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In this study, the effects of a diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) coupled with a catalyzed diesel particulate filter (CDPF) with different catalyst loadings on the power, fuel consumption, gaseous and particulate emissions from a non-road diesel engine were investigated. Results showed that the after-treatment had a negligible effect on the power and fuel consumption. The reduction effect of the DOC on the CO and hydrocarbon (HC) increased with the engine load. Further reductions occurred coupling with the CDPF. Increasing the catalyst loading resulted in a more significant reduction in the HC emissions than CO emissions. The DOC could increase the NO2 proportion to 37.9%, and more NO2 was produced when coupled with the CDPF below 250°C; above 250°C, more NO2 was consumed. The after-treatment could reduce more than 99% of the particle number (PN) and 98% of the particle mass (PM). Further reductions in the PN and PM occurred with a higher CDPF catalyst loading. The DOC had a better reduction effect on the nucleation particles than the accumulation ones, but the trend reversed with the CDPF. The DOC shifted the particle size distribution (PSD) to larger particles with an accumulation particle proportion increasing from 13% to 20%, and the geometric mean diameter (GMD) increased from 18.2 to 26.0 nm. The trend reversed with the CDPF and the accumulation particle proportion declined to less than 10%. A lower catalyst loading on the CDPF led to a higher proportion of nucleation particles and a smaller GMD.
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Poeira , GasesRESUMO
The primary purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of a catalyzed continuously regenerating trap (CCRT) system composed of a diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) and a catalyzed diesel particulate filter (CDPF) on the main gaseous and particulate emissions from an urban diesel bus, as well as the durability performance of the CCRT system. Experiments were conducted based on a heavy chassis dynamometer, and a laboratory activity test as well as X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) test were applied to evaluate the changes of the aged CCRT catalyst. Results showed that the CCRT could reduce the CO by 71.5% and the total hydrocarbons (THC) by 88.9%, and meanwhile promote the oxidation of NO. However, the conversion rates for CO and THC dropped to 25.1% and 55.1%, respectively, after the CCRT was used for one year (~60,000â¯km), and the NO oxidation was also weakened. For particulate emissions, the CCRT could reduce 97.4% of the particle mass (PM) and almost 100% of the particle number (PN). The aging of the CCRT resulted in a reduced PM trapping efficiency but had no observable effect on the PN; however, it increased the proportion of nucleation mode particles. The activity test results indicated that the deterioration of the CCRT was directly relevant to the increase in the light-off temperatures of the catalyst for CO, C3H8 and NO2. In addition, the decreased concentrations of the active components Pt2+ and Pt4+ in the catalyst are also important factors in the CCRT deterioration.
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Filtração/instrumentação , Emissões de Veículos/prevenção & controle , Monóxido de Carbono/análise , Catálise , Hidrocarbonetos/análise , Óxidos de Nitrogênio/análise , Material Particulado/análise , Emissões de Veículos/análiseRESUMO
This work investigates the effects of lubricant sulfur contents on the morphology, nanostructure, size distribution and elemental composition of diesel exhaust particle on a light-duty diesel engine. Three kinds of lubricant (LS-oil, MS-oil and HS-oil, all of which have different sulfur contents: 0.182%, 0.583% and 1.06%, respectively) were used in this study. The morphologies and nanostructures of exhaust particles were analyzed using high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Size distributions of primary particles were determined through advanced image-processing software. Elemental compositions of exhaust particles were obtained through X-ray energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS). Results show that as lubricant sulfur contents increase, the macroscopic structure of diesel exhaust particles turn from chain-like to a more complex agglomerate. The inner cores of the core-shell structure belonging to these primary particles change little; the shell thickness decreases, and the spacing of carbon layer gradually descends, and amorphous materials that attached onto outer carbon layer of primary particles increase. Size distributions of primary particles present a unimodal and normal distribution, and higher sulfur contents lead to larger size primary particles. The sulfur content in lubricants directly affects the chemical composition in the particles. The content of C (carbon) decreases as sulfur increases in the lubricants, while the contents of O (oxygen), S (sulfur) and trace elements (including S, Si (silicon), Fe (ferrum), P (phosphorus), Ca (calcium), Zn (zinc), Mg (magnesium), Cl (chlorine) and Ni (nickel)) all increase in particles.
