4 research outputs found
Components of Particle Emissions from Light-Duty Spark-Ignition Vehicles with Varying Aromatic Content and Octane Rating in Gasoline
Typical gasoline
consists of varying concentrations of aromatic
hydrocarbons and octane ratings. However, their impacts on particulate
matter (PM) such as black carbon (BC) and water-soluble and insoluble
particle compositions are not well-defined. This study tests seven
2012 model year vehicles, which include one port fuel injection (PFI)
configured hybrid vehicle, one PFI vehicle, and six gasoline direct
injection (GDI) vehicles. Each vehicle was driven on the Unified transient
testing cycle (UC) using four different fuels. Three fuels had a constant
octane rating of 87 with varied aromatic concentrations at 15%, 25%,
and 35%. A fourth fuel with higher octane rating, 91, contained 35%
aromatics. BC, PM mass, surface tension, and water-soluble organic
mass (WSOM) fractions were measured. The water-insoluble mass (WIM)
fraction of the vehicle emissions was estimated. Increasing fuel aromatic
content increases BC emission factors (EFs) of transient cycles. BC
concentrations were higher for the GDI vehicles than the PFI and hybrid
vehicles, suggesting a potential climate impact for increased GDI
vehicle production. Vehicle steady-state testing showed that the hygroscopicity
of PM emissions at high speeds (70 mph; κ > 1) are much larger
than emissions at low speeds (30 mph; κ < 0.1). Iso-paraffin
content in the fuels was correlated to the decrease in WSOM emissions.
Both aromatic content and vehicle speed increase the amount of hygroscopic
material found in particle emissions
Will Aerosol Hygroscopicity Change with Biodiesel, Renewable Diesel Fuels and Emission Control Technologies?
The
use of biodiesel and renewable diesel fuels in compression
ignition engines and aftertreatment technologies may affect vehicle
exhaust emissions. In this study two 2012 light-duty vehicles equipped
with direct injection diesel engines, diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC),
diesel particulate filter (DPF), and selective catalytic reduction
(SCR) were tested on a chassis dynamometer. One vehicle was tested
over the Federal Test Procedure (FTP) cycle on seven biodiesel and
renewable diesel fuel blends. Both vehicles were exercised over double
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Highway fuel economy test (HWFET)
cycles on ultralow sulfur diesel (ULSD) and a soy-based biodiesel
blend to investigate the aerosol hygroscopicity during the regeneration
of the DPF. Overall, the apparent hygroscopicity of emissions during
nonregeneration events is consistently low (κ < 0.1) for
all fuels over the FTP cycle. Aerosol emitted during filter regeneration
is significantly more CCN active and hygroscopic; average κ
values range from 0.242 to 0.439 and are as high as 0.843. Regardless
of fuel, the current classification of “fresh” tailpipe
emissions as nonhygroscopic remains true during nonregeneration operation.
However, aftertreatment technologies such as DPF, will produce significantly
more hygroscopic particles during regeneration. To our knowledge,
this is the first study to show a significant enhancement of hygroscopic
materials emitted during DPF regeneration of on-road diesel vehicles.
As such, the contribution of regeneration emissions from a growing
fleet of diesel vehicles will be important
Evaluating the Effects of Aromatics Content in Gasoline on Gaseous and Particulate Matter Emissions from SI-PFI and SIDI Vehicles
We assessed the emissions response
of a fleet of seven light-duty
gasoline vehicles for gasoline fuel aromatic content while operating
over the LA92 driving cycle. The test fleet consisted of model year
2012 vehicles equipped with spark-ignition (SI) and either port fuel
injection (PFI) or direct injection (DI) technology. Three gasoline
fuels were blended to meet a range of total aromatics targets (15%,
25%, and 35% by volume) while holding other fuel properties relatively
constant within specified ranges, and a fourth fuel was formulated
to meet a 35% by volume total aromatics target but with a higher octane
number. Our results showed statistically significant increases in
carbon monoxide, nonmethane hydrocarbon, particulate matter (PM) mass,
particle number, and black carbon emissions with increasing aromatics
content for all seven vehicles tested. Only one vehicle showed a statistically
significant increase in total hydrocarbon emissions. The monoaromatic
hydrocarbon species that were evaluated showed increases with increasing
aromatic content in the fuel. Changes in fuel composition had no statistically
significant effect on the emissions of nitrogen oxides (NO<sub><i>x</i></sub>), formaldehyde, or acetaldehyde. A good correlation
was also found between the PM index and PM mass and number emissions
for all vehicle/fuel combinations with the total aromatics group being
a significant contributor to the total PM index followed by naphthalenes
and indenes
Understanding particles emitted from spray and wall-guided gasoline direct injection and flex fuel vehicles operating on ethanol and iso-butanol gasoline blends
<p>Traffic-related pollutants are an ever-growing concern. However, the composition of particle emissions from new vehicle technologies using relevant current and prospective fuel blends is not known. This study tested four current and up-and-coming vehicle technologies with nine fuel blends with various concentrations of ethanol and iso-butanol. Vehicles were driven on both the federal test procedure (FTP) and the unified cycle (UC). Additional tests were conducted under steady-state speed conditions. The vehicle technologies include spray-guided gasoline direct injection (SG-GDI), wall-guided gasoline direct injection (WG-GDI), port-fuel injection flex fuel vehicle (PFI-FFV), and a wall-guided GDI-FFV. The fuels consisted of 10–83% ethanol and 16–55% iso-butanol in gasoline. The composition of soot, water-insoluble mass (WIM), water-soluble organic mass, and water-insoluble organic mass (WIOM), and OM was measured. The majority of emissions over FTP and UC were water-insoluble (>70%), and WIOM contributes mostly to OM. PFIs have lower soot and particulate matter (PM) emissions in comparison to the WG-GDI technology even while increasing the renewable fuel content. SG-GDI technology, which has not penetrated the market, show promise as soot and PM emissions are comparable to PFI vehicles while preserving the GDI fuel economy benefits. The WIM fraction in GDI-FFV consistently increased with increasing ethanol concentration. Lastly, the impact of the future vehicle emissions and traffic pollutants is discussed. SG-GDI technology is found to be a promising sustainable technology to enhance fuel economy and also reduce PM, soot, and WIM emissions.</p> <p>Copyright © 2017 American Association for Aerosol Research</p
