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Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2011

Regulated and unregulated emissions from highway heavy-duty diesel engines complying with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 2007 emissions standards.

Imad A. Khalek; Thomas Bougher; Patrick M. Merritt; Barbara Zielinska

ABSTRACT As part of the Advanced Collaborative Emissions Study (ACES), regulated and unregulated exhaust emissions from four different 2007 model year U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)-compliant heavy-duty highway diesel engines were measured on an engine dynamometer. The engines were equipped with exhaust high-efficiency catalyzed diesel particle filters (C-DPFs) that are actively regenerated or cleaned using the engine control module. Regulated emissions of carbon monoxide, nonmethane hydrocarbons, and particulate matter (PM) were on average 97, 89, and 86% lower than the 2007 EPA standard, respectively, and oxides of nitrogen (NOx) were on average 9% lower. Unregulated exhaust emissions of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) emissions were on average 1.3 and 2.8 times higher than the NO2 emissions reported in previous work using 1998- and 2004-technology engines, respectively. However, compared with other work performed on 1994- to 2004-technology engines, average emission reductions in the range of 71–99% were observed for a very comprehensive list of unregulated engine exhaust pollutants and air toxic contaminants that included metals and other elements, elemental carbon (EC), inorganic ions, and gas- and particle-phase volatile and semi-volatile organic carbon (OC) compounds. The low PM mass emitted from the 2007 technology ACES engines was composed mainly of sulfate (53%) and OC (30%), with a small fraction of EC (13%) and metals and other elements (4%). The fraction of EC is expected to remain small, regardless of engine operation, because of the presence of the high-efficiency C-DPF in the exhaust. This is different from typical PM composition of pre-2007 engines with EC in the range of 10–90%, depending on engine operation. Most of the particles emitted from the 2007 engines were mainly volatile nuclei mode in the sub-30-nm size range. An increase in volatile nanoparticles was observed during C-DPF active regeneration, during which the observed particle number was similar to that observed in emissions of pre-2007 engines. However, on average, when combining engine operation with and without active regeneration events, particle number emissions with the 2007 engines were 90% lower than the particle number emitted from a 2004-technology engine tested in an earlier program. IMPLICATIONS To meet the 2007 EPA heavy-duty highway PM emissions standard, engine manufacturers have elected to equip engine exhaust with a high-efficiency C-DPF. Because of the use of the C-DPF, the PM emissions were 86% below the 2007 standard, and many unregulated gas and particle-phase emissions compounds were substantially lower than those emitted from pre-2007-technology engines. Signifi-cant air quality benefits can be expected as the C-DPF technology, or other equivalent technology, continues to be applied to future highway engines and to other nonroad and stationary diesel engines.


SAE transactions | 2005

Regulated and Unregulated Exhaust Emissions Comparison for Three Tier II Non-Road Diesel Engines Operating on Ethanol-Diesel Blends

Patrick M. Merritt; Vlad Ulmet; Robert L. McCormick; William E. Mitchell; Kirby J. Baumgard

Regulated and unregulated emissions (individual hydrocarbons, ethanol, aldehydes and ketones, polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), nitro-PAH, and soluble organic fraction of particulate matter) were characterized in engines utilizing duplicate ISO 8178-C1 eight-mode tests and FTP smoke tests. Certification No. 2 diesel (400 ppm sulfur) and three ethanol/diesel blends, containing 7.7 percent, 10 percent, and 15 percent ethanol, respectively, were used. The three, Tier II, off-road engines were 6.8-L, 8.1-L, and 12.5-L in displacement and each had differing fuel injection system designs. It was found that smoke and particulate matter emissions decreased with increasing ethanol content. Changes to the emissions of carbon monoxide and oxides of nitrogen varied with engine design, with some increases and some decreases. As expected, increasing ethanol concentration led to higher emissions of acetaldehyde (increases ranging from 27 to 139 percent). Benzene emissions were reduced by up to 50 percent with the ethanol-blended fuels. Emissions of 1,3-butadiene were also substantially decreased, with reductions ranging from 24 to 82 percent. Isolated trends were noted for certain PAHs. There was a decrease in 1-nitropyrene with use of ethanol in all cases. Particulate phase 1-nitropyrene was reduced from 18 to 62 percent. There was also a general increase in the proportion of heavy PAHs in the particulate phase with ethanol use, and although less pronounced, a general decrease in light PAHs in the particulate phase.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2015

Regulated and unregulated emissions from modern 2010 emissions-compliant heavy-duty on-highway diesel engines

