4.7 Article

Emission characteristics of particulate matter emitted from 4-and 2-stroke marine diesel engines under the background of sulfur emission reduction

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 30, Issue 12, Pages 33660-33673

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-24594-1

Keywords

Particulate matters; Marine diesel engines; Emission characteristics; Volatility characteristics; Size distribution; After-treatment technologies

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With the implementation of sulfur emission regulations, the impact of PM emissions from marine diesel engines on the nearshore environment and human health is becoming increasingly concerning. This study investigates the emission characteristics and influencing factors of PM from marine diesel engines, including number and mass emissions, volatility, composition, and toxicity. The results show that fuel type and engine type influence the size distribution of particle number.
With the implementation of sulfur emission regulations, influences of particulate matter (PM) emitted by marine diesel engines on nearshore atmospheric environment and human health are of increasingly concern. Whatever measures are chosen to meet sulfur emission regulations, the emission characteristic and influencing factors of PM should also be determined. In this study, number and mass emissions, volatility, main composition, and toxicity of PM from marine 4- and 2-stroke diesel engines were investigated. It was found that the size distribution curves of particle number are multiple peaks. Fuels and engines types influence the modal distribution of particles number concentration. For light diesel oil and low-sulfur heavy fuel oil (HFO), particle number was dominated by nucleation and accumulation mode respectively, and particle mass was dominated by accumulation mode. Reduction of fuel sulfur content (FSC) could reduce the particles mass, number and fraction of volatile substance emissions, and small-size particles had the most volatility. Particulate organic carbon (OC) was the main substance, especially for marine 2-stroke diesel engine burning HFO (high- or low-sulfur), while particulate OC contained a large number of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and n-alkanes. The PAHs also had very high toxicity when the engine was burning HFO. The use of low-sulfur HFO cannot make the marine diesel engine meet the current and upcoming PM regulations, and after-treatment technologies or cleaning fuel should be needed.

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