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RECORD NUMBER: 29 OF 87

Main Title Exhaust emissions from a diesel engine /
Author Risby, Terence H. ; Risby, T. H.
CORP Author Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD. Dept. of Environmental Health Sciences.;Environmental Sciences Research Lab., Research Triangle Park, NC.
Publisher U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Environmental Sciences Research Laboratory,
Year Published 1983
Report Number PB84-122910; EPA-600/3-83-106; EPA-R-806558
Stock Number PB84-122910
OCLC Number 759494256
Subjects Air--Pollution ; Automobiles--Motors (Diesel)--Exhaust gas
Additional Subjects Air pollution ; Exhaust emissions ; Public health ; Particles ; Mutagens ; Aromatic polycyclic hydrocarbons ; Chemical analysis ; Adsorbates ; Nitrogen organic compounds ; Physicochemical properties ; Electron paramagnetic resonance ; Gas chromatography ; Diesel engine exhaust ; Air pollution detection ; Pyrene/nitro ; High performance liquid chromatography
Internet Access
Description Access URL
https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyPDF.cgi?Dockey=9100Y4AX.PDF
Holdings
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Status
ELCD  EPA 600-3-83-106 NVFEL Library/Ann Arbor, MI 11/07/2011
NTIS  PB84-122910 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation viii, 104 p. : ill., charts ; 28 cm.
Abstract
Studies were performed using (1) Diesel particles collected from the undiluted exhaust of a single-cylinder engine, operated at constant speed and load, using a binary pure hydrocarbon fuel with air or gas mixture oxidizers, and (2) Diesel particles collected from the diluted exhaust of a multicylinder engine operated on a commercial fuel. The physicochemical properties of the particles were determined by static and dynamic methods. The organic adsorbate was characterized by chromatographic and mass spectrometric procedures and by microbial testing protocols. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometry and high performance liquid chromatography were used to study reactivity of the organic adsorbate. The particles collected from the exhaust of Diesel engines operated on binary pure hydrocarbons and on commercial fuels contained similar compounds in the organic adsorbates. The nitrogen in these compounds is derived mainly from the oxidizer (Air). The microbial mutagenic activities of the organic adsorbates found on the surface of both types of Diesel particles are comparable. These microbial mutagenic activities can be attributed mainly to the presence of nitrated polnuclear aromatic hydrocarbons.
Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 99-104). "PB84-122910." "EPA-600/3-83-106"--T.p. "November 1983." "EPA Grant Number R-806558"--T.p. "Project Officer John E. Sigsby"--T.p.
Contents Notes
Studies were performed using (1) Diesel particles were collected from the undiluted exhaust of a single-cylinder engine, operated at a constant speed and load, using a binary pure hydrocarbon fuel with air or gas mixture oxidizers, and (2) Diesel particles collected from the diluted exhaust of a multicylinder engine operated on a commercial fuel. The physiochemical properties of the particles were determined by static and dynamic methods. The organic adsorbate was characterized by chromatographic and mass spectrometric procedures and by microbial testing protocols. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometry and high performance liquid chromatography were used to study reactivity of the organic adsorbate. The particles collected from the exhaust of Diesel engines operated on binary pure hydrocarbons and on commercial fuels contained similar compounds in the organic adsorbates. The nitrogen in these compounds is derived mainly from the oxidizer (Air). The microbial mutagenic activities of the organic adsorbates found on the surface of both types of Diesel particles are comparable. These microbial mutagenic activities can be attributed mainly to the presence of nitrated polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons.