In-depth characterization of exhaust particles performed on-board a modern cruise ship applying a scrubber

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6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

To comply with environmental regulations, ship operators may adopt exhaust after-treatment devices such as scrubbers or selective catalytic reduction (SCR). Beyond gaseous emission control, these technologies impact the exhaust particles emitted from marine engines to the atmosphere. This study characterizes comprehensively the chemical composition and physical properties of exhaust aerosol particles upstream and downstream a hybrid scrubber operating in open loop mode on-board a modern cruise ship. The study considers two engines, one equipped with SCR and both with scrubber, during engine load conditions of 75 % and 40 %, and the influence of marine gas oil (MGO) use in addition to heavy fuel oil (HFO). At least 4 different particle types were observed in the exhaust based on transmission electron microscopy (TEM) studies both upstream and downstream scrubber, and both scrubber and SCR affected the particle number size distribution (PSD). The geometric mean diameter (GMD) of the particles increased over scrubber both due to removal of nucleation mode particles and particle growth in the scrubber. The scrubber effectively decreased particle number (PN) and, also, non-volatile particles, but the effect depended on particle size and no significant decrease was observed in number of particles above 50 nm, typically comprising black carbon (BC) and in the case of HFO combustion, also asymmetrical metal containing particles. In addition to PN, concentrations of PAH compounds were reduced in the scrubber. The results may be further utilized when including the exhaust aerosol characteristics from ships applying scrubbers to emission inventories, as well as climate and air quality models.
Original languageEnglish
Article number174052
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Volume946
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Oct 2024
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Funding

The study was supported by the Business Finland (SEA-EFFECTS BC, 40357/14), Trafi (172834/2016) and industrial partners, W\u00E4rtsil\u00E4, Pegasor , Spectral Engines , Gasmet , VG-Shipping , HaminaKotka Satama Oy , Oiltanking Finland Oy and Kine Robotics . Niina Kuittinen acknowledges funding from K.F. and Maria Dunderberg Foundation and Merenkulun s\u00E4\u00E4ti\u00F6 Foundation . Jyrki Ristim\u00E4ki (Royal Caribbean Group) is thanked for assistance in measurement planning and commenting the manuscript.

Keywords

  • Exhaust aerosol
  • Marine engine
  • Particle emissions
  • SCR
  • Scrubber

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