Abstract:
The health and environmental risks due to airborne nanoparticles are important issues
facing the citizens and governments of the industrialized countries. To assess and
mitigate these risks, increasingly stringent regulations are being enacted to reduce the
particulate emissions from the combustion of hydrocarbon fuels, which primarily
consist of soot. Improvements to the understanding of the formation of soot
nanoparticles and their impact on the health and the environment are required. This
necessitates advances in the state of quantitative measurement of soot.
Laser-induced incandescence (LII) is an optical diagnostic technique for the
measurement of concentration and primary particle diameter of soot with high
selectivity. Limitations with conventional LII were identified and a significantly
enhanced technique, autocompensating LII (AC-LII), was developed employing time-
resolved two-colour pyrometry, low fluence, and an absolute intensity calibration to
address these limitations. AC-LII was shown to measure the soot particle temperature
and automatically compensate for variations in the measurement environment that
affected the peak soot particle temperature. With low fluence, AC-LII was shown to
avoid soot sublimation, which impacted the measurements of concentration and size
with high fluences.
AC-LII was applied to flames and to combustion-generated emissions. At low ambient
temperatures it was discovered that the measured concentration varied with fluence. To
mitigate this issue, it was recommended that AC-LII be performed at a moderate fluence
near the sublimation threshold. In order to assess the impact of distributions of the soot
primary particle diameter and of aggregate size, analysis coupling experiments with a
state-of-the-art numerical model of the heat transfer was performed. The results showed
that AC-LII signal evaluation should begin immediately after an initial anomalous
cooling period but before distribution effects become dominant.
The sensitivity of AC-LII was optimized and applied to measure atmospheric black
carbon concentrations. Comparison to other instruments demonstrated that AC-LII has
significant advantages for the measurement of soot, and represents a major advancementin techniques for nanoparticle characterization.