Directly to content
  1. Publishing |
  2. Search |
  3. Browse |
  4. Recent items rss |
  5. Open Access |
  6. Jur. Issues |
  7. DeutschClear Cookie - decide language by browser settings

Aircraft based measurements of atmospheric Sulfur Dioxide and ground based measurements of gaseous Sulfur (VI) in the simulated internal flow of an aircraft engine: Implications for atmospheric aerosol formation

Katragkou, Eleni

German Title: Flugzeugmessungen von Schwefeldioxid und Bodenmessungen von Schwefelsäure innerhalb einer Fugzeuggasturbine: Auswirkung auf die Bildung von atmospärischen Aerosol

[thumbnail of Abstract.pdf]
Preview
PDF, English
Download (71kB) | Terms of use

[thumbnail of diss_katragkou.pdf]
Preview
PDF, English
Download (14MB) | Terms of use

[thumbnail of titel.pdf]
Preview
PDF, English
Download (44kB) | Terms of use

Citation of documents: Please do not cite the URL that is displayed in your browser location input, instead use the DOI, URN or the persistent URL below, as we can guarantee their long-time accessibility.

Abstract

This dissertation is concerned with aircraft based measurements of sulfur dioxide in the atmosphere and gaseous sulfuric acid measurements in the internal flow of an aircraft gas turbine engine. Both trace gases promote the formation and growth of sulfate aerosol particles which play an important role in the chemistry of the troposphere and perhaps even in climate. An Ion Trap Mass Spectrometer specially adapted for in flight measurements was employed in the aircraft campaign. Several high resolution altitude profiles in polluted and un-polluted tropospheric air were obtained and implications on particle formation and growth was examined. Sulfuric acid was also measured in the simulated internal flow of an aircraft engine with the Ion Trap Mass Spectrometer. The sulfur conversion efficiency epsilon was determined for three different fuel sulfur contents and two combustor operating conditions. The results suggest that modern aircraft engines have conversion efficiencies in the range of a few percent (2.3 ±1.2 %) and that modern engines have larger conversion efficiencies compared to the old engines. Even such low epsilon allow the formation and growth of volatile aerosol particles and also sulfuric acid induced soot activation in aircraft wakes, which initiate formation of contrails and perhaps even cirrus clouds.

Document type: Dissertation
Supervisor: Arnold, Prof. Dr. Frank
Date of thesis defense: 26 November 2003
Date Deposited: 12 Dec 2003 16:41
Date: 2003
Faculties / Institutes: Service facilities > Max-Planck-Institute allgemein > MPI for Nuclear Physics
DDC-classification: 530 Physics
Controlled Keywords: Schwefelemission, Atmosphärisches Aerosol
About | FAQ | Contact | Imprint |
OA-LogoDINI certificate 2013Logo der Open-Archives-Initiative