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Differences in compositions and effects of VOCs from vehicle emission detected using various methods

Zhenzhen Niu, Shaofei Kong, Huang Zheng, Yao Hu, Shurui Zheng, Yi Cheng, Liquan Yao, Wei Liu, Feng Ding, Xiaoyong Liu, Shihua Qi

2023Environmental Pollution21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Vehicle exhaust and oil fuel evaporation emit volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The differences in VOC compositions and their effects determined using different methods have not been addressed sufficiently. In this study, VOC samples are obtained from single gasoline and diesel vehicle exhausts using a portable emission measurement system, from a tunnel in Yichang City, and from gasoline and diesel evaporation at gas stations. A total of 107 VOCs are analysed. The calculated VOC source profiles (based on VOC source profiles of single-vehicle type and vehicle fleet composition in the tunnel) and the tested source profiles (from a tunnel test) are compared. The results show that gasoline burning can reduce alkenes from a mass fraction of 53.1% (for evaporation) to 3.6% (for burning), as well as increase the mass fraction of alkenes from 1.3% (for diesel evaporation) to 34.0% (for diesel burning). The calculated VOC source profiles differed from the tested VOC source profiles, with a coefficient of divergence of 0.6. Ethane, ethylene, n-undecane, and n-dodecane are used to distinguish VOCs in gasoline and diesel exhausts. Cis-2-butene, 2-methylpentane, m/p-xylene, o-xylene, and n-decane can be used to separate gasoline from diesel. The xylene/ethylbenzene ratios accurately reveal the photochemical age. Gasoline burning increases health risks associated with VOCs compared with gasoline evaporation. Furthermore, it modifies the main contributor to ozone formation potential. This study is expected to facilitate refined VOC source apportionment and studies pertaining to speciated emission inventories.

Topics & Concepts

GasolineDiesel fuelEnvironmental chemistryChemistryFraction (chemistry)EvaporationEthylbenzeneHydrocarbonXyleneVolatile organic compoundEnvironmental scienceAnalytical Chemistry (journal)MeteorologyChromatographyOrganic chemistryBenzenePhysicsVehicle emissions and performanceAtmospheric chemistry and aerosolsAir Quality and Health Impacts
Differences in compositions and effects of VOCs from vehicle emission detected using various methods | Litcius