Regenerating exhaust after-treatment systems are increasingly employed in passenger cars in order to comply with regulatory emission standards. These systems include pollutant storage units that occasionally have to be regenerated. The regeneration strategy applied, the resultant emission levels and their share of the emission level during normal operation mode are key issues in determining realistic overall emission factors for these cars. In order to investigate these topics, test series with four cars featuring different types of such after-treatment systems were carried out. The emission performance in legislative and real-world cycles was monitored as well as at constant speeds. The extra emissions determined during regeneration stages are presented together with the methodology applied to calculate their impact on overall emissions. It can be concluded that exhaust after-treatment systems with storage units cause substantial overall extra emissions during regeneration mode and can appreciably affect the emission factors of cars equipped with such systems, depending on the frequency of regenerations. Considering that the fleet appearance of vehicles equipped with such after-treatment systems will increase due to the evolution of statutory pollutant emission levels, extra emissions originating from regenerations of pollutant storage units consequently need to be taken into account for fleet emission inventories. Accurately quantifying these extra emissions is achieved by either conducting sufficient repetitions of emission measurements with an individual car or by considerably increasing the size of the sample of cars with comparable after-treatment systems.
[1]
Ulrich Dr. Göbel,et al.
Die Abgasreinigung der FSI-Motoren von Volkswagen
,
2000
.
[2]
Mordecai Shelef,et al.
Twenty-five years after introduction of automotive catalysts: what next?
,
2000
.
[3]
Michel André,et al.
The ARTEMIS European driving cycles for measuring car pollutant emissions.
,
2004,
The Science of the total environment.
[4]
Jun Tahara,et al.
Field Trial for Diesel Passenger Cars with DPNR
,
2003,
ATZautotechnology.
[5]
Leonidas Ntziachristos,et al.
Effects of a catalysed and an additized particle filter on the emissions of a diesel passenger car operating on low sulphur fuels
,
2005
.
[6]
M. Twigg.
Progress and future challenges in controlling automotive exhaust gas emissions
,
2007
.
[7]
Martin Mohr,et al.
Particle emissions from diesel passenger cars equipped with a particle trap in comparison to other technologies.
,
2006,
Environmental science & technology.
[8]
Dmitry Yu. Murzin,et al.
Toward Improved Catalytic Low-Temperature NOx Removal in Diesel-Powered Vehicles
,
2006
.
[9]
David C. Carslaw,et al.
Investigating the potential importance of primary NO2 emissions in a street canyon
,
2004
.
[10]
Grigorios C. Koltsakis,et al.
Diesel Soot Oxidation with NO 2 : Engine Experiments and Simulations
,
2002
.
[11]
D. Klemp,et al.
Regulated and unregulated exhaust emissions from nine passenger cars
,
2003
.