Imad A. Khalek; Matthew G. Blanks; Patrick M. Merritt; Barbara Zielinska

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) established strict regulations for highway diesel engine exhaust emissions of particulate matter (PM) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) to aid in meeting the National Ambient Air Quality Standards. The emission standards were phased in with stringent standards for 2007 model year (MY) heavy-duty engines (HDEs), and even more stringent NOX standards for 2010 and later model years. The Health Effects Institute, in cooperation with the Coordinating Research Council, funded by government and the private sector, designed and conducted a research program, the Advanced Collaborative Emission Study (ACES), with multiple objectives, including detailed characterization of the emissions from both 2007- and 2010-compliant engines. The results from emission testing of 2007-compliant engines have already been reported in a previous publication. This paper reports the emissions testing results for three heavy-duty 2010-compliant engines intended for on-highway use. These engines were equipped with an exhaust diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC), high-efficiency catalyzed diesel particle filter (DPF), urea-based selective catalytic reduction catalyst (SCR), and ammonia slip catalyst (AMOX), and were fueled with ultra-low-sulfur diesel fuel (~6.5 ppm sulfur). Average regulated and unregulated emissions of more than 780 chemical species were characterized in engine exhaust under transient engine operation using the Federal Test Procedure cycle and a 16-hr duty cycle representing a wide dynamic range of real-world engine operation. The 2010 engines’ regulated emissions of PM, NOX, nonmethane hydrocarbons, and carbon monoxide were all well below the EPA 2010 emission standards. Moreover, the unregulated emissions of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), nitroPAHs, hopanes and steranes, alcohols and organic acids, alkanes, carbonyls, dioxins and furans, inorganic ions, metals and elements, elemental carbon, and particle number were substantially (90 to >99%) lower than pre-2007-technology engine emissions, and also substantially (46 to >99%) lower than the 2007-technology engine emissions characterized in the previous study. Implications: Heavy-duty on-highway diesel engines equipped with DOC/DPF/SCR/AMOX and fueled with ultra-low-sulfur diesel fuel produced lower emissions than the stringent 2010 emission standards established by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. They also resulted in significant reductions in a wide range of unregulated toxic emission compounds relative to older technology engines. The increased use of newer technology (2010+) diesel engines in the on-highway sector and the adaptation of such technology by other sectors such as nonroad, displacing older, higher emissions engines, will have a positive impact on ambient levels of PM, NOx, and volatile organic compounds, in addition to many other toxic compounds.


Air Quality, Atmosphere & Health | 2012

Relationships of attached garage and home exposures to fuel type and emission levels of garage sources

Barbara Zielinska; Eric M. Fujita; Will Ollison; Dave Campbell; John C. Sagebiel; Patrick M. Merritt; Lawrence R. Smith

Mobile source air toxics (MSAT) may pose an adverse health risk, especially in microenvironments with high exposures to vehicle exhaust or evaporative emissions. Although programs such as reformulated gasoline are intended to reduce the emissions of MSAT and ozone precursors, uncertainties remain regarding population exposures associated with both oxygenate-gasoline blends and conventional gasoline. Measurements were carried out in San Antonio, Texas under controlled conditions to establish relationships between vehicle tailpipe and evaporative emissions and concentration levels in a residence with an attached garage. This paper concentrates on the influence of vehicle type (sedan versus pickup truck), its operational mode (normal versus malfunction), and fuel type (conventional versus oxygenated) on the pollutant levels in the attached garage and adjacent room (kitchen).


Archive | 1997

Cylindrical proton exchange membrane fuel cells and methods of making same

Edward Albert Bass; Patrick M. Merritt; Christopher A. Sharp; Craig Marshall Wall; John Campbell


SAE transactions | 1998

Development of an Ethanol-Fueled Ultra-Low Emissions Vehicle

Lee G. Dodge; Ken Shouse; Joe Grogan; Douglas M. Leone; Kevin A. Whitney; Patrick M. Merritt


Powertrain & Fluid Systems Conference and Exhibition | 2006

Unregulated Exhaust Emissions from Alternate Diesel Combustion Modes

Patrick M. Merritt; Yiqun Huang; Magdi K. Khair; Joseph Pan


International Fuels & Lubricants Meeting & Exposition | 1993

Heavy-Duty Diesel Hydrocarbon Speciation:Key Issues and Technological Challenges

Matthew S. Newkirk; Lawence R. Smith; Patrick M. Merritt


SAE International Journal of Fuels and Lubricants | 2008

Catalytic Formulation for NO2 Suppression and Control

Magdi K. Khair; Patrick M. Merritt; Qilong Lu; Jacques Lemaire; Jean-Paul Morin; Keld Johansen


SAE International journal of engines | 2008

Development of a Synthetic Diesel Exhaust

E. Robert Fanick; Patrick M. Merritt; King D. Eng

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Christopher A. Sharp

Southwest Research Institute

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E. Robert Fanick

Southwest Research Institute

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Eric M. Fujita

Desert Research Institute

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Imad A. Khalek

Southwest Research Institute

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Lawrence R. Smith

Southwest Research Institute

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Magdi K. Khair

Southwest Research Institute

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Will Ollison

American Petroleum Institute

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Dave Campbell

Desert Research Institute

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