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Dive into the research topics where William H. Robertson is active.

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Featured researches published by William H. Robertson.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

Effect of advanced aftertreatment for PM and NOx reduction on heavy-duty diesel engine ultrafine particle emissions.

Jorn D. Herner; Shaohua Hu; William H. Robertson; Tao Huai; M.-C. Oliver Chang; Paul Rieger; Alberto Ayala

Four heavy-duty and medium-duty diesel vehicles were tested in six different aftertreament configurations using a chassis dynamometer to characterize the occurrence of nucleation (the conversion of exhaust gases to particles upon dilution). The aftertreatment included four different diesel particulate filters and two selective catalytic reduction (SCR) devices. All DPFs reduced the emissions of solid particles by several orders of magnitude, but in certain cases the occurrence of a volatile nucleation mode could increase total particle number emissions. The occurrence of a nucleation mode could be predicted based on the level of catalyst in the aftertreatment, the prevailing temperature in the aftertreatment, and the age of the aftertreatment. The particles measured during nucleation had a high fraction of sulfate, up to 62% of reconstructed mass. Additionally the catalyst reduced the toxicity measured in chemical and cellular assays suggesting a pathway for an inverse correlation between particle number and toxicity. The results have implications for exposure to and toxicity of diesel PM.


Aerosol Science and Technology | 2009

Evaluation of the European PMP Methodologies during On-Road and Chassis Dynamometer Testing for DPF Equipped Heavy-Duty Diesel Vehicles

Kent C. Johnson; Thomas D. Durbin; Heejung Jung; Ajay Chaudhary; David R. Cocker; Jorn D. Herner; William H. Robertson; Tao Huai; Alberto Ayala; David B. Kittelson

This study evaluated the UN-ECE Particle Measurement Programme (PMP) protocol for the measurement of solid particle number emissions under laboratory and on-road conditions for two passive diesel particle filters (DPF)–equipped medium and heavy-heavy duty diesel vehicles. The PMP number emissions were lower than the European light-duty certification value (9.6 × 1011 #/mi) for all standardized cycles, but exceeded this value during some higher load on-road driving conditions. Particle number measurements were generally less variable than those of the PM mass for the on-road testing, but had comparable or greater variability than PM mass for the laboratory measurements due to outliers. These outliers appear to be real events that are not apparent with integrated filter methods. The particle number measurements for the low cut point CPCs (3–7 nm) below the PMP system were approximately an order of magnitude higher than those for the PMP-compliant CPC (23 nm), indicating the presence of a large fraction of solid sub-23 nm particles. Although such particles are defined as solid by the PMP method, their actual state is unknown. Nucleation particles with a large sulfate contribution formed under a variety of conditions when the exhaust temperature near the DPF exceeded a “critical” temperature, typically >300°C.


Aerosol Science and Technology | 2012

Nature of Sub-23-nm Particles Downstream of the European Particle Measurement Programme (PMP)-Compliant System: A Real-Time Data Perspective

Zhongqing Zheng; Thomas D. Durbin; Georgios Karavalakis; Kent C. Johnson; Ajay Chaudhary; David R. Cocker; Jorn D. Herner; William H. Robertson; Tao Huai; Alberto Ayala; David B. Kittelson; Heejung S. Jung

This study provides an evaluation of the nature of sub-23-nm particles downstream of the European Particulate Measurement Programme (PMP) methodology, with prescribed cycles and on-road flow-of-traffic driving conditions. Particle number concentrations and size distributions were measured using two PMP measurement systems running simultaneously. For this analysis, the focus is on the real-time results from multiple instruments. The results revealed that a significant fraction of particles downstream of both PMP systems for all tested cycles were below 11 nm. The fraction of sub-11-nm particles observed downstream of the PMP system decreased when the overall dilution ratio of one PMP system was increased from 300 to 1500, suggesting those sub-11-nm particles were formed through re-nucleation of semivolatile precursors. When the evaporation tube temperature was increased from 300°C to 500°C, no difference in particle number concentrations was observed, suggesting that incomplete evaporation of semivolatile particles did not contribute to those sub-11-nm particles. Particle emissions were about one order of magnitude higher during flow-of-traffic driving along a highway with a steep grade than during the prescribed driving cycles. During the same flow-of-traffic condition, a sudden jump in PMP operationally defined solid particle concentration was observed, while the accumulation mode particle concentrations in the constant volume sampling (CVS) tunnel measured by an engine exhaust particle sizer (EEPS) only showed a slight increase. This discrepancy was attributed to the extensive growth of the re-nucleated particles downstream of the PMP systems. Copyright 2012 American Association for Aerosol Research


