Measuring
Particulate Emissions of Light Duty Passenger
Vehicles Using Integrated Particle Size Distribution (IPSD)
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Abstract
The California Air
Resources Board (ARB) adopted the low emission
vehicle (LEV) III particulate matter (PM) standards in January 2012,
which require, among other limits, vehicles to meet 1 mg/mi over the
federal test procedure (FTP). One possible alternative measurement
approach evaluated to support the implementation of the LEV III standards
is integrated particle size distribution (IPSD), which reports real-time
PM mass using size distribution and effective density. The IPSD method
was evaluated using TSI’s engine exhaust particle sizer (EEPS,
5.6–560 nm) and gravimetric filter data from more than 250
tests and 34 vehicles at ARB’s Haagen-Smit Laboratory (HSL).
IPSD mass was persistently lower than gravimetric mass by 56–75%
over the FTP tests and by 81–84% over the supplemental FTP
(US06) tests. Strong covariance between the methods suggests test-to-test
variability originates from actual vehicle emission differences rather
than measurement accuracy, where IPSD offered no statistical improvement
over gravimetric measurement variability