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Biofuel Blending Reduces Aircraft Engine Particle Emissions at Cruise Conditions

Authors :
Richard H Moore
Kenneth L Thornhill
Bernadett Weinzierl
Daniel Sauer
Eugenio D'Ascoli
Brian Beaton
Andreas J Beyersdorf
Dan Bulzan
Chelsea Corr
Ewan Crosbie
Robert Martin
Dean Riddick
Michael Shook
Gregory Slover
Christiane Voigt
Robert White
Edward Winstead
Richard Yasky
Luke D Ziemba
Anthony Brown
Hans Schlager
Bruce E Anderson
Source :
Nature. 543(7645)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2017.

Abstract

Aviation aerosol emissions have a disproportionately large climatic impact because they are emitted high in the relatively pristine upper troposphere where they can form linear contrails and influence cirrus clouds. Research aircraft from NASA, DLR, and NRC Canada made airborne measurements of gaseous and aerosol composition and contrail microphysical properties behind the NASA DC-8 aircraft at cruise altitudes. The DC-8 CFM-56-2C engines burned traditional medium-sulfur Jet A fuel as well as a low-sulfur Jet A fuel and a 50:50 biofuel blend. Substantial, two-to-three-fold emissions reductions are found for both particle number and mass emissions across the range of cruise thrust operating conditions. These observations provide direct and compelling evidence for the beneficial impacts of biojet fuel blending under real-world conditions.

Subjects

Subjects :
Aircraft Propulsion And Power

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
543
Issue :
7645
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Nature
Notes :
ARMD_081876, , 081876.02.07.50.04.04, , CAAFER 46FA-JA12, , VH-NG-606, , ERC 640458, , HA W2/W3-060, , DFG JU3059/1-1
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20190027477
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature21420