Gas-phase composition and secondary organic aerosol formation from standard and particle filter-retrofitted gasoline direct injection vehicles investigated in a batch and flow reactor
Gasoline direct injection (GDI) vehicles have recently been identified as a significant source of carbonaceous aerosol, of both primary and secondary origin. Here we investigated primary emissions and secondary organic aerosol (SOA) from four GDI vehicles, two of which were also retrofitted with a p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Atmospheric chemistry and physics 2018-07, Vol.18 (13), p.9929-9954 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Gasoline direct injection (GDI) vehicles have recently been identified as a
significant source of carbonaceous aerosol, of both primary and secondary
origin. Here we investigated primary emissions and secondary organic aerosol
(SOA) from four GDI vehicles, two of which were also retrofitted with a
prototype gasoline particulate filter (GPF). We studied two driving test
cycles under cold- and hot-engine conditions. Emissions were characterized by
proton transfer reaction time-of-flight mass spectrometry (gaseous
non-methane organic compounds, NMOCs), aerosol mass spectrometry (sub-micron
non-refractory particles) and light attenuation measurements (equivalent
black carbon (eBC) determination using Aethalometers) together with
supporting instrumentation. Atmospheric processing was simulated using the
PSI mobile smog chamber (SC) and the potential aerosol mass oxidation flow
reactor (OFR). Overall, primary and secondary particulate matter (PM) and
NMOC emissions were dominated by the engine cold start, i.e., before thermal
activation of the catalytic after-treatment system. Trends in the
SOA oxygen to carbon ratio (O : C) for OFR and SC were
related to different OH exposures, but divergences in the H : C remained
unexplained. SOA yields agreed within experimental variability between the
two systems, with a tendency for higher values in the OFR than in the SC (or,
vice versa, lower values in the SC). A few aromatic compounds dominated the
NMOC emissions, primarily benzene, toluene, xylene isomers/ethylbenzene and
C3-benzene. A significant fraction of the SOA was explained by those
compounds, based on comparison of effective SOA yield curves with those of
toluene, o-xylene and 1,2,4-trimethylbenzene determined in our OFR, as well
as others from literature. Remaining discrepancies, which were smaller in the
SC and larger in the OFR, were up to a factor of 2 and may have resulted from
diverse reasons including unaccounted precursors and matrix effects. GPF
retrofitting significantly reduced primary PM through removal of refractory
eBC and partially removed the minor POA fraction. At cold-started conditions
it did not affect hydrocarbon emission factors, relative chemical composition
of NMOCs or SOA formation, and likewise SOA yields and bulk composition
remained unaffected. GPF-induced effects at hot-engine conditions
deserve attention in further studies. |
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ISSN: | 1680-7324 1680-7316 1680-7324 |
DOI: | 10.5194/acp-18-9929-2018 |