Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
VTT's Research Information Portal Home
Home
Profiles
Research output
Projects
Datasets
Research units
Research Infrastructures
Activities
Prizes
Press/Media
Impacts
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Effect of oxidation catalysts on diesel soot particles
Kati Vaaraslahti
, Jyrki Ristimäki
, Annele Virtanen
, Jorma Keskinen
*
, Barouch Giechaskiel
, Anu Solla
*
Corresponding author for this work
VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Tampere University of Technology (TUT)
VTT (former employee or external)
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
Scientific
›
peer-review
71
Citations (Scopus)
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Effect of oxidation catalysts on diesel soot particles'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Alternative Catalysts
50%
Catalytic Oxidation
25%
Density Value
25%
Diesel Particles
25%
Diesel Soot Particles
100%
Dry Particle
25%
Effective Density
25%
Emission Measurement
25%
Flow Sampling
25%
Heavy-duty Diesel Engine
25%
Low Density
25%
Low-sulfur Fuel
25%
No Catalyst
25%
Oxidation Catalyst
100%
Partial Flow
25%
Particle Mass
25%
Particle number
25%
Particle number Concentration
25%
Particle Oxidation Catalyst
100%
Particle Structure
25%
Particulate Matter Emissions
25%
Physical Size
25%
Porous Structure
25%
Sampled-data Systems
25%
Soluble Organic Matter
75%
Soot
25%
Soot Agglomerates
25%
Structure Analysis
25%
Thermodenuder
50%
Engineering
Diesel Engine
100%
Emission Measurement
100%
Particle Number
100%
Particle Number Concentration
100%
Particulate Matter Emission
100%
Physical Size
100%
Porous Structure
100%
Sampling System
100%
INIS
catalysts
100%
concentration
9%
density
18%
diesel engines
9%
distribution
9%
emission
9%
fuels
9%
oxidation
100%
particle structure
9%
particles
100%
particulates
9%
porous materials
9%
sampling
9%
size
18%
soot
100%
sulfur
9%
values
9%
voids
9%
Material Science
Density
100%
Particulate Matter
50%
Chemical Engineering
Atmospheric Aerosols
100%