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Lubrificantes/química , Modelos Químicos , Enxofre/química , Emissões de Veículos/análise , Microscopia Eletrônica de Transmissão , Tamanho da Partícula , Espectrometria por Raios XRESUMO
Fossil fuel energy crisis and environmental pollution have initiated the scientific research on alternative fuels. Biodiesel (B100), gas to liquid (G100), and coal to liquid (C100) are superb selections to be substitutes for conventional diesel. To better investigate the emission characteristics of the alternative fuels mentioned above, a portable emission measurement system (PEMS) was used to carry out this study under real-world driving conditions. Results showed that the driving conditions had a notable effect on the vehicle emissions, the CO, THC, and CO2 emissions were higher under urban condition, and the NOx, PM (particle mass), and PN (particle number) emissions were higher under suburban condition. The expressway condition resulted in lower emissions except for PN due to more nucleation particles emitted. The use of B100, G100, and C100 fuels led to a reduction of more than 50% in the CO emission, especially for the C100, but the reduction effects for the THC were not obvious, and among them, G100 is the most prominent. Higher NOx emission was emitted after using the three fuels, especially for the B100; meanwhile, B100 increased the CO2, but G100 and C100 decreased the CO2 emission compared with D100. The PN emissions reduced by 1-2 orders of magnitude in comparison with those from D100 after using the three alternative fuels, and more than 50% of the PM could be reduced. B100 has the most significant particle reduction effect due to its oxygen-containing property, and it produced an evidently higher proportion of nucleation particles than D100, followed by G100 and C100.
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Poluentes Atmosféricos , Biocombustíveis , Carvão Mineral , Emissões de Veículos , Emissões de Veículos/análise , Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise , Monitoramento AmbientalRESUMO
Wall impingement, particularly liquid-wall impingement, has been demonstrated to be one of the critical causes of combustion deterioration in plateau diesel engines. Obviously, the complexity of wall impingement is exacerbated by the plateau scenario. However, fundamental studies specifically dedicated to this phenomenon are still inconclusive and insufficiently detailed, obviating the feasibility of the targeted design and optimization of diesel engines operating in regions with different altitudes. Consequently, the second part of this investigation, presented in this work, focused on the detailed physical and chemical processes of impinging spray combustion under different altitude conditions. A wall impingement system was designed to generate an impinging spray flame. The impingement distance was varied from 77 to 37 mm to cover different situations of wall impingement. The liquid spray, ignition, and combustion processes were visualized in detail by using different optical diagnostics. The results showed that the variation of the liquid length with the impingement distance was mainly dependent on the liquid impingement under the same altitude condition. The effect of the impingement distance on the ignition distance was more sensitive to the altitude. The quantitative analysis of the flame natural luminosity confirmed the decisive effect of the impinging flame morphology on the ambient entrainment and fuel-air mixing under different altitude conditions, and it also revealed that there was an optimal impingement distance under identical altitude conditions to achieve minimum soot emissions. And interestingly, the optimal impingement distance increased with altitude. Finally, the spray combustion processes of an impinging diesel jet were determined to occur in four typical regions, upon which a schematic diagram depicting the flame structure of an impinging diesel jet was proposed to phenomenologically describe the role of altitude in impinging spray combustion processes. Based on this, an attempt was made to explore some new perspectives beyond the popular solutions to recover and improve the performance of plateau diesel engines.
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In this study, the nanostructure, surface functional groups, and oxidation activity of soot particulate along the exhaust after-treatment system of a heavy-duty diesel engine fueled with waste cooking oil (WCO) biodiesel blends are investigated by TEM, XPS, and TGA respectively. The main findings are as follows: Along the exhaust after-treatment system, fringe length of primary particles of soot particulate emitted from tested heavy-duty diesel engine fueled with B0, B10, B20, and B100, i.e., 0%, 10%, 20%, and 100% ratio of WCO biodiesel blended into petroleum diesel in volume respectively increases, while fringe tortuosity and separation distance of primary particles reduces. The fringe length of B10, B20, and B100 is smaller, but the fringe tortuosity and separation distance are larger than that of B0. The O/C ratio of soot particulate tends to increase firstly and then decrease as the exhaust passes through DOC+cDPF and SCR+ASC in sequence. The O/C ratio of B10, B20, and B100 are also higher than that of B0. Soot particulate at cDPF outlet contains carborundum and biuret is found at SCR+ASC outlet. The sp3/sp2 ratio decreases along the exhaust after-treatment system, and B10, B20, and B100 tend to get higher sp3/sp2 ratio than B0. The C-OH and C=O content of soot particulate from different WCO biodiesel blends show generally similar trends along the exhaust after-treatment system, while the activation energy of soot particulate keeps increasing along the exhaust after-treatment system, but decreases with the increasing of blend ratio. These findings can provide useful references for optimizing the after-treatment system for WCO biodiesel blends.
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Biocombustíveis , Nanoestruturas , Oxirredução , Emissões de Veículos , Emissões de Veículos/análise , Nanoestruturas/química , Culinária , Gasolina , Material ParticuladoRESUMO
Soot particles in engine exhaust seriously pollute the atmosphere and endanger human health. For soot oxidation, Pt and Pd precious metal catalysts are widely used and are effective. In this paper, the catalytic characteristics of catalysts with different Pt/Pd mass ratios for soot combustion were studied through X-ray diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Brunauer-Emmett-Teller analysis, scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, the temperature-programmed oxidation reaction, and thermogravimetry. Besides, the adsorption characteristics of soot and O2 on the catalyst surface were explored by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The research results showed that the activity of catalysts for soot oxidation from strong to weak is Pt/Pd = 10:1, Pt/Pd = 5:1, Pt/Pd = 1:0, and Pt/Pd = 1:1. XPS results showed that the concentration of oxygen vacancies in the catalyst is the highest when the Pt/Pd ratio is 10:1. The specific surface area of the catalyst increases first and then decreases with the increase of Pd content. When the Pt/Pd ratio is 10:1, the specific surface area and pore volume of the catalyst reach the maximum. The following are the DFT calculation results. With the increase of Pd content, the adsorption energy of particles on the catalyst surface decreases first and then increases. When the Pt/Pd ratio is 10:1, the adsorption of C on the catalyst surface is the strongest, and the adsorption of O2 is also strong. In addition, this surface has a strong ability to donate electrons. The theoretical simulation results are consistent with the activity test results. The research results have a guiding significance for optimizing the Pt/Pd ratio and improving the soot oxidation performance of the catalyst.
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Due to the inherent combustion characteristics of diesel engines, particulate matter (PM) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) are the main pollutants of diesel engines. NOx emissions under low load and low temperature are the focus of future regulation. Selective catalytic reduction coated on diesel particulate filter (SDPF) can reduce NOx and PM emissions of diesel engines at the same time, especially improving the emission characteristics of NOx under low load and low temperature. In this paper, a light-duty diesel engine with diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) and SDPF was studied, and emission of particulate and gaseous pollutants of the engine before DOC, after DOC, and after SDPF was measured under 10 steady-state operating conditions. The effects of SDPF on particulate size distribution, the filtration efficiency of particulate, and the conversion efficiency of gaseous pollutants were analyzed. The results show that DOC + SDPF can trap PM with particle sizes between 10 and 23 nm by 1-2 orders of magnitude, and the conversion and filtration efficiency of DOC + SDPF for both gaseous pollutants and PM exceeds 90% under low-temperature and low-load conditions. The filtration efficiency of SDPF is 94.37% for PM and 90.36% for PN, and the conversion efficiency is 91.43% for NOx.
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This study investigated the emission characteristics of ultrafine particles based on test bench and on-board measurements. The bench test results showed the ultrafine particle number concentration of the diesel engine to be in the range of (0.56-8.35) x 10(8) cm(-3). The on-board measurement results illustrated that the ultrafine particles were strongly correlated with changes in real-world driving cycles. The particle number concentration was down to 2.0 x 10(6) cm(-3) and 2.7 x 10(7) cm(-3) under decelerating and idling operations and as high as 5.0 x 10(8) cm(-3) under accelerating operation. It was also indicated that the particle number measured by the two methods increased with the growth of engine load at each engine speed in both cases. The particle number presented a "U" shaped distribution with changing speed at high engine load conditions, which implies that the particle number will reach its lowest level at medium engine speeds. The particle sizes of both measurements showed single mode distributions. The peak of particle size was located at about 50-80 nm in the accumulation mode particle range. Nucleation mode particles will significantly increase at low engine load operations like idling and decelerating caused by the high concentration of unburned organic compounds.
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Poluentes Atmosféricos/química , Tamanho da Partícula , Material Particulado/química , Emissões de Veículos/análiseRESUMO
Biodiesel, as one of the most promising alternative fuels, has received more attention because of limited fossil fuels. A comparison of biodiesel and petroleum diesel fuel is discussed as regards engine unregulated exhaust emissions. A diesel fuel, a pure biodiesel fuel, and fuel with 20% V/V biodiesel blend ratio were tested without engine modification The present study examines six typical unregulated emissions by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) method: formaldehyde (HCHO), acetaldehyde (C2 H4 O), acetone (C3 H6 O), toluene (C7 H8), sulfur dioxide (SO2), and carbon dioxide (CO2). The results show addition of biodiesel fuel increases the formaldehyde emission, and B20 fuel has little change, but the formaldehyde emission of pure biodiesel shows a clear trend of addition. Compared with the pure diesel fuel, the acetaldehyde of B20 fuel has a distinct decrease, and the acetaldehyde emission of pure biodiesel is lower than that of the pure diesel fuel at low and middle engine loads, but higher at high engine load. The acetone emission is very low, and increases for B20 and pure biodiesel fuels as compared to diesel fuel. Compared with the diesel fuel, the toluene and sulfur dioxide values of the engine show a distinct decrease with biodiesel blend ratio increasing. It is clear that the biodiesel could reduce aromatic compounds and emissions of diesel engines. The carbon dioxide emission of pure biodiesel has a little lower value than diesel, showing that the biodiesel benefits control of greenhouse gas.
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Biocombustíveis , Espectroscopia de Infravermelho com Transformada de Fourier , Emissões de Veículos , Acetaldeído , Acetona , Formaldeído , Gasolina , PetróleoRESUMO
Used cooking oil (UCO) biodiesel may be one of the most potential alternative fuels in China to lower the dependency on crude oil for transportation. An experimental study has been conducted to assess the interactions between biodiesel produced from UCO in Shanghai and elastomer materials on high-speed marine diesel engines by immersing elastomer materials into conventional fossil diesel, 5, 10, and 20%, of a volumetric blending ratio of UCO biodiesel and pure UCO biodiesel. The test duration is 168 h at different temperatures of 25, 50, and 70 °C. Meanwhile, the effects of the mixing ratio of UCO biodiesel and the immersion temperature on the compatibility of elastomer materials with UCO biodiesel were analyzed. The results revealed that elastomer materials such as nitrile butadiene rubber (NBR), ethylene propylene diene monomer (EPDM), fluororubber (FKM), and silicone rubber (SR) exposed to biodiesel blends would reveal worse but acceptable changes than those exposed to petroleum diesel, including the slight increase of mass and volume and decline of tensile strength and hardness. FKM, NBR, and SR represented better compatibility with pure UCO biodiesel than diesel, and EPDM showed worse compatibility with UCO biodiesel as the blend ratio rises. In general, the recommended volumetric mixing ratio of UCO biodiesel should be no larger than 20%. The present study could be helpful for the investigation of UCO biodiesel blends as a potential fuel to satisfy the energy demand.