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2013

Emissions of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and nitro-PAHs from heavy-duty diesel vehicles with DPF and SCR

Shaohua Hu; Jorn D. Herner; William H. Robertson; Reiko Kobayashi; M.-C. Oliver Chang; Shiou-Mei Huang; Barbara Zielinska; Norman Kado; John F. Collins; Paul Rieger; Tao Huai; Alberto Ayala

In total, 24 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in both gas and particle phases and 35 nitro-PAHs in particle phase were analyzed in the exhaust from heavy-duty diesel vehicles equipped with after-treatment for particulate matter (PM) and NOX control. The test vehicles were carried out using a chassis dynamometer under highway cruise, transient Urban Dynamometer Driving Schedule (UDDS), and idle operation. The after-treatment efficiently abated more than 90% of the total PAHs. Indeed, the particle-bound PAHs were reduced by >99%, and the gaseous PAHs were removed at various extents depending on the type of after-treatment and the test cycles. The PAHs in gas phase dominated the total PAH (gas + particle phases) emissions for all the test vehicles and for all cycles; that is, 99% of the two-ring and 98% of the three-ring and 97% of the four-ring and 95% of the carcinogenic PAHs were in the gas-phase after a diesel particle filter (DPF) and not bound to the very small amount of particulate matter left after a DPF. Consequently, an evaluation of the toxicity of DPF exhaust must include this volatile fraction and cannot be based on the particle fraction only. The selective catalytic reduction (SCR) did not appear to promote nitration of the PAHs in general, although there might be some selective nitration of phenanthrene. Importantly the after-treatmtent reduced the equivalent B[a]P (B[a]Peq) emissions by >95%, suggesting a substantial health benefit. Implications: This study demonstrated that after-treatments, including diesel particulate filters (DPF), diesel oxidation catalysts (DOC), and selective catalytic reduction (SCR), significantly reduce the emissions of PAHs from heavy-duty diesel engines. The gas-phase PAHs dominate the total PAH (gas + particle phases) emissions from heavy-duty diesel vehicles retrofitted with various DPFs and not bound to the very small amount of particulate matter left after a DPF. Consequently, an evaluation of the toxicity of DPF exhaust must also include this volatile fraction and cannot be based on the particle fraction only. Supplemental Materials: Supplemental materials are available for this paper. Go to the publishers online edition of the Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association.


Related Information: SAE Paper No. 2009-01-2733; Posted with permission. Presented at the 2009 SAE Powertrain, Fuels, and Lubricants Meeting, 2-4 November 2009, San Antonio, Texas | 2009

On-Road and In-Laboratory Testing to Demonstrate Effects of ULSD, B20 and B99 on a Retrofit Urea-SCR Aftertreatment System

Kevin Walkowicz; Kwangsam Na; William H. Robertson; Keshav Sahay; Mike Bogdanoff; Chris Weaver; Richard Carlson

Emissions changes for a 2005 International tractor operating on low-sulfur diesel and biodiesel in Santa Monica were measured to demonstrate performance and impacts of selective catalytic reduction.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2018

Deriving fuel-based emission factor thresholds to interpret heavy-duty vehicle roadside plume measurements

David C. Quiros; Jeremy D. Smith; Walter Ham; William H. Robertson; Tao Huai; Alberto Ayala; Shaohua Hu

