TY - JOUR
T1 - On-road measurement of post-catalyst ammonia emissions from gasoline and hybrid vehicles using quantum cascade laser detector
AU - Li, Ruonan
AU - Wang, Chongyao
AU - Wang, Xin
AU - Luo, Jiaxin
AU - Yin, Dailin
AU - Wen, Miao
AU - Hao, Lijun
AU - Tan, Jianwei
AU - Ge, Yunshan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2025/1/1
Y1 - 2025/1/1
N2 - Ammonia emissions from gasoline vehicles have been confirmed an essential precursor of urban secondary aerosols. To more comprehensively understand the formation mechanisms and better control vehicle-related ammonia, this paper measured the on-road ammonia emissions from six conventional and four hybrid vehicles using a state-of-the-art Quantum Cascade Laser analyzer on urban, rural, and highway routes. The test vehicles emitted 0.01–4.27 mg/km of ammonia emissions, with a fleet average of 1.04 mg/km. Compared to the previous laboratory tests, the results of this study were low because of the high emission standards of the vehicles and the near-zero emissions during rural driving. Most test vehicles showed high ammonia emissions during engine warm-up, while some vehicles also had ammonia peaks during dynamic highway driving. On average, hybrid vehicles emitted 60.7% less ammonia emissions than the conventional candidates. It is confirmed that ammonia was formed when incomplete oxidation products presented on a warm catalyst. Engine warm-up, dynamic highway driving, particulate filter regeneration, and hybrid engine re-starting could be important sources. It is hypothesized that the ammonia formed on the upstream catalyst could be consumed by the downstream catalyst at moderate catalyst temperature, resulting in the near-zero ammonia emissions during rural driving.
AB - Ammonia emissions from gasoline vehicles have been confirmed an essential precursor of urban secondary aerosols. To more comprehensively understand the formation mechanisms and better control vehicle-related ammonia, this paper measured the on-road ammonia emissions from six conventional and four hybrid vehicles using a state-of-the-art Quantum Cascade Laser analyzer on urban, rural, and highway routes. The test vehicles emitted 0.01–4.27 mg/km of ammonia emissions, with a fleet average of 1.04 mg/km. Compared to the previous laboratory tests, the results of this study were low because of the high emission standards of the vehicles and the near-zero emissions during rural driving. Most test vehicles showed high ammonia emissions during engine warm-up, while some vehicles also had ammonia peaks during dynamic highway driving. On average, hybrid vehicles emitted 60.7% less ammonia emissions than the conventional candidates. It is confirmed that ammonia was formed when incomplete oxidation products presented on a warm catalyst. Engine warm-up, dynamic highway driving, particulate filter regeneration, and hybrid engine re-starting could be important sources. It is hypothesized that the ammonia formed on the upstream catalyst could be consumed by the downstream catalyst at moderate catalyst temperature, resulting in the near-zero ammonia emissions during rural driving.
KW - Light-duty gasoline vehicle
KW - Post-catalyst ammonia emission
KW - Real driving emission
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85209092173&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.envpol.2024.125319
DO - 10.1016/j.envpol.2024.125319
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85209092173
SN - 0269-7491
VL - 364
JO - Environmental Pollution
JF - Environmental Pollution
M1 - 125319
ER -