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Catalyzed diesel particulate filters (CDPFs) have been widespread used as a technically and economically feasible mean for meeting increasingly stringent emissions limits. An important issue affecting the performance of a CDPF is its aging with using time. In this paper, the effects of noble metal loadings, regions and using mileage on the aging performance of a CDPF were investigated by methods of X-ray diffraction (XRD), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and catalytic activity evaluation. Results showed that aging of the CDPF shifted the XRD characteristic diffraction peaks towards larger angles and increased the crystallinity, showing a slowing downward trend with the increase of the noble metal loadings. In addition, the increase of the noble metal loading would slow down the decline of Pt and Pt4+ concentration caused by aging. The characteristic temperatures of CO, C3H8 conversion and NO2 production increased after aging, and the more the noble metal loadings, the higher the range of the increase. But noticeably, excessive amounts of noble metals would not present the corresponding anti-aging properties. Specifically, the degree of aging in the inlet region was the deepest, the following is the outlet region, and the middle region was the smallest, which were also reflected in the increase range of crystallinity, characteristic temperatures of CO, C3H8 conversion and NO2 production, as well as the decrease range of Pt and Pt4+ concentrations. The increase of aging mileage reduced the size of the aggregates of the soot and ash in CDPFs, however, improved the degree of tightness between particles. Meanwhile Carbon (C) concentration in the soot and ash increased with the aging mileage.
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A comparative experiment was conducted based on a non-road diesel engine to investigate the effects of two after-treatment devices on the engine's emission characteristics as well as their power and fuel consumption performances. The first after-treatment device is a combination of a diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) and a catalytic diesel particulate filter (CDPF). The second device is a single CDPF-coated improved noble metal catalyst. Results showed that the two after-treatment devices had almost no effect on the power and fuel consumption performance. The gaseous and particulate emissions of the engine depended on the operation conditions including the speed and load. However, the dual DOC+CDPF system and the single CDPF reduced more than 81% of the carbon monoxide (CO) and 73% of the hydrocarbon (HC) emissions. Notably, the reduction efficiency by the single CDPF was higher than that of the DOC+CDPF system. In terms of the particulate emissions, both after-treatment devices achieved more than 96% reduction of the particle number (PN) and up to 88% reduction of the particulate mass (PM). Similarly, the single CDPF outperformed the dual DOC+CDPF system in reducing particle emissions. Although no changes occurred in the bimodal particle size distribution of the engine after the installation of the two after-treatment devices, they performed differently in reducing particles with different sizes. The particles reduction efficiency of the DOC+CDPF system was higher than that of the single CDPF for the particles smaller than 14.3 nm, and this trend converted for particles larger than 14.3 nm. Improving the noble metal catalyst load in the CDPF ensured a performance that rivaled the DOC+CDPF system. Apart from the NOx emissions, the installation of a single CDPF with an improved noble metal catalyst load can make the non-road diesel engine meet the limits of the China IV emission regulations.
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Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise , Poluição do Ar/prevenção & controle , Gasolina , Emissões de Veículos/análise , Monóxido de Carbono/análise , Catálise , China , Hidrocarbonetos/análise , Oxirredução , Emissões de Veículos/prevenção & controleRESUMO
Particle number is a key index for evaluating particulate emissions, and diesel oxidation catalysts (DOCs) are one of the most important technologies for controlling the particulate emissions of a diesel engine. In this paper, a novel phenomenological one-dimensional model was established to predict particle number and size distributions at a DOC outlet with the aim of investigating the effects of DOC on particle number emissions. The phenomenological model consisted of two submodels: submodel-1, a global kinetic model for calculating particle size in particle number and size distributions after particles had passed through the DOC, and submodel-2, an original global parametric model for calculating the particle number at the DOC outlet. The effects of the sampling process, fuel properties, and the engine operating condition were considered in submodel-2. An 8.8â¯L, direct-injection, heavy-duty diesel engine was tested. The particle number and size distributions at the DOC inlet and outlet were determined using an engine exhaust particle sizer. The test data, coupled with literature results, were used to calibrate and validate the phenomenological model. This model was then applied to investigate the influence of various factors on particle number and size distributions at the DOC outlet. It was found that dilution temperature, fuel sulfur content, exhaust gas temperature, and gas hourly space velocity (GHSV) played a key role in the particle number after DOC oxidation. The particle number concentration at the DOC outlet increased as fuel sulfur content and exhaust gas temperature increased and decreased as GHSV and dilution temperature increased. In general, results proved that this phenomenological model was accurate enough to predict particle number and size distributions at a DOC outlet under most operating conditions. It may serve as a useful tool for research and development focusing on PM reduction of diesel engines and air pollution control.
