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Molecular hydrogen (H2) emissions from gasoline and diesel vehicles

Authors :
Bond, S.W.
Alvarez, R.
Vollmer, M.K.
Steinbacher, M.
Weilenmann, M.
Reimann, S.
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Aug2010, Vol. 408 Issue 17, p3596-3606. 11p.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Abstract: This study assesses individual-vehicle molecular hydrogen (H2) emissions in exhaust gas from current gasoline and diesel vehicles measured on a chassis dynamometer. Absolute H2 emissions were found to be highest for motorcycles and scooters (141±38.6mg km−1), approximately 5 times higher than for gasoline-powered automobiles (26.5±12.1mg km−1). All diesel-powered vehicles emitted marginal amounts of H2 (∼0.1mg km−1). For automobiles, the highest emission factors were observed for sub-cycles subject to a cold-start (mean of 53.1±17.0mg km−1). High speeds also caused elevated H2 emission factors for sub-cycles reaching at least 150km h−1 (mean of 40.4±7.1mg km−1). We show that H2/CO ratios (mol mol−1) from gasoline-powered vehicles are variable (sub-cycle means of 0.44–5.69) and are typically higher (mean for automobiles 1.02, for 2-wheelers 0.59) than previous atmospheric ratios characteristic of traffic-influenced measurements. The lowest mean individual sub-cycle ratios, which correspond to high absolute emissions of both H2 and CO, were observed during cold starts (for automobiles 0.48, for 2-wheelers 0.44) and at high vehicle speeds (for automobiles 0.73, for 2-wheelers 0.45). This finding illustrates the importance of these conditions to observed H2/CO ratios in ambient air. Overall, 2-wheelers displayed lower H2/CO ratios (0.48–0.69) than those from gasoline-powered automobiles (0.75–3.18). This observation, along with the lower H2/CO ratios observed through studies without catalytic converters, suggests that less developed (e.g. 2-wheelers) and older vehicle technologies are largely responsible for the atmospheric H2/CO ratios reported in past literature. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
408
Issue :
17
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
51810569
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2010.04.055