4.8 Article

On-Board Sensor-Based NOx Emissions from Heavy-Duty Diesel Vehicles

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 9, Pages 5504-5511

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b07048

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Funding

  1. CARB [13-301]

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Real-world nitrogen oxides (NO) emissions were estimated using on-board sensor readings from 72 heavy-duty diesel vehicles (HDDVs) equipped with a Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) system in California. The results showed that there were large differences between in-use and certification NOx emissions, with 12 HDDVs emitting more than three times the standard during hot-running and idling operations in the real world. The overall NOx conversion efficiencies of the SCR system on many vehicles were well below the 90% threshold that is expected for an efficient SCR system, even when the SCR system was above the optimum operating temperature threshold of 250 degrees C. This could potentially be associated with SCR catalyst deterioration on some engines. The Not-to-Exceed (NTE) requirements currently used by the heavy-duty in-use compliance program were evaluated using on-board NOx sensor data. Valid NTE events covered only 4.2-16.4% of the engine operation and 6.6-34.6% of the estimated NOx emissions. This work shows that low cost on-board NOx sensors are a convenient tool to monitor in-use NOx emissions in real-time, evaluate the SCR system performance, and identify vehicle operating modes with high NOx emissions. This information can inform certification and compliance programs to ensure low in-use NOx emissions.

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