, was little influenced by OME oxidation, the oxidation temperature T50 of CO increases by more than 10 °C by OME addition. Nitrogen monoxide impeded the oxidation of OME in a similar way to the other components investigated. Due to the amount of FA produced and its toxicity, it could be concluded that it is necessary to heat up exhaust after-treatment systems of OME diesel engines even faster than conventional diesel exhaust after-treatment systems. The relatively high reactivity of OME on oxidation catalyst can be used by active thermal management approaches.
- Subjects :
- Alkane
chemistry.chemical_classification
Heptane
Diesel exhaust
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Formaldehyde
chemistry.chemical_element
thermochemische Prozesse
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
Wasserstofftechnologie
Pollution
Diesel fuel
chemistry.chemical_compound
Synthetic fuel
Catalytic oxidation
chemistry
Chemical engineering
Automotive Engineering
Wasserstofftechnologie und elektrischer Energiespeicher
Carbon
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....8904a27dcd689eefba3c762a5bf787a1