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Development and preliminary evaluation of a particulate matter emission factor model for European motor vehicles.
J Air Waste Manag Assoc. 2000 Oct; 50(10):1805-17.JA

Abstract

Although modeling of gaseous emissions from motor vehicles is now quite advanced, prediction of particulate emissions is still at an unsophisticated stage. Emission factors for gasoline vehicles are not reliably available, since gasoline vehicles are not included in the European Union (EU) emission test procedure. Regarding diesel vehicles, emission factors are available for different driving cycles but give little information about change of emissions with speed or engine load. We have developed size-specific speed-dependent emission factors for gasoline and diesel vehicles. Other vehicle-generated emission factors are also considered and the empirical equation for re-entrained road dust is modified to include humidity effects. A methodology is proposed to calculate modal (accelerating, cruising, or idling) emission factors. The emission factors cover particle size ranges up to 10 microns, either from published data or from user-defined size distributions. A particulate matter emission factor model (PMFAC), which incorporates virtually all the available information on particulate emissions for European motor vehicles, has been developed. PMFAC calculates the emission factors for five particle size ranges [i.e., total suspended particulates (TSP), PM10, PM5, PM2.5, and PM1] from both vehicle exhaust and nonexhaust emissions, such as tire wear, brake wear, and re-entrained road dust. The model can be used for an unlimited number of roads and lanes, and to calculate emission factors near an intersection in user-defined elements of the lane. PMFAC can be used for a variety of fleet structures. Hot emission factors at the user-defined speed can be calculated for individual vehicles, along with relative cold-to-hot emission factors. The model accounts for the proportions of distance driven with cold engines as a function of ambient temperature and road type (i.e., urban, rural, or motorway). A preliminary evaluation of PMFAC with an available dispersion model to predict the airborne concentration in the urban environment is presented. The trial was on the A6 trunk road where it passes through Loughborough, a medium-size town in the English East Midlands. This evaluation for TSP and PM10 was carried out for a range of traffic fleet compositions, speeds, and meteorological conditions. Given the limited basis of the evaluation, encouraging agreement was shown between predicted and measured concentrations.

Authors+Show Affiliations

National Exposure Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA. sing.rakesh@epa.govNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

11288309

Citation

Singh, R B., and J J. Colls. "Development and Preliminary Evaluation of a Particulate Matter Emission Factor Model for European Motor Vehicles." Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association (1995), vol. 50, no. 10, 2000, pp. 1805-17.
Singh RB, Colls JJ. Development and preliminary evaluation of a particulate matter emission factor model for European motor vehicles. J Air Waste Manag Assoc. 2000;50(10):1805-17.
Singh, R. B., & Colls, J. J. (2000). Development and preliminary evaluation of a particulate matter emission factor model for European motor vehicles. Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association (1995), 50(10), 1805-17.
Singh RB, Colls JJ. Development and Preliminary Evaluation of a Particulate Matter Emission Factor Model for European Motor Vehicles. J Air Waste Manag Assoc. 2000;50(10):1805-17. PubMed PMID: 11288309.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Development and preliminary evaluation of a particulate matter emission factor model for European motor vehicles. AU - Singh,R B, AU - Colls,J J, PY - 2001/4/6/pubmed PY - 2001/5/22/medline PY - 2001/4/6/entrez SP - 1805 EP - 17 JF - Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association (1995) JO - J Air Waste Manag Assoc VL - 50 IS - 10 N2 - Although modeling of gaseous emissions from motor vehicles is now quite advanced, prediction of particulate emissions is still at an unsophisticated stage. Emission factors for gasoline vehicles are not reliably available, since gasoline vehicles are not included in the European Union (EU) emission test procedure. Regarding diesel vehicles, emission factors are available for different driving cycles but give little information about change of emissions with speed or engine load. We have developed size-specific speed-dependent emission factors for gasoline and diesel vehicles. Other vehicle-generated emission factors are also considered and the empirical equation for re-entrained road dust is modified to include humidity effects. A methodology is proposed to calculate modal (accelerating, cruising, or idling) emission factors. The emission factors cover particle size ranges up to 10 microns, either from published data or from user-defined size distributions. A particulate matter emission factor model (PMFAC), which incorporates virtually all the available information on particulate emissions for European motor vehicles, has been developed. PMFAC calculates the emission factors for five particle size ranges [i.e., total suspended particulates (TSP), PM10, PM5, PM2.5, and PM1] from both vehicle exhaust and nonexhaust emissions, such as tire wear, brake wear, and re-entrained road dust. The model can be used for an unlimited number of roads and lanes, and to calculate emission factors near an intersection in user-defined elements of the lane. PMFAC can be used for a variety of fleet structures. Hot emission factors at the user-defined speed can be calculated for individual vehicles, along with relative cold-to-hot emission factors. The model accounts for the proportions of distance driven with cold engines as a function of ambient temperature and road type (i.e., urban, rural, or motorway). A preliminary evaluation of PMFAC with an available dispersion model to predict the airborne concentration in the urban environment is presented. The trial was on the A6 trunk road where it passes through Loughborough, a medium-size town in the English East Midlands. This evaluation for TSP and PM10 was carried out for a range of traffic fleet compositions, speeds, and meteorological conditions. Given the limited basis of the evaluation, encouraging agreement was shown between predicted and measured concentrations. SN - 1096-2247 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/11288309/Development_and_preliminary_evaluation_of_a_particulate_matter_emission_factor_model_for_European_motor_vehicles_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -