Litcius/Paper detail

Measuring Emissions from a Demonstrator Heavy-Duty Diesel Vehicle under Real-World Conditions—Moving Forward to Euro VII

Tommaso Selleri, Roberto Gioria, Anastasios Melas, Barouch Giechaskiel, Fabrizio Forloni, Pablo Mendoza Villafuerte, Joachim Demuynck, Dirk Bosteels, Thomas Wilkes, Oliver Simons, Patrick Recker, Velizara Lilova, Yusuke Onishi, M. Steffen, Benedikt Grob, A. Perujo, Ricardo Suárez‐Bertoa

2022Catalysts43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The European Union (EU) has introduced since the early 1990s a series of progressively more stringent emission regulations to control air pollution from the transport sector, commonly known as Euro standards. Following this path, more recently, with the European Green Deal, the European Commission has indicated the intention to review the current air pollutant emissions standards. This study investigates the emission performance of an advanced demonstrator vehicle developed to meet the increasingly more stringent air pollution limits required. Emissions of currently regulated and unregulated components including NH3, N2O, and SPN10 (solid particle number), were studied in a very wide range of real-world operative conditions. The performance of two new generation portable instruments for the onboard measurement of N2O and NH3 were also evaluated in comparison with reference laboratory equipment. Similarly, the measurement accuracy of onboard NOx sensors was also compared to laboratory reference. The vehicle presented low emissions of NOx and NH3 and relatively low emissions of N2O, also compared to data currently available in the literature, in a broad range of operative conditions, which however resulted in a large variability in emissions.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental scienceEuropean unionEuropean commissionDiesel fuelNOxAir pollutionMeteorologyAutomotive engineeringEngineeringBusinessInternational tradeCombustionPhysicsOrganic chemistryChemistryVehicle emissions and performanceAir Quality and Health ImpactsAir Quality Monitoring and Forecasting