Paper
16 September 2014 Studying biofuel aerosol evaporation rates with single particle manipulation
S. Corsetti, R. E. H. Miles, J. P. Reid, J. Kiefer, D. McGloin
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The significant increase in the air pollution, and the impact on climate change due to the burning of fossil fuel has led to the research of alternative energies. Bio-ethanol obtained from a variety of feedstocks can provide a feasible solution. Mixing bio-ethanol with gasoline leads to a reduction in CO emission and in NOx emissions compared with the use of gasoline alone. However, adding ethanol leads to a change in the fuel evaporation. Here we present a preliminary investigation of evaporation times of single ethanol-gasoline droplets. In particular, we investigated the different evaporation rate of the droplets depending on the variation in the percentage of ethanol inside them. Two different techniques have been used to trap the droplets. One makes use of a 532nm optical tweezers set up, the other of an electrodynamics balance (EDB). The droplets decreasing size was measured using video analysis and elastic light scattering respectively. In the first case measurements were conducted at 293.15 K and ambient humidity. In the second case at 280.5 K and a controlled environment has been preserved by flowing nitrogen into the chamber. Binary phase droplets with a higher percentage of ethanol resulted in longer droplet lifetimes. Our work also highlights the advantages and disadvantages of each technique for such studies. In particular it is challenging to trap droplets with low ethanol content (such as pure gasoline) by the use of EDB. Conversely such droplets are trivial to trap using optical tweezers.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
S. Corsetti, R. E. H. Miles, J. P. Reid, J. Kiefer, and D. McGloin "Studying biofuel aerosol evaporation rates with single particle manipulation", Proc. SPIE 9164, Optical Trapping and Optical Micromanipulation XI, 91642W (16 September 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2061378
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KEYWORDS
Bioalcohols

Aerosols

Optical tweezers

Atmospheric particles

Electrodynamics

Biofuels

Light scattering

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