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American Chemical Society, Environmental Science and Technology, 14(41), p. 5022-5027, 2007

DOI: 10.1021/es063020v

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Rapid Identification of High Particle Number Emitting On-Road Vehicles and Its Application to a Large Fleet of Diesel Buses

Journal article published in 2007 by E. R. Jayaratne, L. Morawska ORCID, Z. D. Ristovski, C. He
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Pollutant concentrations measured in the exhaust plume of a vehicle may be related to the pollutant emission factor using the CO2 concentration as a measure of the dilution factor. We have used this method for the rapid identification of high particle number (PN) emitting on-road vehicles. The method was validated for PN using a medium-duty vehicle and successfully applied to measurements of PN emissions from a large fleet of on-road diesel buses. The ratio of PN concentration to CO2 concentration, Z, in the exhaust plume was estimated for individual buses. On the average, a bus emitted about 1.5 x 10(9) particles per mg of CO2 emitted. A histogram of the number of buses as a function of Z showed, for the first time, that the PN emissions from diesel buses followed a gamma distribution, with most of the values within a narrow range and a few buses exhibiting relatively large values. It was estimated that roughly 10% and 50% of the PN emissions came from just 2% and 25% of the buses, respectively. A regression analysis showed that there was a positive correlation between Z and age of buses, with the slope of the best line being significantly different from zero. The mean Z value for the pre-Euro buses was significantly greater than each of the values for the Euro I and II buses.