ABSTRACT Remote sensing devices have been used for decades to measure gaseous emissions from individual vehicles at the roadside. Systems have also been developed that entrain diluted exhaust and can also measure particulate matter (PM) emissions. In 2015, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) reported that 8% of in-field diesel particulate filters (DPF) on heavy-duty (HD) vehicles were malfunctioning and emitted about 70% of total diesel PM emissions from the DPF-equipped fleet. A new high-emitter problem in the heavy-duty vehicle fleet had emerged. Roadside exhaust plume measurements reflect a snapshot of real-world operation, typically lasting several seconds. In order to relate roadside plume measurements to laboratory emission tests, we analyzed carbon dioxide (CO2), oxides of nitrogen (NOX), and PM emissions collected from four HD vehicles during several driving cycles on a chassis dynamometer. We examined the fuel-based emission factors corresponding to possible exceedances of emission standards as a function of vehicle power. Our analysis suggests that a typical HD vehicle will exceed the model year (MY) 2010 emission standards (of 0.2 g NOX/bhp-hr and 0.01 g PM/bhp-hr) by three times when fuel-based emission factors are 9.3 g NOX/kg fuel and 0.11 g PM/kg using the roadside plume measurement approach. Reported limits correspond to 99% confidence levels, which were calculated using the detection uncertainty of emissions analyzers, accuracy of vehicle power calculations, and actual emissions variability of fixed operational parameters. The PM threshold was determined for acceleration events between 0.47 and 1.4 mph/sec only, and the NOX threshold was derived from measurements where after-treatment temperature was above 200°C. Anticipating a growing interest in real-world driving emissions, widespread implementation of roadside exhaust plume measurements as a compliment to in-use vehicle programs may benefit from expanding this analysis to a larger sample of in-use HD vehicles. Implications: Regulatory agencies, civil society, and the public at large have a growing interest in vehicle emission compliance in the real world. Leveraging roadside plume measurements to identify vehicles with malfunctioning emission control systems is emerging as a viable new and useful method to assess in-use performance. This work proposes fuel-based emission factor thresholds for PM and NOx that signify exceedances of emission standards on a work-specific basis by analyzing real-time emissions in the laboratory. These thresholds could be used to prescreen vehicles before roadside enforcement inspection or other inquiry, enhance and further develop emission inventories, and potentially develop new requirements for heavy-duty inspection and maintenance (I/M) programs, including but not limited to identifying vehicles for further testing.


Atmospheric Environment | 2014

Gas- and particle-phase primary emissions from in-use, on-road gasoline and diesel vehicles

Andrew A. May; Ngoc T. Nguyen; Albert A. Presto; Timothy D. Gordon; Eric M. Lipsky; Mrunmayi Karve; Alváro Gutierrez; William H. Robertson; M. Zhang; Christopher Brandow; Oliver Chang; Shiyan Chen; Pablo Cicero-Fernandez; Lyman Dinkins; Mark Fuentes; Shiou-Mei Huang; Richard Ling; Jeffrey R. Long; Christine Maddox; John Massetti; Eileen McCauley; Antonio Miguel; Kwangsam Na; Richard Ong; Yanbo Pang; Paul Rieger; Todd Sax; Tin Truong; Thu Vo; Sulekha Chattopadhyay


Environmental Science & Technology | 2009

Effect of Advanced Aftertreatment for PM and NOx Control on Heavy-Duty Diesel Truck Emissions

Jorn D. Herner; Shaohua Hu; William H. Robertson; Tao Huai; John Collins; Harry A. Dwyer; Alberto Ayala


Atmospheric Environment | 2008

Physical properties of particulate matter (PM) from late model heavy-duty diesel vehicles operating with advanced PM and NOx emission control technologies

Subhasis Biswas; Shaohua Hu; Vishal Verma; Jorn D. Herner; William H. Robertson; Alberto Ayala; Constantinos Sioutas


Atmospheric Environment | 2009

Metals emitted from heavy-duty diesel vehicles equipped with advanced PM and NOX emission controls

Shaohua Hu; Jorn D. Herner; Martin M. Shafer; William H. Robertson; James J. Schauer; Harry Dwyer; John F. Collins; Tao Huai; Alberto Ayala

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Alberto Ayala

California Air Resources Board

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Jorn D. Herner

California Air Resources Board

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Tao Huai

California Department of Fish and Wildlife

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Shaohua Hu

California Department of Fish and Wildlife

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Kwangsam Na

California Air Resources Board

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Paul Rieger

California Air Resources Board

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Ajay Chaudhary

University of California

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Harry A. Dwyer

University of California

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John Collins

University of California

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