posted on 2023-07-05, 19:35authored byGeorgios
A. Kelesidis, Amogh Nagarkar, Una Trivanovic, Sotiris E. Pratsinis
Soot from jet fuel combustion in aircraft engines contributes
to
global warming through the formation of contrail cirrus clouds that
make up to 56% of the total radiative forcing from aviation. Here,
the elimination of such emissions is explored through N2 injection (containing 0–25 vol % O2) at the exhaust
of enclosed spray combustion of jet fuel that nicely emulates aircraft
soot emissions. It is shown that injecting N2 containing
5 vol % of O2 enhances the formation of polyaromatic hydrocarbons
(PAHs) that adsorb on the surface of soot. This increases soot number
density and volume fraction by 25 and 80%, respectively. However,
further increasing the O2 concentration to 20 or 25 vol
% enhances oxidation and nearly eliminates soot emissions from jet
fuel spray combustion, reducing the soot number density and volume
fraction by 87.3 or 95.4 and 98.3 or 99.6%, respectively. So, a judicious
injection of air just after the aircraft engine exhaust can drastically
reduce soot emissions and halve the radiative forcing due to aviation,
as shown by soot mobility, X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy,
nitrogen adsorption, microscopy, and thermogravimetric analysis (for
the organic to total carbon ratio) measurements.