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A diesel bus was tested with a China City Bus Cycle (CCBC) on a heavy chassis dynamometer, and the components of the particulate emissions with different after-treatment equipment were investigated. Results showed that OC was less than EC in the particulates of the bus emissions without the use of after-treatment equipment. The organic components were mainly fatty acids (60.9%) and n-alkanes (32.4%), with a few hopanes and PAHs. Fatty acid components were mainly C16:0, C18, C14, and C18:1. The n-alkanes were mainly C18-C24, with C21H44 and C22H46 accounting for the greatest portion. PAH mass was concentrated in medium and small molecular weight components, such as Pyr, FL, and PA. While PAH toxicity was dominated by medium and high molecular weight components, BaP was the most toxic, followed by B(b+k)F, BaA, and IcdP. The total toxicity of the PAHs decreased by 2.7% after DOC treatment and continued to decrease by 89.6%-93.8% after CDPF treatment. After-treatment equipment significantly reduced the OC+EC emissions by 18.9% (DOC) and 70.5%-72.5% (CDPF), but the reduction rate varied from one component to another. The different precious metal loadings of the CDPF did not obviously affect the reduction rate.
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Based on the revolving drum test bench, an experimental study was conducted in heavy-duty diesel vehicle at China Stage â ¢ with and without DOC+CDPF to investigate the effects of DOC+CDPF on the gaseous and particle emission characteristics under C-WTVC driving cycle. The results showed that from city circulation conditions to high way circulation conditions to high-speed circulation conditions, the CO, THC, CO2 and PM emission factors of the test vehicle without DOC+CDPF decreased while NOx and PN emission factors increased, the particle number concentration showed two peaks versus the size of the particles and accumulated particles predominated. After the test vehicle was equipped with DOC+CDPF, the emissions factors decreased and the faster the circulation speed, the greater the decreasing amplitudes of the emissions factors. Throughout the C-WTVC, the decreasing amplitudes of CO, THC, CO2, and NOx emission factors were 70.36%, 72.73%, 17.00% and 7.76%, the PM and PN emission factors decreased by 93.77% and 98.91% respectively. The particle number concentration still had two peaks versus the size of the particles and the nuclear mode particles predominated. Besides, the size of the accumulated particles peak diminished.
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Based on heavy chassis dynamometers, an experimental study was conducted in a diesel bus with proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS). It investigated the effects of volatile organic compound (VOC) emission characteristics with three different diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC)+catalyzed diesel particulate filter (CDPF) after-treatments for a typical Chinese city bus driving cycle (CCBC). The results reveal that the major compounds from the diesel bus are OVOCs, aromatic hydrocarbons, alkenes, alkanes, nitrogenous organic compounds, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), and that the OVOCs account for more than 50%of the total VOCs. With the same precious metal composition and ratio of the proportion in the CDPF catalyst, the emissions of VOCs decrease with an increase in precious metal load. The emission reduction rates of the VOCs are 36.2%, 40.1%, and 41.4%, respectively, when the precious metal loads are 15 g·ft-3 (type A after-treatment device), 25 g·ft-3 (type B), and 35 g·ft-3 (type C). The average emission rates of alkanes for the three kinds of DOC+CDPF after-treatments are all over 59% for the entire CCBC cycle. The type C after-treatment device can reduce the alkane emissions by 70.2%, with a slight advantage for the OVOC reduction compared with type A and type B devices. For unsaturated hydrocarbons, including aromatic hydrocarbons, alkenes, and PAHs, the after-treatment devices have a catalytic effect, but there is no significant difference between them. The emissions of nitrogenous organic compounds are greatly decreased, by 50.5%, with the type A after-treatment, but the reduction rate decreases with an increase in precious metal load. In addition, OVOCs, aromatic hydrocarbons, and alkenes are the most important contributors to ozone formation. The adoption of DOC+CDPF reduces the emissions of VOCs and, therefore, the ozone formation potential. Taking into account the emission reduction rates and costs of the three different after-treatments and for weighting coefficients of 0.8 and 0.2, respectively, the type B after-treatment is the optimal solution.
