Science Inventory

EMISSIONS FROM A LIGHT-DUTY DIESEL: AMBIENT TEMPERATURE AND FUEL EFFECTS

Citation:

Gabele, P., W. Karches, W. Ray, AND N. Perry. EMISSIONS FROM A LIGHT-DUTY DIESEL: AMBIENT TEMPERATURE AND FUEL EFFECTS. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/D-85/272 (NTIS PB86131349).

Description:

Exhaust emissions from a diesel passenger car were characterized and measured to examine the effect of ambient temperature on emissions performance. The vehicle was tested at three temperatures on a chassis dynamometer located within a cold cell. Three driving cycles and three fuels of varying quality were used. The effort included measurements of regulated exhaust gases and particles, particulate organic fractions and their molecular-weight distributions, particulate fractions under 2 microns in diameter, trace metal contents, and fuel economy. Results indicate that reductions in ambient temperature had little effect on emissions or fuel economy in the study. In some cases, statistically significant increases in NOx emissions were measured with decreases in ambient test temperature. Other differences related to temperature effects occurred more frequently with the lower quality fuels.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:05/24/2002
Record Last Revised:12/10/2002
Record ID: 49133