4.6 Article

Impacts of engine lubrication oil-derived ash on soot oxidative reactivity on a catalytic gasoline particulate filter

Journal

JOURNAL OF AEROSOL SCIENCE
Volume 162, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaerosci.2022.105960

Keywords

Engine-generated nanoparticles; Gasoline particulate filter; Soot oxidative reactivity; Lubricating oil-derived metallic ash

Funding

  1. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) [DE-EE0007217]

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Characterizing the kinetics of soot oxidation is crucial for understanding the performance of gasoline particulate filters (GPFs). A novel in-situ measurement method was developed to evaluate soot oxidative reactivity. The results showed that the catalytic washcoat and lubrication oil additives had significant effects on the oxidation rate.
Characterizing soot oxidation kinetics is crucial for understanding how gasoline particulate filters (GPFs) perform both in terms of filtration efficiency and pressure drop. The most common method for measuring soot oxidative reactivity is thermogravimetric analysis (TGA). Because TGA is an offline method, it may inaccurately predict how soot oxidizes on a GPF, especially if a catalytic washcoat is present that may enhance oxidation rates through surface interactions as the soot loads on the filter. In this work, a novel in-situ soot oxidative reactivity measurement method was developed. The method involved loading a catalytic GPF under high temperature conditions conducive to soot oxidation and measuring the filtration efficiency of 100 nm particles. A correlation was made between filtration efficiency and loaded soot mass on the filter to allow calculation of the soot oxidation rate. The method was evaluated in experiments using a 2.0 L gasoline direct injection (GDI) engine with three oils of varying additive packages, including an oil with a high zinc dialkyldithiophosphate (ZDDP) concentration, a non-additive, pure polyalpha olefin (PAO) oil, and an oil with a high concentration of calcium sulfonate. Calculated specific soot oxidation rates ranged from similar to 0.06-0.6 min(-1) and showed strong dependence on GPF inlet gas temperature and lubrication oil additive type. The results clearly demonstrated a catalytic effect of calcium-containing ash particles. Reactivity of soot produced by the engine running with the high calcium containing lubrication oil was increased. Similarly, the results indicated that the catalytic washcoat on the filter increased soot oxidation rates on-filter, especially at low soot loading. Conversely, the ZDDP oil additive exhibited a reactivity inhibiting effect, resulting in lower soot oxidation rates. This work represents the first known in-situ soot oxidative reactivity measurements on a GPF and elucidates the effect of lubrication oil additives and catalytic washcoat on oxidation rate.

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