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This study investigates the influence of noble metal capacity and promoter capacity in diesel oxidation catalysts (DOC) and catalyzed diesel particulate filters (CDPF) on particulate matter (PM) emissions. Four types of exhaust aftertreatments were applied to a diesel bus engine that meets the national â ¢ emissions regulations. On-board tests were conducted respectively. PM emissions from the engine were strongly influenced by noble metal capacity in DOC and CDPF, especially at high speeds (the total number of particles increased by 70.8% when the noble metal capacity decreased by 5 g·ft-3 at 60 km·h-1). The higher the noble metal capacity was, the lower the PM emissions became, especially for PM in nuclei mode. The lanthanide material contributed to reducing PM emissions significantly. The content of precious metals could be reduced by 25% with proper lanthanide material, while the treatment effect of exhaust particles was guaranteed. In summary, aftertreatments are not sensitive to accelerating conditions, but the purification efficiency is obviously different under decontamination conditions.
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Based on heavy chassis dynamometer, an experimental study was conducted in diesel buses compliant with China â ¢,â £,â ¤ emissions standards respectively, fueled with three different blends of petroleum diesel/biodiesel (0%,5%and 10%, V/V biodiesel blends), which investigated the characteristics of particulate matter (PM) emission under CCBC driving cycle. Results of study showed that the total PM number and mass emission from China â ¤ bus respectively decreased by 68.1%,56.2%,57.5% and 52.7%,64.8%, 88.5% compared to China â ¢ bus. When compared to China â £ bus, the PM mass emission decreased by 43.0%, 47.3% and 42.1%, while the number increased by 4.0%,7.6% and 14.7%. The nucleation mode PM emission of China â ¢ bus was mainly from high-speed driving condition, while China â £ and â ¤ buses were from middle-low speed. The accumulation mode PM emissions of China â ¢, â £ and V buses were all mainly from middle-low speed driving conditions. In relatively lower speed conditions, compared to China â ¢ bus, the nucleation mode PM emissions of China â £ and â ¤ buses obviously decreased, so was accumulation mode PM. Compared to China â £ bus, emission of China â ¤ bus did not improve obviously and the nucleation mode PM emission even increased. In high-speed driving condition, the nucleation mode PM emission from China â ¢ bus increased dramatically, while those from China â ¤ and â £ buses slightly increased. Meanwhile, the accumulation PM number and mass emission of China â £ bus was obviously higher than those of China â ¤ and â ¢ buses. When fueled with B10, the relatively bigger sizes PM emission of China â ¢ bus deteriorated rapidly, indicating that China â ¢ bus was not suitable for fuel with high blending ratio of biodiesel.
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Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise , Biocombustíveis , Monitoramento Ambiental , Emissões de Veículos/análise , China , Gasolina , Veículos Automotores , Material ParticuladoRESUMO
Based on heavy chassis dynamometer, an experimental study was conducted in diesel bus with China Stage â ¢, which investigated the effects of gaseous emission characteristics under CCBC driving cycle, such as carbon monoxide (CO), total hydrocarbons (THC), nitric oxide (NO), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), nitrogen oxides (NOx) and carbon dioxide (CO2) with the fresh/aged oxidized catalyst (DOC) and oxidation catalysts coupled catalyzed particulate trap (DOC+CDPF, referred CCRT). The results showed that using fresh and aged DOC/CCRT, the diesel bus could reduce CO, THC and NO emissions, meanwhile increase NO2 emissions, but NOx and CO2 emissions remained basically unchanged. In idle speed, acceleration, deceleration and constant speed of working conditions, the diesel bus using the fresh DOC had better oxidation efficiency of the CO and THC emissions than the bus using the aged DOC. The diesel bus using the fresh CCRT had higher oxidation efficiency of THC emissions, but lower oxidation efficiency of CO emissions than the bus using the aged CCRT. The diesel bus using the fresh DOC/CCRT had a higher rate of NO emissions reductions and NO2 emissions increments than the bus using the aged DOC/CCRT, but it did not basically affect the NOx emissions.