1 research outputs found
Assessing the Impacts of Ethanol and Isobutanol on Gaseous and Particulate Emissions from Flexible Fuel Vehicles
This
study investigated the effects of higher ethanol blends and
an isobutanol blend on the criteria emissions, fuel economy, gaseous
toxic pollutants, and particulate emissions from two flexible-fuel
vehicles equipped with spark ignition engines, with one wall-guided
direct injection and one port fuel injection configuration. Both vehicles
were tested over triplicate Federal Test Procedure (FTP) and Unified
Cycles (UC) using a chassis dynamometer. Emissions of nonmethane hydrocarbons
(NMHC) and carbon monoxide (CO) showed some statistically significant
reductions with higher alcohol fuels, while total hydrocarbons (THC)
and nitrogen oxides (NO<sub><i>x</i></sub>) did not show
strong fuel effects. Acetaldehyde emissions exhibited sharp increases
with higher ethanol blends for both vehicles, whereas butyraldehyde
emissions showed higher emissions for the butanol blend relative to
the ethanol blends at a statistically significant level. Particulate
matter (PM) mass, number, and soot mass emissions showed strong reductions
with increasing alcohol content in gasoline. Particulate emissions
were found to be clearly influenced by certain fuel parameters including
oxygen content, hydrogen content, and aromatics content
