TY - JOUR
T1 - A new method to assess vehicle airborne non-exhaust particles
T2 - Principle, application and emission evaluation
AU - Wang, Yachao
AU - Li, Jiachen
AU - Yin, Hang
AU - Yang, Zhengjun
AU - Zhong, Chongzhi
AU - Sun, Jiaxin
AU - Hu, Yuekun
AU - Li, Zhenguo
AU - Shao, Yuankai
AU - Zhang, Li
AU - Du, Tianqiang
AU - Ge, Yunshan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2023/12/15
Y1 - 2023/12/15
N2 - A method that could assess the whole vehicle non-exhaust particle (NEP) emission from the whole vehicle level was proposed by combining sealed housing with the chassis dynamometer. The intake and exhaust systems were connected to the out of the chamber to avoid possible effects on NEP emissions. The most distinguishing feature of the proposed method is the whole vehicle assessment of the NEP. Based on the proposed method, three vehicles were tested under various conditions. The results proved that the total NEP from the US06 cycle could be four orders of magnitude higher than that of the WLTC cycle due to the higher thermal load. The transient NEP concentration is highly associated with the friction pairs' temperature, and there are two critical temperatures respectively for volatile particles and solid particles. Mechanical friction-dominated test (WLTC) tends to produce larger particles, while thermal process-dominated tests (US06) tend to emit smaller particles. Solid particles occupy <10% of the total particles, and solid particle is dominated with the size at 10– 23 nm. The higher the brake temperature, the higher the solid particle emissions (both concentration and portion). NEP emission decreases when vehicle miles travelled increase. Total NEP number emission factors could be two orders of magnitude higher than the current PN limit for exhaust particles (6*1011#/km). The solid particle emission factor could also be ten times higher than the current PN limit. O and Fe element distribution matches well with the SEM image, which means the proposed method could successfully sample the brake particles. The carbon element weight is dominated by the organic carbon, which might mean that it's the mechanical abrasion dominate the carbon mass. The top 5 dominant element during ICP/MS analysis is Si, Na, Mg, Zn, and Al.
AB - A method that could assess the whole vehicle non-exhaust particle (NEP) emission from the whole vehicle level was proposed by combining sealed housing with the chassis dynamometer. The intake and exhaust systems were connected to the out of the chamber to avoid possible effects on NEP emissions. The most distinguishing feature of the proposed method is the whole vehicle assessment of the NEP. Based on the proposed method, three vehicles were tested under various conditions. The results proved that the total NEP from the US06 cycle could be four orders of magnitude higher than that of the WLTC cycle due to the higher thermal load. The transient NEP concentration is highly associated with the friction pairs' temperature, and there are two critical temperatures respectively for volatile particles and solid particles. Mechanical friction-dominated test (WLTC) tends to produce larger particles, while thermal process-dominated tests (US06) tend to emit smaller particles. Solid particles occupy <10% of the total particles, and solid particle is dominated with the size at 10– 23 nm. The higher the brake temperature, the higher the solid particle emissions (both concentration and portion). NEP emission decreases when vehicle miles travelled increase. Total NEP number emission factors could be two orders of magnitude higher than the current PN limit for exhaust particles (6*1011#/km). The solid particle emission factor could also be ten times higher than the current PN limit. O and Fe element distribution matches well with the SEM image, which means the proposed method could successfully sample the brake particles. The carbon element weight is dominated by the organic carbon, which might mean that it's the mechanical abrasion dominate the carbon mass. The top 5 dominant element during ICP/MS analysis is Si, Na, Mg, Zn, and Al.
KW - Non-exhaust airborne particle emission
KW - Sealed housing for non-exhaust particle (SHNEP)
KW - Whole vehicle assessment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85171331297&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.apenergy.2023.121942
DO - 10.1016/j.apenergy.2023.121942
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85171331297
SN - 0306-2619
VL - 352
JO - Applied Energy
JF - Applied Energy
M1 - 121942
ER -