4.8 Article

Exceedances of Secondary Aerosol Formation from In-Use Natural Gas Heavy-Duty Vehicles Compared to Diesel Heavy-Duty Vehicles

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 48, Pages 19979-19989

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.3c04880

Keywords

secondary organic aerosol; heavy-duty vehicles; natural gas vehicles; ammonium nitrate; lubricantoil; chassis dynamometer; primary emissions; environmental chamber

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This study assessed the secondary aerosol formation from both diesel and natural gas heavy-duty vehicles. The results showed that natural gas vehicles emitted higher levels of particulate matter and nonmethane organic gas. In contrast, diesel vehicles with advanced aftertreatment controls had almost negligible secondary organic aerosol formation. Additionally, the lubricating oil in natural gas vehicles may contribute to elevated secondary organic aerosol formation.
This work, for the first time, assessed the secondary aerosol formation from both in-use diesel and natural gas heavy-duty vehicles of different vocations when they were operated on a chassis dynamometer while the vehicles were exercised on different driving cycles. Testing was performed on natural gas vehicles equipped with three-way catalysts (TWCs) and diesel trucks equipped with diesel oxidation catalysts, diesel particulate filters, and selective catalytic reduction systems. Secondary aerosol was measured after introducing dilute exhaust into a 30 m(3) environmental chamber. Particulate matter ranged from 0.18 to 0.53 mg/mile for the diesel vehicles vs 1.4-85 mg/mile for the natural gas vehicles, total particle number ranged from 4.01 x 10(12) to 3.61 x 10(13) for the diesel vehicles vs 5.68 x 10(12)-2.75 x 10(15) for the natural gas vehicles, and nonmethane organic gas emissions ranged from 0.032 to 0.05 mg/mile for the diesel vehicles vs 0.012-1.35 mg/mile for the natural gas vehicles. Ammonia formation was favored in the TWC and was found in higher concentrations for the natural gas vehicles (ranged from similar to 0 to 1.75 g/mile) than diesel vehicles (ranged from similar to 0 to 0.4 g/mile), leading to substantial secondary ammonium nitrate formation (ranging from 8.5 to 98.8 mg/mile for the natural gas vehicles). For the diesel vehicles, one had a secondary ammonium nitrate of 18.5 mg/mile, while the other showed essentially no secondary ammonium nitrate formation. The advanced aftertreatment controls in diesel vehicles resulted in almost negligible secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation (ranging from 0.046 to 2.04 mg/mile), while the natural gas vehicles led to elevated SOA formation that was likely sourced from the engine lubricating oil (ranging from 3.11 to 39.7 mg/mile). For two natural gas vehicles, the contribution of lightly oxidized lubricating oil in the primary organic aerosol was dominant (as shown in the mass spectra analysis), leading to enhanced SOA mass. Heavily oxidized lubricating oil was also observed to contribute to the SOA formation for other natural gas vehicles.

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