1. First gaseous sulfuric acid measurements in automobile exhaust: Implications for volatile nanoparticle formation
- Author
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Heinfried Aufmhoff, T. Lähde, Kaarle Hämeri, Tanja Schuck, Liisa Pirjola, and Frank Arnold
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Waste management ,Chemistry ,Exhaust gas ,Sulfuric acid ,010501 environmental sciences ,Diesel engine ,01 natural sciences ,Aerosol ,law.invention ,Diesel fuel ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chemical engineering ,13. Climate action ,law ,Ultrafine particle ,Catalytic converter ,Mass fraction ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Gaseous sulfuric acid (GSA) is thought to represent an important if not the most important nucleating gas present in modern diesel automobile exhaust. It triggers the formation of new aerosol particles, which grow by condensation and coagulation. Here we report on the first measurements of GSA in automobile exhaust. The experiment was made using a modern passenger diesel car equipped with an exhaust after-treatment system composed of an oxidation catalyst and a diesel-particle filter. The diesel fuel used had an ultra-low sulfur mass fraction of only 5×10 −6 . Measured GSA number concentrations reached up to 1×10 9 cm −3 . Freshly nucleated particles with diameters larger than 3 nm were also measured. The concentrations reached up to 1×10 5 cm −3 and were positively correlated with GSA for GSA exceeding a threshold value in the range of 5×10 7 –2×10 8 cm −3 . This suggests that GSA was involved in the formation of new volatile particles.
- Published
- 2006
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