Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (May 2018)

Identification of secondary aerosol precursors emitted by an aircraft turbofan

  • D. Kılıç,
  • D. Kılıç,
  • I. El Haddad,
  • B. T. Brem,
  • B. T. Brem,
  • E. Bruns,
  • C. Bozetti,
  • J. Corbin,
  • L. Durdina,
  • L. Durdina,
  • R.-J. Huang,
  • J. Jiang,
  • F. Klein,
  • A. Lavi,
  • S. M. Pieber,
  • T. Rindlisbacher,
  • Y. Rudich,
  • J. G. Slowik,
  • J. Wang,
  • J. Wang,
  • U. Baltensperger,
  • A. S. H. Prévôt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-18-7379-2018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
pp. 7379 – 7391

Abstract

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Oxidative processing of aircraft turbine-engine exhausts was studied using a potential aerosol mass (PAM) chamber at different engine loads corresponding to typical flight operations. Measurements were conducted at an engine test cell. Organic gases (OGs) and particle emissions pre- and post-PAM were measured. A suite of instruments, including a proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometer (PTR-MS) for OGs, a multigas analyzer for CO, CO2, NOx, and an aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) for nonrefractory particulate matter (NR-PM1) were used. Total aerosol mass was dominated by secondary aerosol formation, which was approximately 2 orders of magnitude higher than the primary aerosol. The chemical composition of both gaseous and particle emissions were also monitored at different engine loads and were thrust-dependent. At idling load (thrust 2.5–7 %), more than 90 % of the secondary particle mass was organic and could mostly be explained by the oxidation of gaseous aromatic species, e.g., benzene; toluene; xylenes; tri-, tetra-, and pentamethyl-benzene; and naphthalene. The oxygenated-aromatics, e.g., phenol, furans, were also included in this aromatic fraction and their oxidation could alone explain up to 25 % of the secondary organic particle mass at idling loads. The organic fraction decreased with thrust level, while the inorganic fraction increased. At an approximated cruise load sulfates comprised 85 % of the total secondary particle mass.