Particle number, mass, and black carbon emissions from fuel-operated auxiliary heaters in real vehicle use

Atmospheric Environment: X(2022)

引用 1|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
Fuel-operated auxiliary heaters (AHs) are frequent solutions to heat the vehicle engines and cabins in cold areas. Particulate exhaust emissions of AHs are unregulated; therefore, their contribution to local air quality and thus human health and even the global emissions budget is unknown. Experiments for studying the AH-originated emissions were performed under Finnish winter conditions mimicking real-world use for six selected vehicles with original AHs installed, including both gasoline- and diesel-powered heaters. We present quantitative results of particle number emissions down to 1.3 nm, particle size distributions, particulate mass, and black carbon, and compare to gaseous emissions. The start-up and shutdown phases showed the highest particle peaks, while the particle concentrations were stable between these. The mean particle number, mass and BC emission factors were found to be as high as 590 × 1012 kgfuel−1, 33 mg kgfuel−1 and mg 18 kgfuel−1 for gasoline-operated heaters and 560 × 1012 kgfuel−1, 20 mg kgfuel−1 and 12 mg kgfuel−1 for diesel-operated heaters. Comparing total number of particles larger than 23 nm emitted during vehicle preheating with AH to vehicle tailpipe emissions during drive shows that a typical heating cycle emits an equal number of particles to drive dozens or even thousands of kilometers.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Auxiliary heaters,Particle formation,Emissions,Cold start emissions,Passenger cars,Traffic,Vehicles,Exhaust emissions,Combustion,Black carbon,Particle size distribution,Vehicle cold start,PM,Soot formation,Particle number,Emission factor
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要